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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67401 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67401)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Forest Scenes in Norway and Sweden:
-being Extracts from the Journal of a Fisherman, by Rev. Henry Garrett
-Newland
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Forest Scenes in Norway and Sweden: being Extracts from the
- Journal of a Fisherman
-
-Author: Rev. Henry Garrett Newland
-
-Release Date: February 13, 2022 [eBook #67401]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOREST SCENES IN NORWAY AND
-SWEDEN: BEING EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF A FISHERMAN ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: BEAR-HUNT.
-
-_Front._]
-
-
-
-
- FOREST SCENES
- IN
- NORWAY AND SWEDEN:
-
- BEING
- Extracts from the Journal of a Fisherman.
-
- BY
- THE REV. HENRY NEWLAND,
- RECTOR AND VICAR OF WESTBOURNE,
- AUTHOR OF “THE ERNE: ITS LEGENDS AND ITS FLY-FISHING,” ETC. ETC.
-
- The Second Edition.
-
- LONDON:
- G. ROUTLEDGE & CO. FARRINGDON STREET;
- NEW YORK: 18, BEEKMAN STREET.
- 1855.
-
-
-
-
-TO MY MUCH-ESTEEMED FRIEND, THE PUBLIC.
-
-
-MY DEAR PUBLIC,—
-
-I have frequently heard you remark, in that quaint and pithy manner so
-peculiarly your own, that “all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.”
-If you should happen to find the book which I here present to your notice
-to be really of such a character as your friend Jack might have written
-under these distressing circumstances, I am afraid I cannot plead this
-very sensible observation of yours as my excuse; for I must confess,
-which I do with thankfulness, that in my time I have enjoyed quite as
-much play as is good for me, or for any one, in this working-day world of
-ours. On this point, therefore, my book must stand on its own merits.
-
-But, as I am extremely solicitous of your good opinion, and should be
-very sorry to see you err on the opposite extreme, imagining, as indeed
-you might, that mine has been “all play and no work,” I must request you
-to look at the Parson at home as well as the Parson abroad,—in short, to
-read my “Confirmation and First Communion,” as well as my “Forest Life;”
-a proceeding which, if it does not benefit you, my dear Public (and I
-sincerely hope it may), will, at all events,—through the medium of his
-Publisher,—benefit, and that materially,
-
- Your faithful Servant,
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-WESTBOURNE VICARAGE, _July 7th, 1854_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION _Page_ 1
-
- CHAPTER I.—Preparations 8
-
- CHAPTER II.—The Voyage 18
-
- CHAPTER III.—The Shipwash Sand 26
-
- CHAPTER IV.—The Landfall 38
-
- CHAPTER V.—Christiansand 49
-
- CHAPTER VI.—The Torjedahl 61
-
- CHAPTER VII.—The Encampment Mosse Eurd 78
-
- CHAPTER VIII.—Making a Night of it 92
-
- CHAPTER IX.—The Hell Fall 108
-
- CHAPTER X.—Departure from Torjedahl 122
-
- CHAPTER XI.—The Mountain March 141
-
- CHAPTER XII.—The Homestead 158
-
- CHAPTER XIII.—The Church 172
-
- CHAPTER XIV.—Breaking up the Encampment 193
-
- CHAPTER XV.—Eider Duck Hunting 203
-
- CHAPTER XVI.—The Coasting Voyage 220
-
- CHAPTER XVII.—Gotheborg 238
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.—Trollhättan 253
-
- CHAPTER XIX.—Gäddebäck 267
-
- CHAPTER XX.—Wenern 280
-
- CHAPTER XXI.—The Meet 295
-
- CHAPTER XXII.—The Commencement of the Skal 305
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.—The Satterval 318
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.—Making another Night of it 333
-
- CHAPTER XXV.—The Watch Fire 349
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.—Beating out the Skal 367
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.—The Ball 377
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.—The Wedding 389
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.—Homeward Bound 402
-
-
-
-
-FOREST LIFE: A FISHERMAN’S SKETCHES IN NORWAY AND SWEDEN.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-Sketches in Norway and Sweden! Are they fact or fiction? are they to be
-instructive or simply entertaining? These are questions which the public
-has a right to ask, and which the author means to answer as truly as he
-can. He hopes there will be a little of both. At least, in making this
-selection from his own and his friends’ journals, he has had both these
-objects in his eye, and he trusts he has been able to keep his eye upon
-them both at the same time, and that without any very great amount of
-squinting. The framework which he has adopted is that of a very popular
-description of authors—the historical romancers, and, if he might venture
-to say so, of a certain equally popular historian: that is to say,
-fiction founded upon fact. He has laid down absolute facts, or what he
-believes to be facts, for his groundwork, and has dressed them up to suit
-his fancy.
-
-These Northern Sketches are, in truth, a continuation of a former work,
-“The Erne, its Legends and its Fly-fishing;” as the expedition which
-gave rise to them was in every respect the same as the old Belleek
-fishing-association, with a simple change of scene. They are therefore
-written upon the same plan, which the author has found extremely
-convenient and very suitable to his purpose.
-
-That purpose was not only to preserve the recollections of a most
-enjoyable time, but also to convey as much real information on the
-subjects treated on as he could compass; and with such an object before
-him, absolute fiction would have been useless.
-
-His descriptions, therefore, in that book were real descriptions, his
-anecdotes, real anecdotes—the incidents of the story did actually happen;
-his instructions in the art of fly-fishing and the hydrography of the
-river were the results of his own experience, and the fairy legends
-were his own collections. Unless these things had been true, his book
-would have been merely a book of entertainment,—and he was ambitious of
-something beyond that. Everything of this kind, therefore, was recorded
-accurately; and in the few instances in which the requirements of the
-story compelled the author to transplant his incidents, their real
-localities were always given.
-
-All this was important to the public, or, at least, as important as the
-subject itself; but it was of no consequence to any one, except for the
-gratification of mere curiosity, to be able to identify the precise
-Captain A. who broke the weirs of the Laune, while such information
-would not have raised Captain A.’s character at the Horse-Guards. The
-Liberal member for B. might enjoy the recollection of the row he got up
-at Kildoney, but might not find it convenient to be reminded of it on the
-hustings. Attorneys might look askance at Barrister C., who for a whole
-summer had directed his studies to the practice of Club-law; while Parson
-D., who had passed three months of his life waist-high in the Erne, might
-possibly expect, were he identified, to have cold water thrown upon him
-by his Bishop for the rest of his life.
-
-With all these matters, interesting enough to the characters themselves,
-the public had nothing whatever to do: it was sufficient for them that
-they had their information and their story; and, provided the incidents
-of that story happened to some one, it signified little to them, which,
-of all the letters of the alphabet, composed his name. The public should
-feel grateful to any fisherman who has truly revealed the silks and
-feathers of his favourite fly; it is what very few fishermen will do: let
-them be satisfied with that: they shall never know—they have no right to
-know—which of all the “Squires” that haunted the Erne it was who landed
-the “Schoolmaster” on the “Bank of Ireland.”
-
-In the present sketches the author has not so much reason to conceal the
-names of his characters; he can hurt no one. He has no rows or “ructions”
-to record; more’s the pity, for there is nothing so interesting to
-read about. Still, there are advantages in carrying out the same plan:
-first, it makes the continuation obvious—some of the Erne characters
-are again introduced: and this is not a fiction; for when rail-roads
-began to multiply, and sporting cockneys began to infest the innocent
-Erne, frightening its salmon and exacerbating its proprietors, that
-pleasant coterie of fishermen, who, in earlier and better times, were
-wont to concoct their punch and tell their stories at Mother Johnstone’s
-fire-side, and hang their great two-handed rods upon her hospitable
-brackets, actually did betake themselves to the exile of foreign lands.
-
-But, in the second place, it conveys the same information in a more
-entertaining manner: the author is able to piece his characters; making
-them, like _Mrs. Malaprop’s_ Cerberus, “three gentlemen at once,” by
-combining into one the incidents that happened to many. The author has
-thus availed himself of other journals and other note-books besides his
-own, and has been able to appropriate their contents, and to distribute
-whatever was characteristic of the country, into a series of connected
-sketches, instead of perpetually changing his locality and introducing
-new characters. He by no means intends to identify himself with his
-fictitious Parson, nor will he even undertake to say, that he was himself
-in all instances personally present whenever the Parson comes upon the
-scene: he will answer for the truth of nothing beyond the detached
-incidents and descriptions.
-
-Neither can these Sketches be used as an itinerary. Now and then,
-though not often, names of places have been even suppressed or altered,
-and incidents transplanted. They will, indeed, give glimpses—slight,
-but true as far as they go—of northern scenery, costume, travelling
-peculiarities, and, above all, sport. They will contain practical hints
-and available directions, but it is only in a general way. They are
-not at all intended as a guide-book, nor will they at all supersede the
-indispensable Murray.
-
-The traveller, following upon the author’s footsteps, will find himself
-lost at two points of the narrative—the village of Soberud, and the
-locality of the Skal. In the former of these the reason is evident
-enough—the author wishes to convey an idea of what sort of men the
-Norwegian clergy are, not to draw the attention of subsequent travellers
-to any individual clergyman. In the case of the skal there is another
-reason. Although Mr. Lloyd, the author of “Northern Wild Sports,” being
-a great hunter, has always contrived to get a shot at the bear, it is,
-nevertheless, true, that an ordinary man sees about as much of a skal as
-a regimental officer does of a battle—that is to say, he sees about a
-dozen men on each side of him: and, it may well happen, that the share
-of any given individual in the most successful of skals, will amount
-to hearing a great deal of firing, and, at the end of three or four
-days’ hard work, seeing five or six carcasses paraded at the nearest
-village. In order, therefore, to give his readers a graphic sketch of a
-skal, without violently outraging probability, it was necessary for the
-author to _make his ground_, that is to say, to imagine ground of such a
-description that it was possible for his characters to see what was going
-on. It is not altogether fictitious either, for the traveller will find a
-good deal of it in the Toftdahl Valley, though this was never, so far as
-the author knows, the scene of a summer skal.
-
-Similarly, also, though there is no such village as Soberud, that
-being the name of a district near Larvig in which Sir Hyde Parker’s
-fishing-lodge is situated and where the author caught a good many
-salmon and trout, yet the traveller will be able to patch together
-the fictitious country from real and actual elements. The church is
-Hitterdahl—but as there is no lake at Hitterdahl, one has been borrowed
-for it from the country between Larvig and Frederiksvärn—the “Lake of the
-Woods” is, really, about four miles north-east of the village of Boen;
-the little lake where the diver was shot, together with the forest about
-it, about as far to the west of the same place; and the dark sombre pine
-wood is, really, situated in the valley of the Nid. This last has been
-slightly altered to suit the locality, for it is next to impossible to
-lose oneself in the Nid forest, the river itself being sufficient guide;
-but the rest is all drawn as accurately as the author’s recollections,
-aided by his journals, will enable him to depict it. With respect to
-the characters, Tom, Torkel, and Jacob were attendants on the author
-and his companions, and, though “a little rose upon,” to use a nautical
-expression, are drawn from actual life, and in their own proper names.
-The Captain and Parson, as has been said before, are not to be considered
-actual characters; that is to say, characters responsible as having
-done and said all that they are represented to have done and said, but
-merely as pegs upon which to hang the author’s personal experiences, or
-pieces of information which he may have received. The same may be said
-of Birger. It was necessary to associate with the party an intelligent
-Swede, and Lieut. Birger was chosen to fill that office. Bjornstjerna
-is wholly fictitious. Hjelmar is a real character; and his adventure
-in the Najaden frigate was related by him exactly as they are conveyed
-to the reader, the steamer following out among the islands the precise
-track of the chase. The author, however, will not undertake to say that
-the actual name of Hjelmar will be found on the watch and quarter bills
-of the frigate, though Hulm was actually her captain, and was actually
-buried near Lyngör, where his monument may be seen to this day. Moodie is
-a real character, though his name, also, is fictitious; or, rather, it
-is derived from a nick-name that the author understands he has acquired
-either by his courage or his foolhardiness: the appellation Modige,
-which is pronounced very like our English name, Moodie, is translatable
-either way. He does not, however, live at Gäddebäck, which is the name
-of a house formerly occupied by the celebrated Mr. Lloyd, the author
-of “Wild Sports of the North,” and “Scandinavian Adventures,” to whose
-kindness the author is indebted for his being able to describe, from
-experience, the fishing of the Gotha, which is drawn as accurately as
-the author’s recollection served him. The traveller need not, however,
-fear the quicksand which engulphed poor Jacob; that scene, and a very
-ridiculous one it was, occurred on the Torjedahl just below Oxea. The
-fisherman is cautioned not to be guided in his choice of a river by the
-author’s success on the Torjedahl. It is too clear, too much overhung,
-and too steadily and regularly rapid to be a first-rate river under any
-circumstances. There are few shallows in it, for there are no tributaries
-below the Falls of Wigeland, and no salmon can get above them; therefore,
-its breeding-ground is very limited indeed; probably the flats of Strei,
-Oxea, and Mosse Eurd, form the whole of it. The author’s success must be
-attributed to the fact of his fly having been the first of his kind that
-ever floated on those transparent waters.
-
-The songs which are put into the mouths of the different characters,
-are really Norwegian or Swedish, and are given as specimens. They are
-translations by Hewitt, Forester, Knightley, and others. Scandinavia has
-always been remarkable for its lyrical poetry from the earliest times;
-and the _Gammle Norgé_ of Bjerregaard, which is given in chapter viii.,
-would seem to show that the cup of poetic inspiration which Odin stole
-from the keeping of Gunlauth, and stored up in Asgard, is not yet empty.
-By far the best of the modern poets of the North is Grundtvig, but his
-subjects are, for the most part, of a nature too solemn for a work so
-light as this; a short specimen from his hymns is given in chapter xviii.
-The Evening Hymn, in chapter xxiii., though in common use in Norway, is
-not Norwegian; it belongs to the ancient church, and is said to be as old
-as the days of Ambrose and Augustine.
-
-The legends are collected from all manner of sources: many of them
-from Tom and Torkel, some from the Eddas and Sagas, some from Malet
-and Knightley; they are all, however, legitimate Scandinavian legends,
-believed implicitly by some one or other.
-
-One word about the voyage out. It signifies little to the public when and
-where those incidents really happened—whether in the North Sea, or in the
-Bay of Biscay, or in the Mediterranean; but it signifies to them a great
-deal, to know that these things actually did happen once, and may happen
-again at any time.
-
-The main incidents adapted to that fictitious voyage are strictly and
-literally true. A large steamer was upon one occasion in the precise
-situation ascribed to the _Walrus_,—and—in the absence of its skipper,
-who for the time had mysteriously disappeared—was saved by the promptness
-of one of the passengers, precisely as is described in the narrative.
-And it is also true that the same vessel, after a run of not more than
-five hundred miles, did find herself fifty miles out of her course.
-The compasses, no doubt, being in fault, as they always are on such
-occasions—poor things!
-
-These are important matters for the public to be made acquainted with;
-for the public do very frequently go down to the sea in steamers, and
-therefore any individual reader may at any time find himself in the very
-same situation.
-
-The author has enlarged upon this, in the faint hope of drawing attention
-to these matters. He would suggest that some sort of superintendence
-would not be altogether superfluous, and that it is not entirely right
-that the lives of two or three hundred men on the deep sea should
-be entrusted to a skipper not competent to navigate a river, nor be
-committed to a vessel so parsimoniously found as to be unable to
-encounter casualties which might happen any day in a voyage to Ramsgate.
-
-On a subject so important as this, the author thinks it his duty to state
-that these incidents, extraordinary as they may appear, are in no way
-fictitious; that they did happen under his own eye; and that the mate,
-the only real sailor on board, did request of him, after the escape, a
-certificate that he, at least, had done his duty. If that man should
-be still alive, he possesses a most unique document, a certificate of
-seamanship, signed by a clergyman of the United Church of England and
-Ireland.
-
-The skipper’s name the author does not think it necessary to record. He
-is not likely to be employed again; for he is one of those who have since
-immortalised themselves in the public prints, by losing his vessel—a
-circumstance which, it will readily be believed, did not excite any very
-great feelings of surprise in the mind of the author.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-PREPARATIONS.
-
- “In every corner
- Carefully look thou
- Ere forth thou goest.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-There is no saying more true than that “he who would make a tour abroad,
-must first make the tour of London.” There are miscellaneous articles
-of appropriate clothing to be got together; there are bags, knapsacks,
-portmanteaus, to be fitted. Above all, there are passports to be
-procured; than which no plague more vexatious, more annoying, or more
-utterly useless for any practicable or comprehensible purpose, has been
-devised by modern ingenuity.
-
-But if this is a necessary preliminary on ordinary occasions, much more
-is it necessary when the contemplated expedition has for its object
-sporting, and the northern wildernesses for its contemplated locality. In
-addition to the cares of ordinary travel, there are now tents, blankets,
-cloaks, guns, rifles, to be thought of; rods, reels, gaffs, lines, to
-be overhauled and repaired; material-books to be replenished, and the
-commissariat department to be adequately looked to. Deep and anxious, yet
-not without their pleasures, are the responsibilities which rest on the
-shoulders of him who undertakes the conduct of such an expedition as this.
-
-Such were the thoughts that crossed the mind of the Parson, as—business
-in his musing eye, care on his frowning brow, and determination in his
-compressed lip—he stood under the archway of the Golden Cross; his hands
-mechanically feeling for the pockets of his fishing-jacket, which had
-been exchanged for a clerical frock-coat more befitting the locality,
-and his mouth pursing itself up for his habitual whistle, which, had he
-indulged in it where he then stood, might have been considered neither
-appropriate nor decorous.
-
-“Don’t you think this list rather a long one,” said the Captain, who
-had now joined him from the interior of the hotel, holding in his hand
-a pretty closely-written sheet of foolscap. “These are all very good
-things, and very useful things no doubt, but how are we to stow them, and
-how are we to carry them? Yours is anything but light marching order.”
-
-“Why should it be?”
-
-“My principle is, that no traveller can be too lightly equipped.”
-
-“And a very good principle, too,” said the Parson. “Heavy and useless
-incumbrances are the invariable attributes of travelling Englishmen. You
-may know them by their endless train of household goods, as you would
-know a snail by its shell.”
-
-“I believe,” said the Captain, “that foreign rail-roads are regulated
-precisely so as to tax us English tourists. Travel on whatever line you
-please in England, except that grasping Brighton and South Coast, and you
-may take just exactly what luggage you like; while abroad, the fare is
-so low and the charge for luggage so high, that an Englishman generally
-pays double; while the Frenchman, whose three spare collars and bottle
-of hair-oil are in his pocket; and the German, whose great tobacco-bag
-and little reticule of necessaries are so constructed as to fit the
-allowance, are permitted to go free.”
-
-“Upon my word, I do not object to the tax; it is a tax upon folly.
-What can be so absurd as such a miscellaneous collection as Englishmen
-generally carry with them? What can a traveller want beyond a dry suit of
-clothes and half-a-dozen shirts and stockings?”
-
-“There is a slight incongruity between your words and your actions,” said
-the Captain, holding up the list.
-
-“Tush! put that paper into your pocket, and tell me what we are going to
-do. When I went on my reconnoitring expedition to Norway last year, my
-fourteen-foot rod, my fly-book, and a change of clothes constituted all
-the cares of my life; and I contend, as you do, that no traveller whose
-object is information has any business with more. But we are going now
-more in the character of settlers: we are not going to explore, but to
-enjoy that which has been explored for us. Why should we not, therefore,
-take whatever may make life enjoyable?”
-
-“Only for fear we may be called upon to choose between leaving them
-behind or leaving our purpose unaccomplished,” said the Captain.
-
-“Do you think I have calculated my ambulances so badly? But come along.
-We must consult Fortnum and Mason first. I can explain all that on our
-road.
-
-“Considering how wild and uninhabited the greater part of the country
-is, both in Norway and Sweden,” the Parson resumed, as they crossed the
-pavement under Nelson’s pillar, “it is astonishing how easily you may
-travel, and how little impediment are your _impedimenta_. The posting
-regulations are admirable. On every road there are posting stations
-at convenient distances, and, by writing to these, the traveller may
-command, at stated prices, every horse and cart in the district.”
-
-“And at moderate prices?” said the Captain, whose means were not so
-abundant as to make him indifferent to expense.
-
-“No, not at moderate prices; for I do not call a penny an English mile a
-moderate price, and this is what you pay in Sweden; and in Norway it is
-not more than three-halfpence, except in favoured spots in the vicinity
-of towns, where they are permitted to charge three-fold. My plans,
-therefore, are these. We are not going to travel, but to visit certain
-fishing stations, most of which are at no great distance from the coast;
-let us take, therefore, everything that will make us comfortable at these
-different settlements. As long as we coast, we have always traders of
-some sort or other, and generally as nice and comfortable little steamers
-as you can desire. When our road lies along the fjords or lakes, boats
-are to be had from the post stations on the same terms as you get the
-carts, a rower reckoning the same as a horse; and when we want to take
-to the land, we have but to order as many carts as will hold our traps.”
-
-“And how do we travel ourselves?” said the Captain.
-
-“There is no carriage in the world so pleasant for fine weather as the
-cariole; and I propose that we each buy one. If we have to get them new,
-they do not cost above thirty specie-dalers—that is to say, about seven
-or eight pounds—with all their harness and fittings, in the very first
-style; and you may always sell them again at the end of your journey.
-That is the way the natives manage, and they are terrible gadabouts.
-You always find some jobber or other to take it off your hands. But the
-chances are that we shall meet with a choice of second-hand carioles to
-begin with. I gave twenty specie-dalers for mine last year, and sold it
-for fifteen. Drammen is the place for these things, up in Christiania
-fjord: it is the Long Acre of Norway.”
-
-“What sort of things are these carioles?—Gigs, I suppose, to carry two.”
-
-“Not they—barely one: and no great room for baggage either. A
-Scandinavian is of your way of thinking, and does not trouble himself
-with spare shirts. One horse draws one man, and that is all. If your gig
-carries two, you are charged a horse and a half for it. In Sweden they
-have a sort of light spring waggon, drawn by three horses, which will
-take our followers admirably, with as much luggage as we like to stow;
-and by having the collars of the harness made open at the top, they will
-do for all the variety of horses we may meet with on our road. This is
-better than the Norwegian mode of engaging the farm carts; for in this,
-so much time is lost at every stage in restowing luggage, that it becomes
-a serious hindrance. However, in Norway we must do as the Norwegians do.
-The light waggon would make a very unpleasant conveyance down some of
-their mountain roads.”
-
-“And how do you manage crossing the fjords and lakes?”
-
-“Easily enough. Every ferry-boat will take a cariole; and as for
-coasting, a cariole ranks as a deck passenger—that is to say, about ten
-skillings for a sea mile, you paying for your own passage in the cabin
-about twenty.”
-
-“You travellers get so confoundedly technical. What the deuce do you mean
-by a sea mile and a skilling? And how am I to compare two things neither
-of which I know anything about?”
-
-“A regular traveller’s fault,” said the Parson. “There is not a book
-written that does not abound with these absurdities. Well, a skilling is
-a halfpenny in our money, and a sea mile is four of our miles, and a land
-mile eight, nearly.”
-
-“Pretty liberal in their measures of length,” said the Captain.
-
-“Why, they have plenty of it, and to spare; as you will find when
-you come to travel from one place to another. But their money is not
-plentiful, and they dole it out in very small denominations indeed.”
-
-“But here we are at Fortnum and Mason’s; and now for the stores.”
-
-“I observe, you always go to the most expensive places,” said the Captain.
-
-“That is because I cannot afford to go to the cheaper ones,” said the
-Parson. “On such an expedition as this, you should never take inferior
-stores. One hamper turning out bad when unpacked at the end of a thousand
-miles or so of carriage, will make more than the difference between the
-cheapest and the most expensive shop in London. But, to show you that I
-do study economy, I will resist the temptation of these preserved meats;
-and, let me tell you, it is a temptation, for up the country you will
-get nothing but what you catch, gather, or shoot. This, however, is a
-necessary,” pointing to some skins of portable soup; “there is not a
-handier thing for a traveller; it goes in the smallest compass of any
-sort of provisions; it is always useful on a pinch, and some chips of
-it carried in the waistcoat pocket on a pedestrian expedition, make a
-dinner, not exactly luxurious, but quite sufficient to do work upon.
-This we must lay in a good store of; in fact, if we have this, we need
-not be very anxious about anything else. Other things are luxuries:
-this is a necessary of life. Tea we must take: there is nothing more
-refreshing after a hard day’s work, and you cannot get it anywhere in the
-country. At least, what you do meet with is altogether _maris expers_,
-being a villanous composition of dried strawberry leaves and other home
-productions. Oil, too—we must take plenty of that; we shall want it for
-the frying-pan.”
-
-“Have they no butter, then?” said the Captain.
-
-“Yes, they have, and in great plenty too; of all varieties of quality,
-from very bad, down to indescribably beastly. They call it smör,
-pronouncing the dotted _o_ like the French _eu_; and I can assure you
-their very best butter tastes just as the word sounds.”
-
-“Well, then, I vote for some of these sardines, to take off the taste.”
-
-“With all my heart,” said the Parson; “they flavour anything, when they
-are not made of salted bleak, as they generally are—so does cayenne
-pepper. We may as well have some cocoa paste, and a Bologna sausage or
-two may prove a useful luxury.”
-
-“What do you say to a cask of biscuits?” said the Captain. “What sort of
-bread have they?”
-
-“Do you recollect that old story told of Charles the Twelfth, when he
-said of the bread brought to him, that it was not good, but that it might
-be eaten? No one can tell the heroism of that speech who has not eaten
-the Swedish black bread, which is generally the only representative of
-the staff of life procurable. It is gritty, it is heavy, it is puddingy;
-if you throw it against a wall it will stick there—and as for sourness,
-O, ye gods! they purposely keep the leaven till it is uneatably sour, and
-then fancy it becomes wholesome.”
-
-“Well, I suppose it does,” said the Captain. “The Squire used to say,
-that everything that was good, is unwholesome or wrong; and I suppose the
-converse is true. But why not take the biscuits?”
-
-“Because we can get that which will answer our purpose perfectly when
-we arrive at the country, and that without the carriage, and at a much
-cheaper rate. There is not a seaport town in all the coast where you may
-not get what they call Kahyt Scorpor, a sort of coarse imitation of what
-nurses in England feed babies upon, under the name of tops and bottoms.
-They are made of rye, and are as black as my hat; but they are very good
-eating, keep for ever, and are cheap enough in all conscience, being from
-four to six skillings to the pound, that is to say, threepence. In Norway
-they call them Rö Kovringer.”
-
-“We will take some rice, which very often comes in well by way of
-vegetables in a kettle of grouse soup; and a good quantity of chocolate,
-which packs easily, and furnishes a breakfast on the shortest possible
-notice. And this, I think, will do very well for the commissariat
-department of our expedition.”
-
-“And now for arms and ammunition,” said the Captain.
-
-“Everything we are likely to want in that department, we must take with
-us—guns, of course. Shot certainly may be got at Christiansand, and the
-other large towns; up the country, though, you will get neither that nor
-anything else: but powder can be got nowhere, at least, powder that does
-not give you an infinity of trouble in cleaning your gun, on account of
-the quantity of deposit it leaves. That little magazine of yours, with
-its block-tin canisters and brass screw-stoppers, will hold enough for us
-two, unless we meet with very good sport indeed, and in that case we must
-put up with the manufacture of the country.”
-
-“And for guns?” said the Captain. “I shall certainly take that little
-pea-rifle I brought from Canada. I want to bring down a bear.”
-
-“We shall be more likely to get a crack at a seal, where we are going,”
-said the Parson. “Bears are not so plentiful in Norway as is generally
-supposed. People imagine that they run about in flocks like sheep;
-however, it is possible that there may be a bear-hunt while we are there.
-As for rifles, I own I am partial to our own English manufacture. Those
-little pea affairs are sensible things enough in their own country, where
-one wanders for weeks on end through interminable forests and desolate
-prairies on foot, and where a pound of lead more or less in your knapsack
-is a matter of consequence: but where we have means of transport, I see
-no great sense in them. A pea, no doubt, will kill, if it hits in the
-right place; but, like the old Duke, I have myself rather a partiality
-for the weighty bullet. However, each man to his fancy. The great merit
-of every gun, rifle, or pistol, lies behind the stock,—a truth that
-dandy sportsmen are apt to forget; a pea sent straight is better than a
-two-ounce ball beside the mark.”
-
-“Well,” said the Captain, laughing, “I think I can hold my little Yankee
-pretty straight; but we shall want shot-guns more than rifles. I may as
-well take that case I had from Westley Richards, if you do not think it
-too heavy.”
-
-“Not at all; you can always leave the case behind, and take one gun in a
-waterproof cover when we go on light-armed expeditions. This will furnish
-us with a spare gun in case of accidents. I shall take my own old one,
-and a duck gun—which last will be common property, and I think with this
-we shall be pretty sufficiently armed. Pointers and setters are of no
-great use, unless it is a steady old stager, who will retrieve; for you
-must recollect there is no heath, and very little field shooting. The
-character of the country is cover, not very thick anywhere, and in many
-places interspersed with glades and openings. We shall do better with
-beaters: a water-dog, however, is indispensable. Lakes and rivers abound,
-and so do ducks, teal, and snipes.”
-
-“Have you thought about tents?” said the Captain.
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “I am not sure that tents are indispensable,
-and they certainly are not a little cumbersome. While we are fishing we
-can do very well without them: by the water-side we can never be without
-a cottage of some sort to put our heads under if it should come on bad
-weather, for every house in the whole country stands on the banks of
-some lake or river. I must say, though, when you get up into the fjeld
-after the grouse and the ducks, or, it may be, bigger game, it is another
-affair altogether. You may then go twenty or thirty miles on end without
-seeing a human habitation, unless you are lucky enough to meet with a
-säter, and you know what a highland bothy is, for dirt and vermin. But,
-even in the fjeld, I do not know that we should want tents; you can have
-no idea of the beauty of a northern summer’s night, and the very little
-need one has of any cover whatever. I remember, last year, standing
-on one of their barrows, smoking my pipe at the foot of an old stone
-cross, coeval, probably, with St. Olaf, and shadowing the tomb of some
-of his followers that Hakon the Jarl thinned off so savagely. It was
-deep midnight, and there was not a chill in the air, or dew enough on
-the whole headland to fill the cup of a Lys Alf. The full round moon was
-shining down upon me from the south, while a strong glowing twilight was
-still lighting up the whole northern sky, where the sun was but just hid
-under the horizon. The whole scene was as light as day, with the deep
-solemn stillness of midnight all the while. I could distinctly make out
-the distant fishing-boats; I could almost distinguish what the men were
-doing in them, through the bright and transparent atmosphere; but at the
-same time all was so still that I could hear the whistle of the wings,
-as flight after flight of wild-fowl shot over me in their course to
-seaward, though they were so high in the air that I could not distinguish
-the individual birds, only the faint outline of the wedge-like figure in
-which they were flying. I remember, that night, thinking how perfectly
-unnecessary a tent was, and determining not to bring one; and, that night
-at all events, I acted up to my conviction; for, when my pipe was out, I
-slept at the foot of the old cross till the sun warned me that the salmon
-were stirring.”
-
-“All very pleasant, no doubt,” said the Captain; “very enjoyable indeed:
-but does it never rain at night in this favoured land of yours?”
-
-“Upon my word, it does not very often,” said the Parson; “at least, not
-in the summer-time. Besides, you cannot conceive how well the men tent
-themselves with pine-branches.”
-
-“I do not quite like the idea,” said the Captain. “It is all very well to
-sleep out when anything is to be got by it; but, when there is nothing to
-be got by it but the rheumatism, to tell you the honest truth—unlucky, as
-the old women say it is—I rather prefer contemplating the moon through
-glass.”
-
-“Well, I will tell you what we can do,” said the Parson, “and that will
-be a compromise. We can get some canvas made up into two lug sails.
-These will help us uncommonly in our passage over lakes and fjords, for
-their boats are seldom well provided in that respect; and when we get to
-our destination, lug sails—being square, or, to speak more accurately,
-parallelogrammatical—will make us very capital gipsy tents, with two
-pairs of cross-sticks and a ridge-pole, which we shall always be able
-to cut from the forest. I think we may indulge ourselves so far. As for
-waterproof jackets, trousers, boots, and so forth, I need not tell you
-about that: you have been out before, and know the value of these when
-you want to fish through a rainy day. We shall not have so dripping a
-climate here as we had in Ireland, certainly, but we shall have one use
-for our waterproof clothing which we had not there, and that is, when we
-bivouac, vulcanised India-rubber is as good a defence against the dew and
-the ground-damp as it is against the rain. A case of knife, fork, and
-spoon apiece is absolutely necessary, for they do not grow in the fjeld.
-A light axe or two, and a couple of hand-bills, a hammer and nails,
-which are just as likely to be wanted to repair our land-carriages as
-our boats. If you are at all particular in shaving—which, by-the-by, is
-not at all necessary—you may as well take a portable looking-glass. You
-will not find it so easy to shave in the reflection of a clear pool—a
-strait to which I was reduced when I was there last year. And now, I
-think, we have everything—that is to say, if you have taken care of the
-fishing-tackle, as you engaged to do.”
-
-“I have not taken care of your material-book.”
-
-“No,” said the Parson; “but I have taken very good care of that myself.
-Fly-making may be a resource to fall back upon, if we meet with rainy
-weather, and my book is well replenished.”
-
-“Everything else,—rods, books, reels, gaffs, and so forth,—I have packed
-in the old black box which we had with us at Belleek, with spare line,
-and water-cord, and armed wire, and eel hooks, and, in fact, everything
-that we can possibly want; and a pretty heavy package it makes, I can
-assure you.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “we may go to sleep now with a clear conscience.
-But so much depends upon a good start, that a little extra trouble, on
-the first day, will be found to save, in the end, a multiplicity of
-inconveniences.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE VOYAGE.
-
- “Hurrah! hurrah! up she’s rising,—
- Stamp and go, boys! up she’s rising,—
- Round with a will! and up she’s rising,
- Early in the morning.
-
- What shall us do with a lubberly sailor?—
- What shall us do with a lubberly sailor?—
- Put him in the long-boat and make him bale her,
- Early in the morning.
-
- Hurrah! hurrah! up she’s rising.”—
- &c. &c. _ad infinitum_.
-
- _Anchor Song._
-
-
-Clear and joyous as ever a summer’s day came out of the heavens, was the
-12th of June, 18—, when the good ship _Walrus_, with her steam up, her
-boats secured, and everything ready for sea, lay lazily at single anchor
-off Blackwall-stairs. The weather was as still and calm as weather might
-be. The mid-day sun, brilliant and healthful, imparted life and animation
-even to the black and unctuous waters, that all that morning had, in
-the full strength of the spring tide, been rushing past her sides. The
-breeze, light and fitful, just stirred the air, but was altogether
-powerless on the glazy surface of the stream, which sent back, as from a
-polished and unbroken mirror, the exact double of every mast, yard, and
-line of cordage, that reposed above it. The ships lay calm and still. The
-outward-bound had tided down with the first of the ebb, and were already
-out of sight, and the few sails that still hung festooned in their bunt
-and clew-lines, lay as motionless as the yards that held them. Like light
-and airy dragon-flies, just flitting on the surface, and apparently
-without touching it, the river steamers were darting from wharf to wharf;
-while ever and anon a great heavy sea-going vessel would grind her
-resistless way, defying wind and tide, and dashing the black wave against
-the oily-looking banks.
-
-Steamer after steamer passed, each steadily bent on her respective
-mission; and the day wore on—yet there lay the _Walrus_, though her
-sea-signalling blue Peter had hung from her fore-truck ever since
-day-light, and the struggling and impatient steam would continually burst
-in startling blasts from her safety-valves. The tide was slackening
-fast; the chain cable, that all that forenoon had stretched out taut and
-tense from her bows, like a bar of iron, now hung up and down from her
-hawsehole, while the straws and shavings and floating refuse of the great
-capital began to cling round her sides.
-
-“It is a great honour, no doubt, to carry an ambassador, with Heaven
-knows how many stars of every degree of Russian magnitude in his train,”
-said the Parson, who, seated on the taffrail, with his legs dangling
-over the water, had been watching the turning tide, and grumbling, as
-ship after ship in the lower reaches began to swing at her anchors,
-while three or four of the more energetic craft were already setting
-their almost useless sails, and yo-ho-ing at their anchors, preparatory
-to tiding up; “it is a very great honour, and I hope we are all duly
-sensible of it; but, like most great honours, it is a very particular
-nuisance. These Russian representatives of an autocrat majesty must fancy
-they can rule the waves, when all the world knows it is only Britannia
-that can do that. They have let the whole of this lovely tide pass
-by—(the Parson cast his eyes on the greasy water)—and fancy, I suppose,
-that daddy Neptune is bound to supply them with a new one whenever they
-please to be ready for it.”
-
-“Why, Mate!” said the Captain, as a smart sailor-like looking fellow
-fidgeted across the quarter-deck, with an irregular step and an anxious
-countenance; “is this what you call sailing at ten a.m. precisely? Most
-of us would have liked another forenoon on shore, but your skipper was so
-confounded peremptory; and this is what comes of it.”
-
-“What is one to do, sir?” said the Mate, who seemed fully to participate
-in the Captain’s grievance. “These Russians have taken up all the private
-cabins for their own particular use, and occupy half the berths in the
-main and fore-cabins besides—we cannot help waiting for them. They have
-pretty well chartered the ship themselves—what can we do? But,” continued
-he, after a pause, during which he had been looking over the side, as the
-steamer now began evidently to swing in her turn, “I wish we had gone
-down with the morning’s tide.”
-
-“We should have been at the mouth of the river by this time,” said the
-Captain, “if we had started when we ought.”
-
-“Yes,” said the Mate, “and we should now be crossing the dangerous
-shoals, with fair daylight and a rising tide before us.”
-
-“Why, surely you are not afraid,” said the Parson; “that track is as well
-beaten as the turnpike road.”
-
-The Mate shrugged his shoulders, and stepped forward, giving some
-unnecessary orders in a tone unnecessarily sharp and angry.
-
-“Well, Birger, what news? Do you see anything of them?”
-
-The individual addressed was a smart, active, little man, with a quick
-grey eye, and a lively, pleasant, good-humoured countenance, who was
-coming aft from the bridge of the steamer, on which he had been seated
-all the forenoon, sketching, right and left of him groups of shipping on
-the water and groups of idlers on the deck.
-
-“Anything of whom?” said he. “Oh! the Russians. No, I don’t know. I
-suppose they will come some time or other; it does not signify—it is
-all in the day’s work. Look here,”—and he opened his portfolio, and
-displayed, in wild confusion all over his paper, the domes of Woolwich,
-the houses of Blackwall, the forests of masts and yards in the Pool,
-two or three picturesque groups of vessels, a foreign steamer or two,
-landing her weary and travel-soiled passengers at the Custom-house—and,
-over leaf, and in the background as it were, slight exaggerations of the
-ungainly attitudes in which his two friends were then sprawling. “If
-you had found something as pleasant as this grumbling to fill up your
-time with, you would not be wasting your eyes and spoiling your temper in
-looking for the Russians. They are going back to their own country, poor
-devils! no wonder they are slow about it. Did you ever see a boy going to
-school?”
-
-“Birger is not over-fond of the Russians,” said the Captain.
-
-“Few Swedes are,” said Birger; “remember Finland and Pomerania.”
-
-“Besides, it is not over-pleasant to have a great White Bear sitting
-perpetually at one’s gate, always ready to snap up any of one’s little
-belongings that may come in its way. The Russian fleet is getting
-formidable, and Revel and Kronstadt are not very far from the mouth of
-the Mälar.”
-
-“I don’t know anything about that,” said Birger, gallantly; “we are the
-sons of the men who, under Gustaf, taught that fleet a lesson.”
-
-“You are a gallant set of fellows,” said the Parson; “and Sweden would
-be a precious hard nut to crack. But your long-armed friends over the
-water know the value of a ring fence, and would dearly like a seaboard.
-Only fancy that overpowering country, which is now kept in order by
-the rest of Europe, only because, just at present, it lies at the back
-of creation, and cannot get out of the Baltic, Black, and White Seas,
-to do harm to any one,—only fancy that pleasant land, with its present
-unlimited resources, and Gothenborg for its Portsmouth, and Christiania,
-and Frederiksvärn and Christiansand for its outports—a pleasant vision,
-is it not, Mr. Guardsman? Don’t you think it probable that something of
-this sort has soothed the slumbers of the White Bear we were speaking of,
-before this?”
-
-“Did you ever hear of Charles the Twelfth? He taught that White Bear to
-dance.”
-
-“He taught that White Bear to fight,” said the Captain, “and an apt
-scholar he found him. There was more lost at Pultava than Charles’s
-gallant army.”
-
-“There are men in Sweden yet,” said Birger, slightly paraphrasing the
-legend of “Holger.”
-
-“There are,” said the Parson; “and if you could only agree among
-yourselves, you might have hopes of muzzling the White Bear yet. Another
-union of Calmar?”
-
-“O, hang the union of Calmar; there is no more honesty in a Dane or
-a Norseman than there is in a Russ. We are not going to have another
-Bloodbath at Stockholm. My mother is a Lejonhöved,[1] and I am not likely
-to forget that day.”
-
-“I should have thought you more nearly connected with the Svinhöved
-family,” said the Parson; “but depend upon it, unless you men of the
-north can make up your quarrels, the White Bear will chop you up in
-detail, and us after you.”
-
-Birger, who, in some incomprehensible way, traced his descent from the
-founder of Stockholm, the great and terrible Earl Birger, was a smart
-young subaltern in the Royal Guards, and though his present dress—a
-modest and unpretending blouse—was anything but military, his well-set-up
-figure, firm step, and jaunty little forage cap stuck on one side of his
-head, sufficiently revealed his profession. From his earliest youth he
-had discovered a decided talent for drawing, and in accordance with a
-most praiseworthy custom in the Swedish service, he had been travelling
-for the last twelvemonth at the expense of the Government, and was now
-returning to the “Kongs Ofver Commandant’s Expedition,” with a portfolio
-filled with valuable sketches, and a mind no less well stored with
-military knowledge, which he had collected from every nation in Europe.
-The Captain had fallen in with him at the Swedish ambassador’s, and,
-being himself something of an artist, had struck up on the spot a sort of
-professional friendship with him. The pleasant little subaltern was thus,
-from that time forward, enrolled among their party; and though their
-acquaintance was not yet of twenty-four hours’ standing, was at that
-moment talking and chatting with all the familiarity of old and tried
-friendship.
-
-“Here come those precious rascals at last,” said he, breaking off the
-conversation, as a train of at least half-a-dozen carriages rattled
-down to the landing-place, and counts, countesses, tutors, barons,
-children, dogs, governesses, portmanteaus, bags, boxes, and trunks were
-tumbled out indiscriminately on the landing-place. “Heaven and earth!
-if they have not _impedimenta_ enough for an army! and this is only
-their light marching baggage either. All their heavy articles came on
-board yesterday, and are stowed under hatches. I’ll be bound we draw an
-additional foot of water for them. Hang the fellows! they are as bad as
-Junot, they are carrying off the plunder of half the country.”
-
-“Like the Swedes under Oxenstjerna,” said the Parson; “but what need
-you care for that? The plunder—if it is plunder—comes from England, not
-Sweden.”
-
-“It will lumber up the whole cabin, whether it comes from the one or the
-other,” said Birger; “we shall not have room to swing a cat.”
-
-“We don’t want to swing a cat,” said the Parson; “that is a Russian
-amusement rather than an English or a Swedish one, if all tales be
-true; and you may depend upon it we shall fare all the better for their
-presence: our skipper could never think of setting anything short of
-turtle and venison before such very magnificent three-tailed bashaws.”
-
-“Yes,” said Birger, “they are going to Petersburgh, too, where the
-chances are, the bashaws will find some good opportunity of squaring
-accounts with the skipper for any ill-treatment, before the steamer is
-permitted to sail.”
-
-All the while this conversation was going on, the illustrious passengers
-were rapidly accomplishing the short passage from the shore to the
-steamer, a whole flotilla of boats being employed in the service,
-while the hurried click of the pauls, and the quick revolutions of the
-windlass, as the chain-cable was hove short, showed that in the Captain’s
-opinion, as well as that of the Mate, quite time enough had been wasted
-already.
-
-But the golden opportunity had been lost. English tides respect no man,
-not even Russian ambassadors, and old Father Thames was yet to read them
-a lesson on the text—
-
- If you will not, when you may,
- When you will, you shall have Nay.
-
-While the vessel was riding to the ebb tide, as she had done all the
-morning, a warp which had been laid out from her port quarter would
-have canted her head well into the stream; and the tide, acting on her
-starboard bow while the after-part was in comparatively still water,
-would have winded her downwards, almost before her paddles were in
-motion, or her rudder could be brought to act. But the turn of the tide
-had reversed all this. The vessel had indeed swung to the flood, which by
-this time was rattling up at the rate of five or six miles an hour, and
-thus her bowsprit was looking the way she wanted to go; but a strong eddy
-was now bubbling up under her starboard bow, and pressing it towards the
-left bank, while a great lumbering Indiaman lay just ahead of her, and a
-Hamburgh steamer, which had anchored a little higher up on her starboard
-quarter, forbade all reversing of the engine and thus getting out of the
-mess stern foremost.
-
-The moment the anchor broke ground the helm was put hard a-port, and the
-paddles were set in motion; but though from the tide alone the rudder had
-some effect, the strength of the eddy was too much for her; round came
-her head to port, as if she were going to take a leap at the embankment.
-
-“Hard a-port!—hard a-starboard!—ease her!—stop her!—turn her a-head!”
-were the contradictory orders bawled out almost simultaneously. If noise
-and shouting could have got the steamer out of the scrape, there was no
-lack of it; but all these cries, energetic as they were, produced no
-effect whatever, beyond exciting a little suspicion in the mind of our
-travellers (some of whom having been at sea before, knew the stem of a
-ship from the stern) that the skipper was not altogether a “deacon in
-his craft;” and thus giving a point to the Mate’s silent but expressive
-shrug when the Parson had alluded to the shoals at the river’s mouth. At
-last, an indescribable sensation of grating, and a simultaneous volley
-of heterogeneous oaths, such as sailors shot their guns with on grand
-occasions, announced the fact that she had taken the ground abaft.
-
-This, however, as it turned out, was about the best thing that could
-have happened, for it gave the skipper time to collect his senses; or,
-what was more to the purpose, gave the Mate time to whisper in his ear;
-and the rising tide was sure to float her again in ten minutes. By this
-time a warp had been got out to a ship anchored upon the Surrey side,
-an expedient which any sailor would have thought of before tripping
-his anchor in the first instance. The end of it was passed round the
-windlass and hove taut, and as the rising water slowly lifted the unlucky
-vessel from her sludgy bed and a few turns brought a strain upon her,
-she gradually slewed her head outwards. The steam was turned on, the
-paddles went round; the black water began to fizz under her counter, as
-if a million of bottles of stout had been poured into it—she was at last
-a-weigh and fairly on her course, only about six hours after her proper
-time.
-
-“I tell you what,” said the Parson, as he dived down the companion to
-inspect the submarine arrangements of the cabin, “I leave this vessel at
-Christiansand, and I wish we were fairly out of her. This fellow knows no
-more of sea-craft than a tailor. Kind Providence shield us, or we shall
-come to grief yet!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE SHIPWASH SAND.
-
- “Our ship,
- Which but three glasses since we gave out split,
- Is tight and yare and bravely rigged, as when
- We first put out to sea.”
-
- _Tempest._
-
-
-One by one the travellers crept down to the cabin. It was as
-uncomfortable as cabins usually are, perhaps more so, as being more
-lumbered and more crowded; and the ordinary space for locomotion had been
-miserably curtailed by a large supplementary table, which the steward was
-lashing athwart ship for the dinner accommodation of the supernumerary
-passengers. These were standing about here and there, as helpless and
-uncomfortable as people always are on first starting, and were regarding
-one another with looks of suspicion and distrust, as people who start by
-a public conveyance always do regard one another.
-
-In this the English part of the community was prominently conspicuous.
-Denizens of a free land, it would seem as if they considered it as their
-bounden duty to be continually exhibiting their Magna Charta in the
-eyes of foreigners, and to maintain their just rights to the very death
-against all comers.
-
-No rights, however, were invaded—there was no opportunity of asserting
-the Magna Charta; all were equally shy and equally miserable; till, by
-degrees, as the steamer crept slowly down the river against the tide,
-they shook into their places, and the ladies began to smile, and the
-ladies’ maids to look gracious.
-
-The Parson was an old stager. Knowing full well the value of light and
-air in the present crowded state of the cabin, he had very willingly
-assented to the apologetic invitation of the steward, and had established
-himself comfortably enough on the transom itself, upon which was spread
-for his accommodation a horsehair mattress. There was no great deal to
-spare in the height of his domicile, for it was as much as he could
-conveniently manage to sit upright in it; but it was, at all events,
-retired, airy, and not subject to be suddenly evacuated by its occupant
-under the overpowering influence of a lee lurch or a weather roll.
-
-Totally disregarding the bustle and confusion in the cabin below him, he
-was occupied in arranging and beautifying his temporary home. The sill
-of one window formed his travelling library, the books of which he had
-been unpacking from his stores, and securing by a piece of spun yarn
-from the disagreeable consequences of any sudden send of the ship in a
-rolling sea. The next formed his toilet-table and workshop, exhibiting
-his reels and fly-books, and the huge and well-known “material book,” the
-replenishing of which had occupied so much of his attention. The third
-was left empty, so as to be opened and shut at pleasure.
-
-Stretched on his mattress, with a guide-book in his hand, and the map
-of Norway and Sweden at his side, he looked from his high abode on the
-turmoil of the cabin deck, with all the calmness and complacency with
-which the gods of the Epicureans are said to regard the troubles and
-distresses of mortals below.
-
-And thus wore on the day. Dinner, tea, had been discussed—some little
-portion of constraint and shyness had been rubbed off—small knots of men
-were formed here and there, discussing nothings and making conversation.
-Night sank down upon the steamer as she ploughed her way across the Nore,
-and the last of the talkers rolled himself up in his bedclothes, and
-tried, though for a long while in vain, to accustom himself to public
-sleeping.
-
-It was still dark—for the time was hardly three in the morning—when
-the Parson—who, accustomed to all the vicissitudes of travel, had been
-making the most of the hours of darkness, and had been for some time fast
-asleep—was suddenly startled from his dreams by a furious concussion on
-the rudder-case against which his head was pillowed. The vessel became
-stationary, and the fresh breezey hissing of the water in her wake and
-the tremulous motion everywhere suddenly ceased.
-
-“By George, she’s hard and fast!” said the Captain; who, taking hint
-from the comfortable appearance which the Parson had given to his own
-berth, had occupied the same position on the starboard side, and was now
-invading the Parson’s territories from abaft the rudder-case.
-
-“What the devil is to be done now?”
-
-“Nothing at all,” said the Parson; “it is no business of ours; and I am
-sure it is not time to get up yet.”
-
-“Well, but she has certainly struck on a sand.”
-
-“I know that as well as you,” said the Parson; “but you can’t get her
-off. Besides, there is not a bit of danger yet, at all events, for the
-sea is as smooth as a mill-pond. There they go, reversing their engine:
-much good that will do. If there was any truth in that bump I felt,
-she is much too fast aground for that. And the tide falling too!”—he
-continued, striking a lucifer and looking at his watch. “Yes, it is
-falling now, it has turned this hour or more.”
-
-By this time the hurried trampling and stamping on deck had roused up the
-passengers, few of whom could comprehend what had happened, for there
-was no appearance of danger, and the ship was as steady and firm as a
-house. But there is nothing more startling or suggestive of alarm than
-that rushing to and fro of men, so close to the ear, which sounds to the
-uninitiated as if the very decks were breaking up.
-
-“Is it houraccan storrm?” shouted Professor Rosenschall, a fat
-greasy-looking Dane, whom Birger had been hoaxing and tormenting all
-the day before, partly for fun, and partly because he considered it the
-bounden duty of a true Swede to plague a Dane—paying off the Bloodbath by
-instalments.
-
-“Steward!” shouted the Professor, above all the din and confusion of the
-cabin, “Steward, vinden er stærkere? is it houraccan storrm?”
-
-“Yes, Professor, I am sorry to say it is,” said Birger, who had rolled
-himself up in a couple of blankets under the table, upon which was
-reposing the weight of the Professor’s learning. “It is what we call an
-Irish hurricane—all up and down.”
-
-“All up! O what will become of me—and down! O, my poor wife. Hvilken
-skrækelig storrm,” he screamed out, as half-a-dozen men clapped on to the
-tackle falls over his head, with the very innocent purpose of lowering
-the quarter-boat, and began clattering and dashing down the coils of rope
-upon the deck. “Troer de at der er fore paa Færde?—do you think there is
-any danger?”
-
-What with the Professor’s shouting, and what with the real uncertainty of
-the case, and the natural desire that every one, even the most helpless,
-has to see their peril and to do something for themselves, every
-passenger was by this time astir, and the whole cabin was buzzing like a
-swarm of bees.
-
-The Parson’s idea of sleeping was altogether out of the question;
-and, the Captain having gone on deck, he very soon followed him; for,
-notwithstanding his assumed coolness, he was by no means so easy in his
-mind as he would have his friends to understand. He had been at sea
-before this, and was, at least, as well aware as they, that grounding out
-of sight of land, is a very different thing from grounding in the Thames.
-
-The scene on deck was desolate enough. The steamer had struck on the
-Shipwash, a dangerous shoal on the Essex coast, distant about twenty
-miles from land; and a single glance was sufficient to tell that there
-was not a chance of getting her off for the next twelve hours, though the
-Skipper was persisting in trying a variety of absurd expedients. The crew
-were looking anxious—the passengers were looking frightened; while the
-Skipper himself, who ought to have been keeping up every one’s spirits,
-was looking more wretched and more frightened than any one.
-
-The day was just breaking, but a fog was coming on, and the wind showed
-every symptom of freshening. The vessel, indeed, had begun to bump, but
-the tide leaving her, that motion left her also, and she began now to
-lie over on her bilge. From some unfortunate list she had got in her
-stowing (Birger declared it was the weight of the ambassador’s despatch
-boxes), she fell over to windward instead of to leeward, thus leaving her
-decks perfectly exposed to the run of the sea, if the wind should freshen
-seriously.
-
-When the Parson came on deck, the boats had just returned from sounding.
-The Skipper had, indeed, endeavoured to lay out an anchor with them—an
-object in which he might possibly have succeeded, had he tried it at
-first and before there was any great rush of tide, for the steamer had
-struck at the very turn of the flood; but he had wasted his time in
-reversing his engines and in backing and taking in sails which there was
-no wind to fill; and thus, before he had got his anchor lashed to the
-boat, which, like all passage steamers’ boats, was utterly inadequate for
-the work, the stream was strong enough to swamp boat, anchor, and all,
-and it was fortunate indeed that no lives were lost.
-
-It appeared from the soundings that the ship had not struck on the main
-shoal, but on a sort of spit or ridge, the neck of a submarine peninsula
-projecting from the S.W. corner of it. Almost under her bows was a deep
-turnhole or bay in the sand about two cables across, communicating with
-the open water, beyond which, right athwart her hawse, lay the main body
-of the shoal, so that the beacon which marked its northern extremity,
-and which was now beginning to show in the increasing light of the
-morning, lay broad on her port bow, while the other end of the shoal
-was well on her starboard beam; at half a cable length astern, and on
-her port quarter and beam was the deep water with which the turnhole
-communicated,—this being, in fact, the channel she ought to have kept.
-
-It was perfectly evident that nothing could be done till the top of
-the next tide, and whether anything could be done then was extremely
-problematical with the wind rising and the sea getting up; experience
-having already shown that there was not a boat in the steamer fit for
-laying out an anchor.
-
-However, for the present the water was smooth enough; they were for the
-time perfectly safe and comfortable, lying, as they did, under the lee of
-the shoal, patches of which were now beginning to show just awash; while
-the seas were breaking heavily enough certainly, but a full half-mile
-to windward of them. The passengers, seeing nothing to alarm them, and
-feeling their appetites well sharpened by their early rising, began to
-lose their fears and to be clamorous for breakfast; and the meal was
-served with a promptness which, under the circumstances, was perfectly
-astonishing.
-
-Those who know nothing fear nothing, and the jokes which were flying
-about and the general hilarity which pervaded the whole meeting, conveyed
-anything rather than the idea of shipwrecked mariners; though, truth
-to say, this feeling did not seem to be fully participated in by the
-Skipper, who presided at what might very fairly be called the head of the
-table, for it was many feet higher than the foot; he looked all the while
-as if he was seated on a cushion stuffed with bramble bushes.
-
-The Parson, by way, he said, of utilising his moments, was preparing for
-fishing—calculating, and rightly too, that the whiting would congregate
-under the lee of the stranded ship.
-
-He had made his preparations with characteristic attention to his own
-comfort and convenience. The dingy, which was hanging at the stern
-davits, formed at once his seat and his fishing-basket; and as he had
-eased off as much of the lee tackle fall as brought the boat to an even
-keel, the taffrail itself afforded him a shelter from the wind, which was
-now getting high enough to be unpleasant.
-
-There he sat, hour after hour, busily and very profitably employed,
-heeding the gradual advance and strengthening of the tide only so far as
-its increasing current required the use of heavier leads.
-
-The Captain and Birger had been trying to walk the sloping deck, a
-pursuit of pedestrianism under difficulties, for it was very much as
-if they had been trying to walk along the roof of a house. Time hangs
-heavily on the hands of those who have nothing to do, and there was
-nothing to do by the most active of sailors beyond hoisting the ensign
-union downwards, and that might just as well have been left undone too,
-for all the notice that was taken of it. Ship after ship passed by—the
-foreign traders to windward, the English through the shorter but more
-dangerous channel that lay between them and the main land. Many of them
-were quite near enough for anxious passengers to make out the people in
-them reconnoitring the position of the unfortunate _Walrus_ through their
-telescopes. But if they did look on her, certainly they passed by on the
-other side; it never seemed to enter into the heads of one of them to
-afford assistance.
-
-“Pleasant,” said Birger, “very. Is this the way your sailors help one
-another in distress?”
-
-“I am afraid so,” said the Captain.
-
- “Gayer insects fluttering by
- Ne’er droop the wing o’er those that die;
- And English tars have pity shown
- For every failure but their own.”
-
-“You do not mean to say that they will not help us if there really is
-danger?” said the Swede.
-
-“Upon my word, I hope there will not be any real danger; for if you
-expect any help from them, I can tell you that you will not get it.”
-
-“Not get it!” said Birger, who did not at all seem to relish the prospect
-before him.
-
-“That you will not. Sink or swim, we sink or swim by our own exertions.
-Those scoundrels could not help us without losing a whole tide up the
-river, a whole day’s pay of the men, and so much per cent. on the cargo,
-besides the chance of being forestalled in the market: do you think
-they would do that to save the lives of half-a-hundred such as you and
-me? Why, you have not learned your interest tables; you do not seem to
-understand how much twenty per cent. in a year comes to for a day. A
-precious deal more than our lives are worth, I can tell you.”
-
-Birger looked graver still; drowning for a soldier was not a professional
-death, and he did not relish the idea of it.
-
-The Captain continued his words of comfort. “I was very nearly losing a
-brother this way myself,” he said. “He was invalided from the coast of
-Africa, and had taken his passage home in a merchant vessel. They had
-met with a gale of wind off the Scillies; the ship had sprung a leak,
-and when the gale had subsided to a gentle easterly breeze dead against
-them, there were they within twenty miles of the Longships, water-logged,
-with all their boats stove, and their bulwarks gone. Timber ships do not
-sink very readily, and incessant pumping had kept them afloat, but it
-was touch and go with that—their decks awash, and the seas rolling in at
-one side and out at the other. While they were in this state, the whole
-outward-bound fleet of English ships passed them, some almost within
-hailing distance, and all without taking more notice of them than those
-scoundrels are taking of us. They would, all hands, have gone to the
-bottom together, in the very midst of their countrymen, if a French brig
-had not picked them off and carried them into Falmouth. It was so near a
-thing, that the vessel sank almost before the last boat had shoved off
-from her side.
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “if there is a selfish brute upon earth, it is an
-English sailor.”
-
-“Natural enough that you should say so, just at present,” said the
-Captain; “though, as a Swede, you might have recollected the superstition
-that prevails in your own country against helping a drowning man. But
-the fact is, the fault lies not so much with the sailors as with the
-insurance regulations at Lloyds’. Likely enough, every one of these
-fellows has a desire to help us; but if they go one cable’s length from
-their course to do so, or if they stay one half-hour by us when they
-might have been making their way to their port, they vitiate their
-insurance. Man is a selfish animal, no doubt—sea-going man as well
-as shore-going man—and it is very possible that some of them would
-rather see their neighbours perish than lose the first of the market;
-but laws such as these render selfishness imperatively necessary to
-self-preservation, and banish humanity from the maritime code.”
-
-“I wish all Lloyds’ were on the Shipwash,” said Birger, “and had to wait
-there till I picked them off.”
-
-“Yes,” said the Captain; “or that the House of Commons were compelled to
-take a winter’s voyage every year in some of these company’s vessels.
-I think, then, they might possibly find out the advantage of certain
-laws and certain officers to see them put in force, in order to prevent
-their going to sea so wretchedly found. There is nothing like personal
-experience for these legislators. This vessel has not a boat bigger than
-a cockle-shell belonging to her. Did you not hear how nearly the Mate was
-lost last night,—and he is the only real sailor in the ship—when they
-were trying to lay out an anchor—a manœuvre which, I see, they have not
-accomplished yet?”
-
-“Hallo! this is serious,” said Birger, as a heavy sea struck the weather
-paddle-box, and broke over them in spray: for the tide had been gradually
-rising, without, as yet, raising the ship; and, as she lay over to
-windward, the seas that now began to break upon her starboard bow and
-side, deluged her from stem to stern.
-
-“Upon my soul,” said the Captain, “I don’t like this, myself; and there
-sits the Parson, fishing away, as quietly as if he were on the pier at
-Boveysand. By Jove, Nero fiddling while Rome was burning, is a fool to
-him! Why, Parson, don’t you think there is some danger in all this?”
-
-“‘Er det noget Færde?’ as your friend the professor would say,” said the
-Parson, laughing. “I do not think it improbable that the _Walrus_ will
-leave her bones here, if you mean that.—Stop, I’ve got another bite!”
-
-“Confound your bite! If she leaves her bones here, we shall leave ours
-too; for she has not boats for the fourth of us, the devil take them! and
-as for expecting help from these rascally colliers——”
-
-“You may just as well fiddle to the dolphins,” said the Parson. “I know
-that; but do you see that little cutter,—that fellow, I mean, on our
-quarter, that has just tacked? and there beyond her is another, that is
-now letting fly her jib-sheet. I have been watching those fellows all
-the morning, beating out from Harwich. They are having a race, and a
-beautiful race they make of it: you cannot tell yet which has the best of
-it. If those cutters were going over to the Dutch coast, you may depend
-upon it they would not make such short boards. There—look—the leading one
-is in stays again. Those fellows are racing for us, and with our ensign
-Union down, as we have it, we shall make a pretty good prize for the one
-that gets first to us. Those two are pilot-boats. You may depend upon it,
-we are not going to lay our bones here, whatever comes of the _Walrus_.”
-
-The Parson’s anticipations were realised sooner than he expected, for a
-long low life-boat, that nobody had seen till she was close alongside,
-came up, carrying off the prize from both competitors—and preparations
-were begun, which ought to have been completed hours before, for laying
-out an anchor.
-
-Before long, the cutters also had worked up and anchored on the lee edge
-of the shoal, to the great relief of every one on board; for the seas
-were by this time making such a breach over her, that no one could be
-ignorant of the danger.
-
-Suddenly, and without preparation, she righted, throwing half the
-passengers off their legs, and very nearly precipitating the Parson into
-the sea; who took that as a hint to leave his seat in the dingy. Soon
-afterwards she began to bump, first lightly, and then more heavily, and
-the paddles were set in motion. The windlass was manned and worked;
-but the shifting sand afforded no good holding-ground for the anchor,
-which had not been backed—nor, indeed, had any precautions been taken
-whatever—and as soon as there was any strain upon it, it came home and
-was perfectly useless.
-
-The ship now was hanging a little abaft the chess-tree, on the very top
-of the spit; but the stern was free, and the bows were actually in the
-deep water of the turnhole, while at every bump she gained an inch or
-two: just then, the anchor coming home, and the tide taking her under the
-port bow, she ran up in the wind, and pointed for the very centre of the
-shoal.
-
-“Why the devil don’t you set your jib?” bellowed out the Captain, who had
-begun to get excited. “Where the deuce is that know-nothing Skipper of
-yours?”
-
-“Upon my soul, sir, I do not know,” said the Mate, who was standing at
-the wheel, and was looking very anxiously forward.
-
-“Then why don’t you go forward and set it yourself? We shall be on the
-main shoal in two minutes, if she floats.”
-
-“I know it, sir,” said the Mate; “but I dare not leave my post. We shall
-all have to answer for this; and if I am not where the Skipper has placed
-me, he will throw the blame upon me.”
-
-“Then, by George, I don’t care _that_ for your Skipper. Come along, boys,
-we’ll run up the jib ourselves.”
-
-And away he rushed, pushing and shouldering his way along the crowded
-decks, among idlers, and horses, and carriages, followed by his own
-party, and a good many of the foreigners also; till he emerged on the
-forecastle, when, throwing down the jib and fore-staysail hallyards from
-the bitts and clattering them on the deck, while the Parson went forward
-to see all clear, he called out to the Russian servants, who, wet and
-frightened, were cowering under the carriages—
-
-“Here, you slaveys, come out of that—_clappez-vous sur ceci_—clap on
-here, you rascals—_rousez-vous dehors de ces bulwarks_. What the devil is
-Greek for ‘skulking?’”
-
-Whether the Russians understood one word of the Captain’s French,
-or whether they would have understood one word of it had they been
-Frenchmen, may be doubted; but his actions were significant enough; and
-the men, who only wanted to be told what to do, clapped on to the jib and
-fore-staysail hallyards as well and as eagerly as if they had known what
-was to be done with them; here and there, too, was seen a blue-jacket,
-for the seamen had no wish to skulk, if there had been any one to command
-them.
-
-“Gib mig ropes enden!” shouted Professor Rosenschall, who had caught the
-enthusiasm, and was panting after them, though a long way astern.
-
-“Birger will do that for you,” said the Parson, laughing, but without
-pausing for one moment from his work—“Birger! the Professor wants a
-rope’s-end.”
-
-“Vær saa artig!” said Birger, tendering him the signal hallyards,
-the bight of which he had hitched round a spare capstan-bar on which
-he was standing. For Birger, like most Swedish soldiers, had passed a
-twelvemonth in a midshipman’s berth, where, whatever seamanship he had
-picked up, he had, at all events, learned plenty of mischief.
-
-“Away with you!” roared the Captain. “Up with the sails—both of them.”
-
-“Skynda! Professor, Skynda!” echoed Birger, leaping off the capstan-bar
-as he spoke, and thus causing the Professor to pitch headlong among the
-trampling men.
-
-“Up with it! up with it, cheerily! look there, she pays off already!”
-as the two sails flew out; the jib, which was not confined by any stay,
-bagging away to leeward and hanging there, but still drawing and doing
-good service. “Up with it, boys—round she comes, like a top! Hurrah,
-that’s elegant!” as a sea struck her full on the quarter, which, by her
-paying off, had now become exposed to it. On it came, breaking over the
-taffrail and deluging the idlers on the poop, but at the same time giving
-her the final shove off the ridge. “Off she goes! Shout, boys, shout! and
-wake up that Skipper, wherever he is!”
-
-And amid the most discordant yells that ever proceeded from heterogeneous
-voices—Danish, Dutch, Swedish, German, and Russ, above which, distinct
-and ringing, rose the heart-stirring English cheer—the steamer, once more
-under command of her rudder, buzzed, and dashed her way into the open
-sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE LANDFALL.
-
- “Bewilderedly gazes
- On the wild sea, the eagle
- When he reaches the strand:
- So is it with the man;
- In the crowd he standeth
- And hath but few friends there.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-“Nothing gives one so lively an idea of eternal, irresistible progress—of
-steady, inexorable, unalterable fate, as the ceaseless grinding of these
-enormous engines.” Thus moralised Birger, as, two days after the events
-recorded in the last chapter, he stood with his brother officer, the
-Captain, on the grating that gave air into the engine-room. “In joy or in
-sorrow, in hope or in fear, on they go—grinding—grinding, never stopping,
-never varying, never hurrying themselves:—the same quiet, irresistible
-round over and over again: we go to bed—we leave them grinding; we get
-up—there they are, grinding still; we are full of hope, and joy, and
-expectancy, looking out for land and its pleasures—they go no faster;
-they would go no faster if we went to grief and misery. If you or I
-were to fall dead at this moment, the whole ship would be in an uproar,
-every man of them all showing his interest, or his curiosity, one way or
-other—but still would go on, through it all, that eternal, everlasting
-grinding.”
-
-“Everlasting it is,” said the Captain, who was not at all poetical,
-and who was anxious to be at his journey’s end. “This steamer is the
-very slowest top I have ever had the misfortune to sail in. By every
-calculation we should have made the coast of Norway ages ago; I have
-been on the look out for it ever since daylight; but six, seven, eight,
-nine, and no coast yet. Breakfast over, and here are your everlasting
-wheels of fate grinding away, and not one bit nearer land, as far as
-I can see, than they were before. I’ll be hanged if the wind is not
-getting northerly too,” he said, looking up, as the fore and aft foresail
-over their head gave a flap, as if it would shake the canvas out of the
-bolt-ropes. “I thought so. Look at them brailing up the mainsail! wind
-and steam together, we never got seven knots out of this tub; I wonder
-what we shall get now—and the sea getting up too?”
-
-Several consecutive pitches, which set the horses kicking, and prostrated
-one-half of the miserable, worn-out, dirty-looking deck passengers,
-seemed fully to warrant the Captain’s grumbling assertion, and they
-scrambled back to the poop; upon which most of the passengers were by
-this time congregated, for the sun was shining out brightly, and the
-wind, though there was plenty of it, was fresh and bracing.
-
-They had evidently by this time opened the north of Scotland, for the
-slow, heaving swell of the Northern Ocean was rolling in upon them; and
-this, meeting the windwash knocked up by the last night’s south-easterly
-breeze, was making a terrible commotion in the ship, and everything and
-everybody belonging to it.
-
-“Land! land!” shouted the Parson, who had climbed upon the weather
-bulwarks, and was holding on by the vang to steady his footing. “Land, I
-see it now; where could our eyes have been? There it is, like blue clouds
-rising out of the water.”
-
-There was a general move and a general crowding towards the spot to
-which he was pointing, but just then the ship pitched bowsprit and bows
-under, jerking the Parson off his legs; upsetting every passenger who had
-nothing to hold on by, and submerging half-a-dozen men on the jib-boom,
-who were occupied in stowing the now useless jib. They rose from their
-involuntary bath puffing and blowing, and shaking the water from their
-jackets, but continuing their work as if nothing had happened.
-
-There, however, was the land, beyond a doubt. No Cape Flyaway, but
-land—bold, decided, and substantial. Whether it was that people had
-not looked for it in the right direction, or had not known what to look
-for; or whether, as was most likely, a haze had hung over the morning
-sea, which the sun had now risen high enough to dispel; whatever was the
-cause, there stood the hitherto invisible land, speaking of hope and joy,
-and quiet dinners, and clean beds, and creating a soul under the ribs of
-sea-sickness.
-
-Long, however, it was before they neared it,—hour after hour; and
-Birger’s everlasting wheels went grinding on, and the mountains seemed no
-higher and no plainer than they were when the Parson had first descried
-them. But the day had become much more enjoyable, the wind had moderated,
-and the swell was less felt, as the land began to afford some protection.
-
-The Captain and his friend Birger had by this time established themselves
-on the break of the poop, with their sketch-books in their hands,
-nominally to sketch the outline of the land, really to caricature the
-Russian magnates during their hours of marine weakness. While Monsieur
-Simonet, one of the numerous tutors, a venturesome Frenchman, climbed
-warily up the main shrouds to get a better view, creeping up step by
-step, ascertaining the strength of each rattlin before he ventured his
-weight upon it, and holding on to the shrouds like grim Death. Quietly
-and warily stole after him the Mate, with a couple of stout foxes hitched
-round his left arm.
-
-“Faith,” said Birger, “they are going to make a spread-eagle of him.
-Well, that is kind; it will prepare him for his new country; it is in
-compliment to Russia, I suppose, that they turn him into the national
-device.”
-
-But the Mate had reckoned without his host. The Frenchman made a capital
-fight for it, and in the energy of his resistance, entirely forgot his
-precarious position; he kicked, he cuffed, he fought gallantly, and
-finally succeeded in seizing his adversary’s cap, a particularly jaunty
-affair with gold lace round it, in imitation of her Majesty’s navy, of
-which the Mate was especially proud. This, the Frenchman swore by every
-saint the Revolution had left in his calendar, he would heave overboard;
-and before the Captain had completed the little sketch he was taking of
-the transaction, a capitulation was entered into by the belligerents upon
-the principle of the _statu quo_, and the discomfited Mate descended,
-leaving his adversary to enjoy at once his position and his victory.
-
-By this time sails, unseen before, had begun to dot the space which still
-intervened between the steamer and the iron-bound coast before it, which
-now rose stern and rugged, and desolately beautiful, clothed everywhere
-with a sort of rifle-green, from the dark hues of the fir and juniper,
-for none but the hardy evergreens could bear the severe blasts of even
-its southern aspect; few and far between were these sails at first, and
-insignificant did they seem under the abrupt and lofty mountains which
-rose immediately out of the sea, without any beach or coast-line, or
-low-land whatever; but, as they neared the land, the moving objects
-assumed a more conspicuous place in the landscape.
-
-There was the great heavy galliasse with pigs from Bremen or colonial
-produce from Hamburg—a sort of parallelogram with the corners rounded,
-such as one sees in the pictures of the old Dutch school two hundred
-years ago—not an atom of alteration or improvement in its build since
-the days of old Van Tromp; the same flat floor and light draft of
-water—the same lumbering lee-boards—the same great, stiff, substantial,
-square-rigged foremast, with a little fore and aft mizen, which looked
-like an after-thought; she might be said to be harrowing the main instead
-of ploughing it, according to our more familiar metaphor, with a great
-white ridge of foam heaped up under her bows, and a broad, ragged wake
-like that of a steamer.
-
-And there was the Norwegian brig returning from Copenhagen with a cargo
-of corn for Christiansand; rough and ill-found, nine times in ten not
-boasting so much as a foretop-gallant sail, yet tight and seaworthy, and
-far better than she looked; built after the model of a whale’s body,
-full forward and lean aft, with a stern so narrow that she looked as if
-she had been sailing through the Symplegades, and had got pinched in the
-transit.
-
-Then came a fleet of a dozen jagts from the north, the tainted breezes
-advertising their fishy cargo, as they came along. These were the
-originals of the English yacht, which unspellable word is merely the
-Norwegian _jagt_, written as it is pronounced in the country, for Norway
-is the only nation besides England that takes its pleasure on the deep
-sea. With their single great unwieldy sails, their tea-tray-shaped hulls,
-and towering sterns, they looked like a boy’s first essays in the art of
-ship-building.
-
-But Bergen furnishes a far more ship-shape description of craft—sharp
-fore and aft vessels are the Bergeners, looking as if they had all been
-built on the same lines, with little, low bulwarks, and knife-like
-cutwaters, as if they were intended to cut through the seas rather than
-to ride over them, sailing almost in the wind’s eye, and, when very
-close hauled indeed, a point on the other side of it—at least, so their
-skippers unanimously assert, and they ought to know best,—at all events,
-ensuring a wet jacket to every one on board, be the weather as fine as it
-may, from the time they leave the port to the time they return to it.
-
-Then came, crowding all sail and looking as if they were rigged for
-a regatta, with their butterfly summer gear and tapering spars, the
-lobster smacks from Lyngör, and Osterisö, and Arendahl, and Hellesund:
-and a regatta it was on a large scale, with the wide North Sea for a
-race-course, omnivorous London for the goal, and its ever-fluctuating
-markets for a prize. These were sharp, trim-looking vessels, admirably
-handled, and not unworthy of a place in the lists of any Royal Yacht
-Club for beauty or for speed; somewhat less sharp, perhaps, than the
-Bergeners, but scarcely less weatherly or sitting less lightly on the
-seas.
-
-The near approach to the land, which had been for so many hours looked
-for in vain, seemed to bring no great comfort to the unfortunate Skipper,
-who kept fidgetting about the decks with a perplexed and anxious
-countenance. Glasses were brought on deck, and rubbed and polished over
-and over again, and directed in succession to every mountain peak that
-showed itself, and every inlet that opened before them. Then, little
-mysterious consultations were held between the Skipper and his First
-Mate; then, one man was sent for, then another; then more whispering,
-and more mystery, more shaking of the heads and examination of charts;
-then an adjournment to the bridge, on which the Parson was then standing,
-taking his survey of the craft in sight, and enjoying the sunshine.
-At last, the whispering took a more objurgatory tone; more in the way
-of a growl, with now and then a short, emphatic sentence of eternal
-condemnation on somebody’s eyes, or blood, or other personalities,—as is
-the custom of those who “go down to the sea in ships.”
-
-The first distinct words which met the Parson’s ear, came from the lips
-of the Skipper, pronounced in a sharp, acid, querulous sort of tone; such
-as superiors sometimes indulge in, when they are fixing on the shoulders
-of an inferior the blame they shrewdly suspect all the while, ought, if
-justice had its due, to rest on their own.
-
-“You are not worth your salt, sir,” he said; “you are not worth your
-salt—you ought to be ashamed of wearing a blue jacket, you know-nothing,
-lubberly ...” and so forth; expressions by no means unusual at sea,
-certainly, but sounding somewhat misplaced in the present instance,
-inasmuch as if there was any one in the whole ship not worth his salt,
-the speaker certainly was the man, in his own proper person.
-
-“Upon my soul, sir,” said the man addressed, “if I tried to tell you
-anything about it, I should be only deceiving you. I know the coast about
-Christiansand as well as any man. I have traded to that port for years,
-and taken the old brig in and out twenty times; but the land before us is
-all strange to me. I never saw those three hummocky hills before in my
-life. This is not Christiansand.”
-
-“Well, but if it is not, does Christiansand lie east or west of us—which
-way am I to steer?”
-
-The man raised his glass again, and took a long and anxious survey, but
-apparently with no better result.
-
-“Really, sir, I cannot say. I cannot make it out at all; there is not one
-single sea-mark that I know.”
-
-“Then what the devil did you ship for as a pilot, if you knew nothing
-of your business?” Here followed another strong detachment of marine
-expletives.
-
-“I shipped as a pilot for Christiansand, sir; and, for the Sound, and for
-Copenhagen; and can take the steamer into any one of them, if she drew
-as much as a first-rate; but this place is neither one nor the other of
-them, and I never called myself a coasting pilot.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “this seems to me sad waste of breath and
-temper; if you are a couple of lost babes, why do you not ask your way?
-There lies a pilot-boat, as you may see with your own eyes,” pointing to
-a little cutter exhibiting in the bright sunshine a single dark cloth in
-a very white mainsail, which, with her foresheet to windward, lay bobbing
-about in the swell right ahead of them. “That is a pilot-boat, and I
-suppose she knows the way, if you do not—why do you not hail her?”
-
-The Skipper looked askance at the Parson, as if he meditated some not
-very complimentary reply about minding one’s own business; for, conscious
-of the estimation in which he was himself held by the fishing party, who
-were in no way chary of their remarks, he regarded them with anything
-but friendly feelings. But the advice was too obviously sound to be
-neglected, and the Skipper was not by any means anxious that the magnates
-on the poop should become acquainted with the fact that he was at sea in
-more senses than one.
-
-In a few minutes the steamer was alongside the little shrimp of a cutter,
-taking the wind out of her sails by her huge unwieldy hull.
-
-A short conversation passed between them, which as one-half was sworn
-down the wind in very loud English, and the other half came struggling up
-in broad Norske, was not attended with any very satisfactory results.
-
-Birger offered his services.
-
-“You may as well ask them what they will take us into Christiansand for,”
-said the Skipper; “that will soon make them find their English.”
-
-A few more unintelligible words were exchanged, and Birger burst out
-laughing.
-
-“They cannot do it,” he said: “they cannot take us into Christiansand:
-not only they are not able, but they are not licensed to ply so far.”
-
-“Why! where are we, then?” said the astonished Skipper.
-
-“Off Arendahl!” said Birger.
-
-“Arendahl!” broke in the Parson, “why, that is fifty miles to the
-westward of your course.”
-
-“Well, I cannot conceive how that can be,” said the Skipper. “Something
-wrong, I am afraid, with the compasses. We ought not to be so far out; we
-steered a straight course, and—”
-
-“That did you not,” said Birger, “whatever else you did; the Captain and
-I have been studying the theory of transcendental curves from your wake.”
-
-“I can tell you how it is,” said the Parson; “you have steered your
-course as you say, and have not allowed for the easterly set of the
-current, and you imagine how this must have acted upon us under the
-influence of these rolling swells which we have had on our port bow ever
-since daylight, every one of which must have set us down a fathom or
-two to leeward. Don’t you recollect that we lost three line-of-battle
-ships coming home from the Baltic by this very blunder. Compasses!” he
-continued, _sotto voce_, “a pretty lot of blunders are thrown on those
-unfortunate compasses, in every court-martial. However,” he continued,
-aloud, “there is no help for it,—thankful ought we to be it is no worse;
-there is but one thing to be done now, and what that one thing is, you
-know as well as I.”
-
-This the Skipper did know. A close survey of the remaining coals took
-place, and it was decided that notwithstanding the expenditure that took
-place on the day on the Shipwash, there might, with economy, be enough
-for six hours’ consumption, Birger inquiring innocently, “whether the
-Skipper had not anything that would burn in his own private stores?”
-
-The steamer’s course was accordingly altered nine or ten points, for
-the coast from Arendahl to Christiansand trends southerly, and she had
-actually overshot her mark, and gone to the northward as well as to the
-eastward of her port, so that land which had hitherto lain before them,
-was thus brought abaft the starboard beam.
-
-To those who, like our fishermen, were not exactly making a passage,
-but exploring the country, and to whom it was a matter of indifference
-whether they dined at five or supped at eleven, the Skipper’s blunder was
-anything but an annoyance. It afforded them an opportunity, not often
-enjoyed, of seeing the outside coast of Norway; for in general, almost
-all the coasting trade, and all the passenger traffic, is carried on
-within the fringe of islands that guard the shores. An absolute failure
-in the article of fuel, and a week or so of calm within a few miles of
-their port, might have been a trial to their tempers; but there was no
-such temptation to grumbling on the present occasion; and, besides, the
-afternoon and evening were bright and warm, the wind had sunk to a calm,
-and though the ever restless sea was heaving and setting, the swells had
-become glassy, soft, and regular.
-
-Cape after cape, island after island of that inhospitable coast was
-passed, and not a sign of habitation, not a town, not a village, not even
-a fisherman’s cottage, or a solitary wreath of smoke was to be seen. The
-land seemed utterly uninhabited, and, as they drew out from the stream of
-trade, the very sea seemed tenantless also.
-
-The fact is, that the whole coast of Norway, and of Sweden also, is
-fringed with islands, in some places two or three deep, which are
-separated from the main and from each other by channels more or less
-broad, but always deep. Of these islands, the outer range is seldom
-inhabited at all, never on the seaward sides, which, exposed to the first
-sweep of the southwester, are either bare, bold rocks, or else nourish on
-their barren crags a scanty clothing of stunted fir or ragged juniper,
-but afford neither food nor shelter, and where that necessary of life,
-fresh water, is very rarely to be met with.
-
-The whole of the coasting trade passes within this barrier, and the
-houses and villages, of which there are many, lie hidden on the sheltered
-shores of the numerous channels; so that, however well peopled the coast
-may be—and in some places population is by no means scanty—neither house,
-nor boat, nor ship, except the foreign trade as it approaches or leaves
-the coast, is ever seen by the outside coaster.
-
-The shades of evening were already falling, and that at midsummer in
-Norway indicates a very late hour indeed, when the glimmer of a light
-was seen through the scrubby firs of a cape-land island, occasioning a
-general rush of expectant passengers to the bridge, for some had begun
-to doubt the very possibility of discovering this continually retreating
-port, and to class it with the fairy territories of Cloudland and Cape
-Flyaway; while others, with more practical views and less poetical
-imaginations, had been contemplating with anxiety the rapidly decreasing
-coals in the bunkers. Both parties, poets and utilitarians alike, had
-their fears set at rest when, on rounding the point, the long-lost
-lighthouse of Christiansand hove in sight—tall, white, pillar-like,
-looking shadowy and ghost-like, against the dark background behind it.
-The poets might have thought of the guardian spirit of some ancient sea
-king, permitted to watch over the safety of his former dwelling-place,
-for Christiansand is renowned in story. To the utilitarians it might, and
-probably did, suggest visions of fresh vegetables, and salmon, and cod,
-and lobsters, for all of which that town is famous.
-
-A bare, low, treeless slab of rock forms its site, a mere ledge, about
-a quarter-of-a-mile long, and sufficiently low, and sufficiently in
-advance of the higher islands, to form in itself a danger of no small
-magnitude during the long winter nights. It maintains on its withered
-wiry grass half-a-dozen sheep and a pig or two, the property of the
-lighthouse-keeper, which being the first signs of life and vestiges
-of habitation which had greeted the travellers during the afternoon’s
-steaming, were regarded with an interest of which they were not
-intrinsically deserving.
-
-In a very few minutes, the heaving of the outside sea was exchanged
-for the perfect calm and deep stillness of the harbour, with its
-overhanging woods, its long dusky reaches, its quiet inlets, and
-mysterious labyrinthine passages, among its dark, shadowy islands. These
-became higher and more wooded as the steamer wound her way among them,
-deepening the gloom, and bringing on more rapidly the evening darkness.
-All, however, looked deserted and uninhabited, till suddenly, on
-opening a point of land, high and wooded like all the rest, the town of
-Christiansand lay close before them, dark and indistinct in the midnight
-twilight, without the twinkle of a solitary lamp to enliven it, or to
-indicate the low houses from the rocks which surrounded and were confused
-with them.
-
-“Hurrah!” said the Parson, as the plunge of the anchor and the rattle of
-the chain cable broke the stillness of the night. “Some of us are not
-born to be drowned, that is certain.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-CHRISTIANSAND.
-
- “Dark it is without,
- And time for our going.”
-
- _Skirnis Fär._
-
-
-At the time the _Walrus_ dropped her anchor, all seemed as still and
-lonely as if no sound had ever awakened the silence of the harbour. The
-chain cable, as it rattled through the hawse-hole, had even a startling
-effect, so solitary, so unusual was the sound. The place seemed as if
-it had been uninhabited since creation; for though the town lay close
-before it, the houses, low and lightless, looked like a collection of
-fantastic rocks; but scarcely had she felt the strain of her cable, when
-her stern swung into the middle of a group of boats, which seemed as
-if they had risen from the depths of the sea, so sudden and unexpected
-was their appearance, and crowds of earnest, business-like, trafficing
-Norsemen were clambering up her sides at every practical point. Norway
-has no inns, and Norway is said to be a place of universal hospitality,
-where every one is delighted to receive the wandering guest—and so every
-one is, and delighted to receive the wandering guest’s money also, with
-two or three hundred per cent. profit on the outlay. The real fact is,
-every house in Norway is an inn, to all intents and purposes, except the
-license; and in places like Christiansand, every man is his own touter.
-Whatever is the noise and confusion of a vessel arriving at a French or
-Flemish port, on this occasion it was doubled, not only from the number
-and assiduity of hospitable hosts, but also from the unusual quantity and
-quality of the passengers. It was not every day that a Russian ambassador
-graced with his august presence, and his distinguished suite, an obscure
-trading town of Norway; and its citizens, inferior to no nation in the
-world in the art of turning an honest penny, were in two moments as well
-aware of the fact, and as fully determined to profit by it, as the Dutch
-landlady, who, having charged our second George the value of ten pounds
-sterling English for his two eggs and his bit of toast, informed him that
-though eggs were plentiful in her country, kings were not.
-
-The confusion which pervaded the _Walrus’s_ decks and cabins, the cries,
-the calls, the screams that were flying about unheeded; the extraordinary
-oaths that jostled one another, out of every language of Saxon, Russian,
-or Scandinavian origin; the obtrusive civilities of the touters; the
-officiousness of volunteering porters; the mistakes about luggage; the
-anxieties, the rushings to and fro, in which everybody is seeking for
-everybody, may easily be imagined; and none the less was the confusion of
-tongues; that night had thrown her veil over this floating Babel of the
-North.
-
-But through it all the three friends sat on their carpet bags of
-patience, smoking the cigar of peace, now and then making a joke among
-themselves, as the steward’s lantern flashed upon some face of unusual
-solicitude, but totally unconcerned amid the fluctuating hubbub that
-surrounded them.
-
-“Well,” said the Captain, “I have had enough of this fun, and am hungry
-besides; I vote we go on shore. I suppose your man is here?”
-
-The Parson got up, and, putting his head over the side, shouted in
-a stentorian voice, through his hand, which he used as a speaking
-trumpet—“Ullitz! Ullitz!”
-
-“Hulloh!” returned a voice from the dark waters, in the unmistakably
-English man-of-war’s fashion—“Hulloh!” repeated the voice.
-
-“Shove alongside here, under the quarter,” said the Parson. “Who have you
-got in the boat along with you? Tom Engelsk for one, I am sure.”
-
-“Only Tom and Torkel; I thought that would be enough,” said a voice from
-the waters below, in remarkably good English, in which the foreign
-accent was scarcely perceptible.
-
-“Quite enough,” said the Parson; “look out there!” as he hove the slack
-of the quarter-boat’s after-tackle fall, which he had been making up into
-coils as he was speaking. “Tell English Tom to shin up that, and come on
-board: it is nothing for an English man-of-war’s man to do, and one of
-you hold on by the rope.”
-
-Tom, active as a cat, and delighted at being spoken of as an English
-man-of-war’s man before so many English people, scrambled up the side and
-stood before them, with his shallow tarpaulin hat in hand, as perfectly
-an English sailor, so far as his habiliments were concerned, as if he had
-dressed after the model of T. P. Cooke.
-
-The man’s real name was Thorsen, and his birthplace the extreme wilds
-of the Tellemark; but having served for five years on board an English
-man-of-war, he had dropped his patronymic, and delighted in the name of
-English Tom; by which, indeed, he was generally known.
-
-“Tom,” said the Parson, “you see to this luggage; count all the parcels;
-see that you have it all safe; pass it through the custom-house, and
-let us see you and it to-morrow morning. And now, he who is for a good
-supper, a smiling hostess, a capital bottle of wine, and clean sheets,
-follow me.”
-
-As he spoke, he dropped his carpet bag over the side which Ullitz caught,
-and disappeared down the rope by which Tom had ascended, followed
-implicitly by his two companions.
-
-“Shove off, Ullitz,” said he, as the Captain sat himself down and poised
-Tom’s oar in his hands, pointing it man-of-war fashion as Tom himself
-would have done, and when Ullitz had got clear of the steamer, seconding
-ably the sturdy strokes of Torkel. In a few moments the boat touched the
-quay of the fish market, and the party sprang on shore with all the glee
-that shore-going people feel when released from the thraldom of a crowded
-vessel.
-
-Ullitz and Torkel remained behind, in order to secure the boat in some
-dark nook best known to themselves; for there were several idlers on the
-fish-market quay, who, except for want of conveyance, would have been at
-that moment unnecessarily adding to the crowd on board, and were not very
-likely to be over-scrupulous about Torkel’s private property.
-
-The three friends, in the meanwhile, in order to extricate themselves
-from two or three groups of drunken men (drunkenness, the Parson
-remarked, was the normal state of Norway, at that time of night), pressed
-forward, and walked ankle-deep through the sandy desert, which, in
-Christiansand, is called a street, the Captain stuffing the little black
-pipe which, as was his wont, he carried in his waistcoat pocket.
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “no one can appreciate a blessing until he has been
-deprived of it. I declare, it is a luxury in itself to be able to go
-where one pleases, after having been cribbed and cabined and confined
-as we have been, and to plant one’s feet on the solid earth once more,
-instead of balancing our steps on a dancing plank.”
-
-“Pretty well, to call this solid earth,” said the Captain; “I should call
-it decidedly marine.”
-
-“Something like the Christiansanders themselves,” said Birger, “who, as
-all the world knows, are neither fish nor flesh, nor good red-herring;
-but I dare say Purgatory would be Paradise to those who arrived at it
-from the other way. Well, what is the matter? what are you stopping
-about?”
-
-These last words were addressed to the Parson, who having been sent
-forward on the previous summer to spy out this Land of Promise, had
-volunteered to act as guide.
-
-“If there is one thing more puzzling than another,” said he, “it is this
-rectangular arrangement of streets. I wish those utilitarian Yankees, who
-claim the invention, had it all to themselves. It is fit only for them.”
-
-“The English of that is, you have lost your way,” said the Captain.
-
-“No, not lost my way,” said the Parson, who piqued himself on his organ
-of locality; “but the fact is, I cannot remember, in the dark, which of
-all these rectangular crossings is the right one. I wish I could see
-that great lump of a church they are so proud of. I say, Birger, knock up
-some one, and ask ‘if Monsieur Tonson lodges there.’”
-
-“Not I,” said Birger. “You are the guide; besides, they must be coming
-ashore, some of them, from the steamer by this time; and, in good truth,
-here are a couple of them.”
-
-This couple, much to their relief, turned out to be Ullitz and Torkel,
-who pointed out the road at once, but looked rather grave at the
-Captain’s pipe, which was now sending forth a bright red glow through the
-darkness, and occasionally illuminating a budding moustache which he was
-cultivating on the strength of being a military man.
-
-Had the acquaintance been of longer standing, they possibly would have
-spoken out; as it was, they contented themselves with a muttered dialogue
-in their own language, in which the Parson soon made out the words,
-“Tobacco” and “Police,” both of which being modern inventions, bear
-nearly the same name in every language in Europe.
-
-“By the by, I had forgotten that,” said he. “Captain, I am sorry to put
-your pipe out; but the fact is, you must not smoke.”
-
-“Not smoke! why not?”
-
-“For fear you should set fire to the town,” said the Parson,—“that is
-all. You need not laugh; the law is very strict about it, I can tell you.”
-
-The Captain did burst out laughing; and, in truth, where they were
-standing, it seemed a ridiculous law enough, though it is pretty general
-both in Norway and Sweden. The street was one of unusual width, being
-one expanse of sand from side to side, and the houses, none of which
-boasted a storey above the ground floor, seemed absurdly distant,—almost
-indistinct in the darkness.
-
-The Captain, however, obediently put his pipe into its receptacle,
-and resumed his route, muttering something about Warner and the long
-range—his estimate of the Norwegian legislative capacity being in no way
-raised by the sight of certain small tubs of very dirty water standing by
-the side of every house door, which the Parson informed him was another
-precaution against fire.
-
-“Whether there really is to be found any one, well authenticated instance
-of a town being set on fire by a pipe of tobacco,” said Birger, “I will
-not take it upon myself to say, nor whether legislating upon pipes and
-leaving kitchen fires to take care of themselves, be not like guarding
-the spigot and forgetting the bung; but the fires here, when they do
-occur, are really awful. You talk in your country of twenty or thirty
-houses as something; we burn a town at a time. Everything here is of
-deal, every bit of this deal is painted, and in a season like this,
-everything you meet with is as dry as tinder, and heated half-way to
-the point of combustion already. Hark to that!” as a sharp, startling
-crack sounded close by them; “that is the wood strained and expanded by
-the roasting heat of a long summer’s day, yielding now to the change of
-temperature; we shall have plenty of these towards morning. Light up but
-one of these little bonfires of houses in a moderate breeze, and see
-how every house in the town will be burning within half-an-hour. Six
-months ago, the capital of my own province, Wenersborg, contained 10,000
-inhabitants, and I believe now the church and the post-house are the only
-two buildings left in it.”
-
-Here Ullitz, who was leading, came to a dead halt before a substantial
-porch containing wood enough to build a ship, from the open door of
-which a bright light was streaming across the street. Taking off his
-hat—every Norwegian is continually taking off his hat to everybody and
-everything—he made a profound bow to the party in general, and with the
-words, “Vær saa artig,” ushered them into the house.
-
-The room into which they entered was long and low, the ceiling supported
-by a mass of timbers like the decks of a ship; every part of it was
-planked with bright deal,—floor, walls, and roof alike,—putting one
-something in mind of the inside of a deal box. It was, however, well
-furnished with birchen tables, birchen sofas chairs and cabinets (for
-birch is a wood that takes a high polish), the whole having rather a
-French look. The floor was uncarpeted, as is the case in almost all
-Norwegian houses, for they have no carpet manufactory of their own, and
-the duty upon English woollens is so enormous that it is impossible
-to import them; but it was strewed with sprigs of green juniper, which
-diffused a pleasant fragrance; and these, in token that the family were
-keeping holiday, were spangled with the yellow heads of the _trollius
-europæus_, which the pretty Marie, the daughter of the house, had been
-gathering all the morning, and had scattered over them in honour of the
-expected guests.
-
-Neither Marie nor her mother could speak one word of English—few of their
-women can—but their deeds spoke for them; for the hospitable board—and
-in this case it was literally a board, placed upon trestles, and removed
-when the supper was over—groaned under the weight of the good cheer.
-There were fish, not only in every variety, but in every variety of
-cookery; there was lobster-soup, and plok fiske, and whiting cakes, and
-long strips of bright red salmon, highly dried in juniper smoke and
-served up raw; enormous bowls of gröd,—a name which signifies everything
-semi-liquid, from rye-stirabout to gooseberry-fool;—with cream, as if
-the whole dairy was paraded at once,—some of it pure, some tinged with
-crimson streaks, from the masses of cranberry jelly that floated about it.
-
-Nor were the liquors forgotten, which, in Norway, at least, are
-considered indispensable to qualify such delicacies. There was the corn
-brandy of the country, diffusing round it a powerful flavour of aniseed,
-without which no meal of any kind takes place; there, too, was French
-brandy, freely partaken of, but so light both in colour and taste, that
-it suggested ideas of a large qualification of water; there was English
-beer, and a light sort of clarety wine, that was drunk in tumblers.
-Madame Ullitz, indeed, presided over a marshalled array of tea-cups, of
-which she was not a little proud, for it is not every house that can
-boast of its tea equipage; but this was as an especial compliment to the
-English strangers. The tea-cups and saucers might be Staffordshire,—they
-had a most English look about them; but the tea was unquestionably of
-native growth, being little else than a decoction of dried strawberry
-leaves, not at all unpleasant, but by no means coming up to English ideas
-of tea.
-
-“Vær saa artig,” said the lady of the house, with an inviting smile and
-a general bow, intimating that supper was ready; and the whole household
-and guests of various degrees, including Torkel the hunter, and Jacob
-the courier, and two or three stout serving-girls, and half-a-dozen
-hangers-on of one sort or other, placed themselves round the table, as
-indiscriminately as the viands upon it.
-
-The house of Ullitz made a feast that day.
-
-“Vær saa artig,” said Marie, handing to the Captain a plate heaped up
-with brown, crisp, crackling whiting cakes.
-
-The Captain did his best to look his thanks as he took the plate. “What
-on earth do they all mean by that eternal ‘Vær saa artig?’” said he to
-the Parson, aside. “I have heard nothing else ever since we dropped
-our anchor. First, I thought it meant ‘Get out of the boat,’ or ‘Go up
-the street,’ or ‘Come in-doors,’ or ‘Sit down to supper,’ or something
-of that sort; but then those drunken porters on board were shoving and
-elbowing one another about with the very same words in their mouths; and,
-now I recollect, this was the very speech Birger made to the Professor on
-the day of the wreck, when he gave him that slippery hitch.”
-
-“In that case,” said the Parson, laughing, “‘vær saa artig’ must mean
-two black eyes and a bloody nose, for that, as you know, is what the
-Professor got by it. But the fact is, ‘Vær saa artig,’ with variations,
-is the general passport throughout all Scandinavia. Some writers ascribe
-a mystic force to the words, ‘Vackere lilla flycka’—pretty little girl;
-and I am sure I am not going to deny the force of flattery. But among
-the natives, certainly, no one ever thinks of telling you what they want
-you to do. ‘Have another slice of beef?’ ‘Come in?’ ‘Take off your hat?’
-‘Take a seat?’ or whatever it is; all that is dumb show, preceded by
-the universal formula, ‘Vær saa artig,’ ‘Be so polite.’ All the rest is
-understood.”
-
-“Vær saa artig,” said Ullitz, unconsciously, from the other end of the
-table, holding up a bottle of claret, from which he had just extracted
-the cork.
-
-“Jag har äran drikka er till,” replied the Parson, who had picked up
-some of the formularies during his former visit. “There,” he said,
-“that is another instance: an Englishman would have said, ‘Take a glass
-of wine,’ in plain English. He holds me a bottle, and tells me to ‘be
-polite.’ My belief is, that when Jack Ketch goes to hang a man in Norway,
-he is not such a brute as to tell him to put his head into the halter; he
-merely holds it up to him, and, with a bow, requests him ‘Att være saa
-artig.’”
-
-“Yes,” said Birger, breaking in, “that is very true; it used to be the
-case; but the Storthing has abolished that piece of politeness, and
-capital punishment along with it. The fact is, the Norwegians are so
-virtuous now, as everybody knows, that they never want hanging.”
-
-This sarcasm, which was spoken in a little louder tone than the
-conversation which preceded it, threatened rather to interfere with
-the harmony of the evening, which it probably would have done had the
-language been generally understood. But the Parson acted as peace-maker.
-
-“Now, Ullitz,” said he, not giving that worthy time to reply, “tell us
-what arrangements you have been making for us. Shall we be able to start
-to-morrow?”
-
-“I have done everything according to the instructions transmitted to me,”
-said Ullitz, speaking like a secretary of state, and with the solemnity
-warranted by the importance of his subject. “There are two boats now
-lying at the bridge quay, with their oars and sails in my porch, and we
-can easily get another for the foreign gentleman” (so Ullitz designated
-his Swedish fellow-countryman—a little trait of Norske nationality
-at which Birger laughed heartily). “As for boat furniture, we have
-everything you can possibly want, in the shop; you have but to choose.
-And as for provisions, we may trust Madame Ullitz for that.”
-
-“Yes,” said the Parson, “I know Madame Ullitz and her provision-baskets
-of old.”
-
-Madame smiled, and looked pleased; making a guess that something was said
-about her, and that that something must be complimentary.
-
-“Then, as for attendants, I made bold to detain this most excellent and
-well-born Gothenburger, Herr Jacob Carlblom”—(with a polite bow to Mr.
-Jacob, returned by a still more polite bow from that illustrious and
-well-born individual). “Herr Jacob is a traveller of some celebrity by
-sea and land”—(the Parson afterwards found out that he was a Gothenborg
-smuggler)—“and would be happy to attend the gentlemen in the capacity of
-courier, cook, interpreter, and commissary, for the remuneration of a
-specie-daler per diem, with his food and travelling expenses.”
-
-“Very well,” said the Parson; “I suppose we must have a cook, so we will
-try your friend Mr. Jacob in our expedition up the Torjedahl, and see
-how we like him. And what says Torkel? are we to have the benefit of his
-experience?”
-
-Torkel looked as if earth could afford no higher pleasure, for, in his
-way, he was a mighty hunter—he was not only great at the Långref,[2] and
-skilled in circumventing the Tjäder[3] in his lek, but he had followed
-the Fjeld Ripa[4] to the very tops of the snowy mountains, had prepared
-many a pitfall for the wolf and fox, and had been more than once in
-personal conflict with the great Bruin himself.
-
-“Torkel shall be my man, then,” said the Parson, who had a pretty good
-eye to his own interest.
-
-“And English Tom, who speaks the language so well, will be just the man
-for the highborn Captain,” said Ullitz.
-
-“Very good,” said the Parson, “so be it; and whenever we have to do with
-lakes and sailing, Tom shall be our admiral, and shall put in practice
-all the science he has learned in the British navy.”
-
-“Tom is as proud of belonging to the English navy, as if it were the
-Legion of Honour,” said Ullitz, whose father had belonged to the French
-faction, and who was rather suspected of holding French politics himself.
-
-“It _is_ the Legion of Honour,” said Birger, “and I give Mr. Tom great
-credit for his sentiments. Well, you must look me out a man, too. This
-will not be so very difficult, as I speak the language pretty well for a
-foreigner.”
-
-In fact, Birger had been practising the language a good deal already,
-and not a little to the Captain’s envy, by making fierce love to the
-daughter of the house; an amusement with which guardsmen, Swedish as well
-as English, do occasionally beguile their leisure moments; and, to the
-Captain’s infinite disgust, Marie did not seem to lend by any means an
-unfavourable ear to his soft speeches.
-
-“Oh,” said Ullitz, “we shall have no difficulty whatever in finding a
-man; if there is anything these people love better than gain, it is
-pleasure, and here we have both combined. My only difficulty lies in
-making the selection. I have reckoned that each of the highborn gentlemen
-will want a boatman besides his own man; but I have engaged these only
-for the trip to Wigeland, as you will no doubt like to change them there
-for men who are acquainted with the upper river; but you can keep them if
-you like, they will be but too happy to go.”
-
-“All right, then, we will start to-morrow afternoon, and get as far as
-Oxea before we sleep. The morning, I suppose, must be devoted to hearing
-Tom’s report from the Custom-house, making our selections for the trip,
-arranging our heavy baggage that we are to leave here, and seeing that
-our outfit is all right. I like to make a short journey the first day, in
-order that if anything is forgotten, it may be sent back for.”
-
-“Not at all a bad general maxim,” said the Captain: “and now to bed;
-for the broad daylight is already putting out the blaze even of Madame
-Ullitz’s candles.”
-
-“With all my heart,” said the Parson, “it is high time;” and rising from
-his seat and going round to where Madame Ullitz sat, he took her hand,
-and bowing low, said, “Tak for mad”—thanks for the meal.
-
-“Vel de bekomme,” said the lady,—well may it agree with you.
-
-In this ceremony he was followed by the whole party, who, shortly after
-separating, sought their respective sleeping-places.
-
-The beds were queer concerns, certainly: beautifully clean, and fragrant
-with all manner of wild herbs; but as unlike the English notion of a bed
-(which in that country is always associated with ideas of a recumbent
-position), as is well possible. A thick, straw mattress, shaped like
-a wedge, occupied the upper half. Upon this were placed two enormous
-pillows, fringed with lace. The rest of the bed was simply a feather-bed
-placed on the ticking, and so much lower, that the sleeper takes his rest
-almost in a sitting position. The whole, including the quilt, was stuffed
-luxuriously, not with feathers, but with the very best eider-down; for
-Madame Ullitz, in her maiden days, had been at least as celebrated a
-beauty as her daughter was now, and unnumbered had been the offerings of
-eider-down made by her hosts of admirers, who had braved wind and wave
-to procure for her that most acceptable of all presents to a Norwegian
-girl—at once the record of her past triumphs, and the glory of her future
-home. The prudent traveller in Norwegian territories will always do
-well, if he has the chance, to choose for his residence the house of a
-_ci-devant_ beauty.
-
-Little, however, did the travellers reck of mattress or feather-bed,
-Madame Ullitz’s past conquests, or her daughter’s present bright eyes—a
-sea-voyage, four or five restless nights, a long day’s work, and a
-plentiful supper at the end of it, equalize all those things; and, though
-the sun was shining brightly through the shutterless and curtainless
-windows, five minutes had not elapsed before it was indifferent to them
-whether they had sunk to rest on eider-down or poplar leaves; or whether
-their beds had been strewed for them by the fair hands of the bright-eyed
-Marie, or by those of the two lumps of girls who had assisted at the
-grand supper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE TORJEDAHL.
-
- “Foresight is needful
- To the far traveller:
- Each place seems home to him:
- Least errs the cautious.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-“And now for work,” said the Parson, as, somewhat late on the following
-morning they rose from a breakfast as substantial and plentiful as had
-been the supper of the night before. The ordinary meals of a Norwegian
-are, in fact, three good substantial dinners per diem, with their
-proportionate quantity of strong drink: one at nine or ten, which they
-call “Frökost”; one at two or three, which is termed “Middagsmad”; and
-one in the evening, called “Afton.” But, whatever they call them, the
-fare is precisely the same in all; the same preliminary glass of brandy,
-the same very substantial hot joints, the same quantity of sweetmeats,
-and, at Christiansand at all events, the same liberal supply of fish. Tea
-and coffee are not seen at any of them, but generally form an excuse for
-supernumerary meals an hour or so after the grand ones.
-
-The strangers were not yet acclimated; they lounged over their morning’s
-meal as if the recollections of their yesterday’s supper were yet green
-in their memories. Not so the natives. No one would suppose that they had
-supped at all—they ate as if they had been fasting for a week.
-
-All things, however, come to an end,—even a Norwegian’s breakfast;
-and the Parson stood in the porch receiving English Tom’s report from
-the custom-house, and cataloguing the packages as they arrived. These
-included two dogs; one a very handsome brindled bay retriever, called
-“Grog,” belonging to the Captain; the other an extremely accomplished
-poaching setter, his own friend and constant companion. These, wild with
-joy at their newly regained liberty and restoration to their respective
-masters, from whose society they had been separated during the whole
-voyage, were grievously discomposing the economy of Madame Ullitz’s
-well-ordered house.
-
-A small assortment of necessaries was packed in deal covered baskets
-or boxes,—for they looked as much like the one as the other. This
-manufacture is peculiar to the country, and is equally cheap and
-convenient. These, with the rods, guns, ammunition, and boat furniture,
-including the sails which were to form tents on the occasion, together
-with Madame Ullitz’s liberal supply of provisions (among which the rö
-kovringer were not forgotten), were arranged in the porch, and one by one
-were transferred by the boatmen to the bridge quay, where the boats were
-lying. The weightier articles were consigned to the keeping of Ullitz,
-and were lodged in his ample store rooms.
-
-“Now, Captain,” said the Parson, as they stood on the bank of the noble
-river, “do you take a spare boat and a couple of hands, and pull as far
-as the first rapids; let Torkel be one of them, and he will show you the
-place. There is on the left bank of the river, a sort of rude boat canal,
-which is not always passable. If we can contrive to get through it, we
-will sleep at Oxea to-night: but, if the boats require to be hauled over
-land, we must be satisfied with that for one day’s work, return here to
-sleep, and carry our things over land to-morrow morning. It will take
-me a couple of hours, at the least, to fit these things, but I shall be
-ready for you by the time you return. And, to tell you the truth,” he
-added, in a whisper, “I wish you could take Birger with you. He is doing
-nothing but laugh and joke; and he makes the men so idle, that I shall
-get on twice as well without him. Set him to harl for salmon—anything, to
-get rid of him. It will be of use, too; for if he meet with anything down
-here we may be sure that Wigeland is alive with fish. You will see a reef
-of rocks on the right bank, a quarter of a mile above the town: it is
-not a bad throw—set him to work there.”
-
-Birger was delighted at the idea, and, as the Parson would spare none of
-the boats or boatmen, he took a small praam that belonged to one of the
-men, and prepared to accompany the Captain on his expedition.
-
-Birger certainly was no fisherman: he could but just throw a clumsy
-fly, and had never caught a salmon in his life, or seen one, except at
-table: but harling is a science open to the meanest capacity. It is the
-manner in which cockney sportsmen catch their salmon in the Tweed, and
-consists of traversing and re-traversing the width of the river, with a
-rod and twenty yards of line hanging out of the stern of the boat. The
-fly thus quarters the water backwards and forwards without any exertion
-of the fisherman, and even the salmon that seizes it effectually hooks
-itself before the rod can be taken in hand. On the Tweed, the fisherman
-has actually nothing to do, but to pay his boatmen, who, by choosing
-their own course, perform the very little science which this operation
-requires. In the present case, Birger, having to manage his own boat,
-was far more the artificer of his own fortune; but his success depended
-on his skill, not as a fisherman, but as a boatman—an accomplishment in
-which no Northman is deficient,—rather than on his science and dexterity
-as a fisherman.
-
-As soon as the exploring party had left, the Parson, with his lieutenant
-and interpreter, Tom, and the remaining three boatmen, addressed himself
-seriously to work. Every Norseman is a carpenter; indeed, every Norseman
-may be set down as a Jack-of-all-trades; and under Tom’s interpretership
-they very soon began to understand what was wanted.
-
-Under the starboard gunnel of each boat, and close to the right-hand of
-the sitter, were screwed two copper brackets for the gun, protected by
-a short curtain of waterproof. On the opposite side was a sort of shelf
-or ledge for the spare rods; and in the stern-sheets a locker for books,
-reels, powder-flasks, odds and ends, and, above all, any little store of
-brandy that they had,—an article which it was very dangerous indeed to
-have loose in the boat.
-
-Norwegian boats are built like whale boats, with both ends alike, which
-is not altogether a convenient build for harling—a mode of fishing,
-which, however much to be deprecated in known rivers, is very useful,
-indeed almost indispensable, to explorers. To remedy this, a ring and
-socket was fixed on each quarter of the boat, in order to receive the
-butt of the rod, and to hold it in an upright position when the fishermen
-should be otherwise engaged. Under the thwarts of each boat were
-strapped an axe, a handbill, a hammer, and a bag of nails; and several
-coils of birch rope were stowed forward. Birch rope, which is a Swedish
-manufacture from the tough roots of the birch tree, is peculiarly adapted
-to these purposes, since it has the property of floating on the water,
-which hempen ropes have not.
-
-Upon the principle of “business first and pleasure afterwards,” so long
-as anything remained to be done, the Parson had scarcely raised his eyes
-from his work, or thought of anything else; and so well and so ably had
-he been seconded, that everything was completely fitted, provisions
-brought down and stowed, and all ready for starting, a full half-hour
-before the time specified. His friends were, however, still absent; and
-thus, having nothing to do, he left the men to take care of the boats,
-and lounged across the beautiful bridge that connects the town with the
-opposite shore.
-
-The bridge of Christiansand may well be called beautiful; not, indeed,
-as a piece of architecture, for it is built, like almost everything in
-the country, of wood, though with a solidity that would put to shame
-many of our buildings of far more durable materials. Its beauty lies in
-its situation, spanning as it does with its eleven broad flat arches,
-the clear swift stream of the Torjedahl. The depth was such that ships
-of some burthen were lying on each side of the bridge, the centre
-compartment of which was moveable; but so clear was the water, that
-the very foundations of the piers could be seen as the Parson looked
-over the parapet; and among them a beautiful school of white trout, as
-clearly defined as if they had been swimming in air, which, much to
-his satisfaction, he discerned working their way up from the sea. This
-sight was doubly satisfactory, for he had been ominously shaking his
-head at the peculiar ultra-marine tint of the waters,—a sight in itself
-abundantly beautiful, as any one who has seen the Rhone at Geneva can
-testify, but far from welcome to the eyes of a fisherman, as indicating,
-beyond a doubt, the presence of melted snow.
-
-The Parson had reached the last arch, and was sitting on the parapet, on
-the look-out for the returning boats; admiring in the meanwhile the quiet
-little amphitheatre which forms the last reach of the Torjedahl after
-its exit from its mountain gorge, and scanning the quaint, old-fashioned
-town, with its dark-red wooden houses, overtopped by its heavy cathedral,
-on the tower of which the Lion of Norway, and the Axe of St. Olaf, were
-glittering in the sun; and occasionally peering into the gabled sheds of
-its dockyard, from each of which peeped out the bows of a gun-boat,—that
-formidable flotilla which, during the late wars, had hung on our Baltic
-trade like a swarm of musquitos, perpetually dispersed by our cruisers,
-and as perpetually re-united on some different and unexpected point.
-Beyond this was the island citadel, a place of no strength, indeed, for
-the strength of Norway does not lie in its fortifications, but a point of
-considerable beauty in the eye of an artist. The whole of this picture
-to seaward as well as to landward, was set in by a frame of miniature
-mountains—not hills, nor anything like hills, but real fantastically
-shaped mountains, with peaked heads, some of them showing their bare
-rocks, with little splashes of mica slate sparkling like diamonds, but
-most of them covered with dark fir to their very summits, only shooting
-out occasionally a bare cliff, so arid and so perpendicular that no tree
-could find root on it.
-
-So intently was the Parson gazing on the scene, that it was some time
-before he caught sight of Birger’s praam, which was rapidly approaching
-the place where he was sitting, and some time longer before he made out
-the very uncomfortable position in which his friend was placed. Birger,
-dexterous enough in the management of a boat, even that most ticklish
-of boats, the Norwegian praam—a dexterity which any one will appreciate
-who has ever attempted the navigation of a Welsh coracle, or can picture
-to himself what it is to be at sea in a washing-tub—had proved an apt
-scholar in the science of harling; and the Captain, having seen him make
-two or three traverses without upsetting his boat or entangling his
-flies, had proceeded on his mission and left him to his own devices. The
-boat was hardly out of sight when a heavy fish rose at the fly. Birger
-seized his rod, as he had been directed, but in his agitation forgot
-to secure his paddles, both of which dropped overboard, and, unseen
-and unheeded, set out on an independent cruise of their own,—and thus
-the salmon, of course, had it all his own way. It so happened that he
-headed to seaward, and the light praam offering very little resistance,
-and the stream, which was sweeping stilly and steadily at the rate of
-three or four miles an hour, forwarding him on his way, there was every
-probability of his reaching it.
-
-No sooner had the Parson realised the true state of things, than he
-rushed across the bridge for his boat; but the bridge was by no means a
-short one, and the Parson was at the farthest end; and long before he
-reached it, salmon, Birger, praam, and all had disappeared under one of
-the centre arches.
-
-The boatmen had, of course, lounged away from the quay, probably to the
-nearest brandy shop; but the Parson sprang into a boat, cut the painter,
-seized the paddles, and shoved off furiously into the stream.
-
-Fortunately, this had been seen by the Captain, who was at that moment
-returning; and he, though of course perfectly unaware what was the
-matter, changed his course, and dashed through the nearest arch, in
-pursuit.
-
-By this time the praam was fairly at sea; but the boats were nearing her
-fast, and the Captain, having the advantage of oars, passed the Parson’s
-boat, and then, checking his speed, lest he should capsize the friend he
-meant to aid, grappled the praam with his boat-hook, and, winding his
-own boat at the same time, towed her quietly and steadily to a little
-sandy beach. Upon this, both he and Birger landed. The latter, whose arms
-were aching as only a salmon-fisher’s arms can ache, was glad enough to
-transfer his rod to the Captain.
-
-The Parson calling in vain for a gaff, which implement in the hurry had
-been left in one of the other boats, threw himself into the water, which
-there was not much over his knees. But the salmon, seeing his enemies on
-every side, collected his energies afresh, as that gallant fish will do,
-and rattled off fifty yards of line into the deep blue sea before the
-Captain could turn him. He had, however, a practised hand to deal with.
-Slowly and carefully did the Captain reel him up, guiding him to the spot
-a little above where the Parson was standing as still and motionless as
-the rocks around him. There was as yet a considerable current, arising
-from the flow of the river, and the Captain, taking advantage of this,
-let the fish tail down quietly and inch by inch, to where the Parson was
-standing motionless and stooping so that his hands were already under
-water. Slowly, and without effort, the fish came nearer and nearer, till
-at last, gripping firmly with both hands the thin part just above the
-insertion of the tail, the Parson, half-lifting the fish from the water,
-dragged him to land, and, despite his struggles, threw him gasping on the
-snow-white beach.
-
-“Well done, Birger!” said the Captain, laying his rod against a rock, and
-running down, steelyard in hand; “there is the first fish of the season,
-and you are the prize-man.”
-
-“Hurrah,” said Birger, admiring his own handiwork,—for the steelyard had
-given a full two-and-twenty pounds,—“this is the first salmon I ever
-caught in my life; and upon my word, when I had him, I thought I had got
-hold of Loki himself.”
-
-“And upon my word,” said the Parson, “it looked as if Loki had got hold
-of you; I thought he was taking you off to his own realms. If we had
-not come up, you would have been by this time half way to the Midgard
-Serpent!”[5]
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “it took all the Œsir together to land the
-aboriginal salmon; and, I must say, Thor himself could not have handled
-him better than you did.”
-
-“What is your story?” said the Captain; “sit down there and tell it
-us. You will lose no time,” he added—for Birger, having once tasted
-blood, looked very much as if he wished to be at work again—“you will
-lose no time, I tell you, for I must crimp this fish for our dinners.
-Who can tell if we are to catch another to-day? Parson, lend me your
-crimping-knife; I left mine in the boat.”
-
-The Parson produced from his slip-pocket that formidable weapon,
-called by our transatlantic brethren a bowie knife; and the Captain,
-having first put the fish out of his misery, proceeded to prepare him
-scientifically for the toasting-skewers.
-
-“Now, Birger, for the story. So much I know, that it is something
-about diabolical agency. Loki, I believe, is the Devil of Scandinavian
-mythology.”
-
-“Not exactly,” said Birger; “though we must admit that he and his
-progeny, the Wolf Fenrir and the Midgard Serpent, are the origin of
-evil, and will eventually cause the destruction of the world. But Loki
-really was one of the Œsir, or gods, and had sworn brotherhood with Odin
-himself; and thus, though he often played them mischievous tricks, they
-seem to have associated with him, as one is in the habit of doing with a
-disreputable brother-officer—not exactly liking him, far less approving
-of his ways, but still consorting with him, and permitting him to be a
-participator of their exploits. At last, however, when he had gone so
-far as to misguide poor blind Hodur, so as to make him kill Baldur, they
-determined that this really was too bad. Baldur was a general favourite;
-everything good or beautiful, either in this world or in Asgard, was
-called after him; and the unanimous vote was, that Loki should be brought
-to justice, and made to suffer for this. Loki, however, who rather
-suspected that he had gone too far, himself, was no where to be found. He
-had quitted Asgard in the form of a mist,—whence, I presume, we derive
-the expression ‘to mizzle,’—and had betaken himself to the great fall
-called Fränängars Foss, where he lived by catching salmon;—for Loki, it
-is said, was the first inventor of nets.”
-
-“I have not a doubt of it,” said the Captain. “I always did think that
-those stake nets must have been invented by the Principle of Evil
-himself.”
-
-“Well, so it was, at all events,” said Birger. “Odin, however, one day,
-while sitting upon his Throne of Air, Hlidsjälf, happened to fix his eye
-upon him—I say eye, for you know Odin had but one, having left the other
-in pledge at the Mimir Fountain. No sooner did he see him, than he called
-to Heimdall, the celestial warder, to blow his horn, and summon the gods
-to council at the Well of Urdar.
-
-“Loki, perceiving that something was suspected, burnt his nets, and,
-changing himself into a salmon, took refuge under the fall; so that,
-when the gods arrived at Fränägngar, they found nothing but the ashes
-of the nets. It so happened, however, that the shape of the meshes was
-left perfect in the white ash to which it was burnt, and the god Kvasir,
-who, I presume, must be the god who presides over the detective police of
-Heaven, saw what had happened, and set the gods weaving nets after the
-pattern of the ashes.[6]
-
-“When all was ready, they dragged the river; but Loki placed his head
-under a stone—as that clever fish, the salmon, will do,—and the net
-slipped over his smooth, scaly back. The Œsir felt him shoot through, and
-tried another cast, weighting the net with a spare heap of new shields,
-which the Valkyrir had brought the day before from a battle-field, in
-order to mend the roof of Valhalla. Loki, however, leaped the net this
-time gallantly, and again took refuge under the foss.
-
-“This time the gods dragged down stream; Thor wading in the river behind
-the net. Thor did not mind wading; he was obliged to do that every day
-that he went to council, for the bridge of Bifrost would not bear him. In
-the meanwhile Vidar, the God of Silence, in the form of a seal, cruised
-about at the river’s mouth.
-
-“Loki had thought to go to sea and take refuge with his daughter,
-Jörmungard the Serpent, but, in assuming the form of a salmon, he had
-assumed also, of necessity, the natural antipathies and fears of the
-fish. He turned at a sight so terrible to a salmon, and again sprang
-over the net. But Thor was ready for him, and while he was in the air,
-caught him in his hand, just above the insertion of the tail; and you
-may observe that salmon have never yet recovered from that tremendous
-squeeze, but are finer and thinner at the root of the tail than any fish
-that swims.”
-
-“Well,” said the Captain, “that is quite true; it is a fact that every
-salmon-fisher knows; and he knows also that the root of the tail is the
-only part of the salmon by which it is possible to hold him, and that
-it _is_ possible to hold him by that the Parson showed you just now
-practically. But it is very satisfactory to find out the reason of such
-things, particularly when the reason is such a very good one. What did
-the gods do with Mr. Loki when they had got him; crimp him, and eat him?”
-
-“They could not kill him,” said Birger, “because of the oath of
-brotherhood which Odin had one day incautiously sworn with him (I
-presume, when they were both drunk); so they laid him on his back on
-three pointed rocks in a cave, and bound him with three cords which they
-afterwards transformed into iron bars; and there he will lie, shifting
-himself, every now and then, from side to side, and producing what
-mortals call earthquakes, until that day, known only to the Nornir, when
-the twilight shall fall upon Asgard, and the conflagration of the world
-is at hand.”
-
-“Serve him right, too,” said the Captain; “I am delighted to hear that
-the inventor of salmon-nets perished—like Perillus and other rascals—by
-his own invention. I hope the gods will keep him purgatory, or whatever
-they call it, as long as rivers run toward the sea. However, here is
-our Loki (holding up, by the tail, the scored salmon), and, as we have
-not been geese enough to swear brotherhood with him, he will do for our
-dinner. What shall we do, in the meanwhile, to crimp him?”
-
-“Make him fast to the boat, and tow him a-stern for ten minutes,” said
-the Parson; “the water of the Torjedahl is cold enough to crimp a live
-fish, let alone a dead one. And, I will tell you what: let Torkel go with
-the praam for the other boats, and meet us on the left bank, just above
-the bridge. I want to show you a view of our route to-day that is worth
-seeing.”
-
-So saying, he led the way up a steep, rugged path, just discernible among
-the rocks of the rugged ridge which divides the amphitheatre in which
-Christiansand is situated from the wild coasts of the Fjord; and, passing
-through a sort of natural opening cut in the summit ridge, pointed to the
-scene before them. “There,” said he, “what do you think of that?”
-
-Birger was an artist; and, anxious as he was to begin his career as a
-fisherman, his ever-ready sketchbook was drawn out of his pocket; nor
-did he express a wish to move till the rugged foreground upon which they
-stood, the luxuriant park-like middle distance, with its clumps of trees,
-and dark-red houses, and neat English-looking church, and the background
-of fir-clad mountains, range beyond range, and the deep narrow gorge
-through which their journey lay, which the blue lake-like river seemed to
-fill from side to side, were transferred to the paper.
-
-A few minutes’ walk brought them to where the boats were waiting, with
-the whole house of Ullitz, handmaidens and all, who had come to see them
-off. Hand-shaking all round—the fishermen took their places—the boats
-shoved off—Marie threw after them her kid slipper, for luck, (for that
-custom is of Scandinavian origin)—English Tom gave three cheers, after
-the manner of her Britannic Majesty’s navy—and the expedition started on
-its voyage up the Torjedahl.
-
-The Parson, who was anxious to reach the proposed encampment at Oxea,
-while there was yet light to pitch the tents, would suffer no harling,
-notwithstanding Birger’s remonstrances, until the first rapids had been
-safely passed; and, indeed, with the exception of the single throw where
-the Lieutenant had hooked his fish that morning, that part of the river
-was scarcely worth the trouble.
-
-The rapids, however, which had been surveyed beforehand by the Captain,
-were passed, under his skilful pilotage, in much less time than had been
-allotted for the operation, and then, with one consent, the flies were
-thrown upon the water.
-
-Above the rapids, the river forms what is technically called a “flat;”
-a spot carefully to be sought out by the exploring fisherman, as the
-likeliest to reward his search. A flat is where the water rolls on with
-its acquired velocity and the pressure of that which is behind it, rather
-than on account of any declivity in the bed through which it flows. In
-the present instance, indeed, the bed of the river actually rose instead
-of sinking, for the ridge of rocks which form the head of the rapids, had
-retained the stones and loose earth washed down in the winter floods.
-This gradually shallowed the whole river, spreading it out, at the same
-time, like a lake, so as to fill the level of the valley from mountain
-to mountain. These rose abruptly on either hand, in bare, inaccessible
-cliffs, as if they had been forced asunder by some convulsion of Nature,
-to make room for the rush of waters, and exhibited a bare splintered face
-of rock.
-
-At the end of an hour—for the Parson would allow no more—all fears were
-at an end for that night’s supper; no other salmon, indeed, had risen,
-but trout after trout had been handed into the boats, some of them, too,
-of a very respectable size: even Birger had not been without his share of
-success.
-
-But the stream was strong, the day was waning, many miles intervened
-between them and their camping-ground, the Parson was inexorable; so the
-casting-lines were exchanged for harling-tackle, and the squadron formed
-in order of sailing.
-
-The difference between a common casting-line and the harling-tackle which
-one rod in each boat should carry in every exploring expedition, consists
-principally in the length of the gut. The harling line carries five or
-six flies, in order to show, at once, as great a variety as possible of
-size and colour, and is joined to the reel-line by a swivel, in order to
-prevent it from kinking—while two, or, at the most, three, flies will be
-found quite sufficient for casting.
-
-The order of march was this:—Birger led, with his gun in his hand, ready
-for a stray duck or teal, many of which would whistle over their heads,
-as evening drew on. He was directed to keep, as near as possible, to the
-middle of the stream; while, on either flank, and about twenty yards
-behind him, came his two friends, with one rod in each boat for harling,
-while, with the other, they whipped into the likely ripples. Shooting and
-fishing, however, were made altogether a secondary condition to progress:
-they might catch what they could, and shoot what they could, but the
-rowers were to pull steadily forward.
-
-And thus they opened reach after reach of the beautiful river, for the
-most part pent in by inaccessible cliffs, on which the birch trees seemed
-to grow on each other’s heads, and to support above them all a serrated
-crest of spruce and fir. But, now and then, they would come to little
-semicircular coombs, where the mountain wall would recede for a space,
-leaving flats of twenty or thirty acres, which were carefully cultivated
-to the very water’s brink, and planted at the roots of the mountains with
-white poplar, the dried leaves of which were to serve for beds in the
-summer and hay in the winter. Here would be dark-red wooden houses with
-overhanging eaves, and tidy, compact, little farmsteadings, with their
-granaries, and store-rooms, and cattle-sheds, all complete in themselves:
-and they had need be, for they were completely isolated from the rest
-of the world. There was no road, not even a footpath; no possibility of
-ingress or egress, except that which the river afforded. The mountains,
-except here and there, were inaccessible; and at every turn of the river,
-seemed to beetle over it, shutting out each little amphitheatre from its
-neighbour. The winter is the Torjedahler’s time of liberty: then it is
-that their vehicles are put into requisition; then it is that their corn
-and cattle, if they produce any beyond their own consumption, are brought
-to market; for the river, which has hitherto been their boundary, forms
-now their railroad and frost-constructed channel of communication.
-
-The shadows were darkening on the clear river, and the arms of even
-Norwegian rowers were beginning to ache, when the last point was rounded;
-and the Parson’s joyous shout gave notice that their camping-ground was
-at last reached; and at the welcome signal, the lines were reeled up with
-alacrity, and the boats’ heads were directed to the shore.
-
-The spot had been selected by him and Ullitz the year before, partly as
-lying conveniently near to Mosse Eurd, their proposed head-quarters,
-which it was considered expedient to reach before noon on the morrow,
-in order to afford time for their men hutting themselves and foraging
-out the resources of the place; but principally from its own beauty and
-convenience.
-
-So precious is level land by the banks of the river, that it is rare to
-find any portion of it uncultivated of sufficient extent for such an
-encampment as they required. But here, at the foot of a winter torrent,
-whose dry bed gave access to the uplands in summer, and brought down
-rocks and uprooted trees in the winter, was a rough plain, formed, no
-doubt, originally from the debris brought down by the torrent, but now
-covered with short turf and cranberry-bushes, with a few thick, bushy,
-white poplars, the leaves of which had not yet been stripped for hay;
-while here and there a graceful birch-tree formed a natural tent with its
-weeping branches.
-
-“Tom, bring the sails with you,” said the Captain, who had leaped ashore
-to reconnoitre the ground; “we will have our tent under this rock.”
-
-“Capital place!” said Birger; “and bring the axe with you, Tom, as well:
-that fir will make a first-rate ridge-pole, and it blocks up the place
-where it stands.”
-
-The Captain, not accustomed yet to the trifling value put upon timber,
-hesitated to chop up a very promising young tree,—which, indeed, was
-unnecessarily large for the purpose, and which stood but very little in
-the way, after all.
-
-“Why,” said Birger, “the very best fir-tree that ever grew is not worth a
-specie daler here; and as for that stick——” substituting the action for
-the word, he struck deep into its side, and in a dozen strokes or so it
-came crashing down among the under-stuff.
-
-There was no lack of fuel: there never is in Norway, where outsides of
-timber float down the rivers unheeded; and trees, uprooted by the winter
-storms and land-slips, rot where they fall. Before half the things were
-out of the boats, three or four fires were throwing round their cheerful
-light, some for cooking, some for wantonness, for the evening was
-anything but cold. Birger, however, who, as a Swedish soldier, had had a
-good deal of experience in bivouacking,—an exercise to which they are all
-regularly drilled,—set his own two men to gather and pile fuel enough to
-last through the night; observing that they would all find it cold enough
-before morning, when those scamps had burned up the fuel at hand.
-
-The Captain and the Parson were occupied in collecting and weighing the
-fish, and apportioning them and the other provisions among the men, while
-Jacob, the courier, seated on a stone, apart, was plucking and preparing
-half-a-dozen teal that Birger had shot during the passage. These, to the
-Parson’s surprise, he deliberately cut in pieces, and consigned to the
-great soup-kettle, along with a piece of salt-beef from the harness cask,
-and various condiments which he made a great secret of.
-
-It may be observed that in Norway fresh meat is seldom eaten, unless
-it be on grand occasions, or by those who are well to do in the world.
-October is called in the north the Slaughtering Month, and every family
-there is occupied in salting, not only for winter, but for the rest of
-the year. A harness cask, therefore,—that is to say, a small cask with a
-moveable head, containing salt-beef or pork in pickle,—is a very common
-thing to meet with, and in fact had formed the _pièce de resistance_ of
-Madame Ullitz’s stores.
-
-“Look here, Jacob, my man,” said the Captain; “I will show you a trick in
-cookery that has never reached Gottenborg yet, nor London neither, for
-that matter; it is worth a hogshead of your teal-soup.”
-
-He called to Tom, who had been preparing under his superintendence
-certain square sods of turf, and some long white skewers; which, in
-the absence of arbutus—in Ireland considered indispensable on such
-occasions,—he had been directed to cut from the juniper.
-
-Birger’s salmon, the flakes of which had actually curled under the cold
-of the waters, preserving all their curd between them, was cut into what
-he technically termed fids; each one of these was spread open by the
-skewers and fixed upon the turfs. These the Captain ranged round a great
-heap of hot embers, which he had raked from the fire, and set English Tom
-to turn as they required, basting them pretty freely with salt and water.
-
-The remaining fish had been given to the men, by whom they were subjected
-to a variety of culinary operations; one of which was making soup of
-them; and the fires began to grow bright and cheery in the increasing
-darkness, when Jacob paraded his kettle of teal-soup, and Tom set before
-each of the fishermen a turf of toasted salmon.
-
-In return, they received the men’s rations of brandy, the only part of
-the provisions on which any limitation was affixed. This in Norway,
-perhaps, was considered but a small modicum: it would have been, however,
-quite enough to make twice the number of Englishmen roaring drunk.
-
-The men collected round their fires, looking like so many gipsies;
-provisions were dispatched in enormous quantities, pipes were lighted,
-horns produced and filled with pure brandy, in which each man drank “du”
-with his neighbour,—an ancient Scandinavian ceremony, which entitles
-the drinkers henceforward to address one another in the second person
-singular, and to consider themselves on terms of intimacy.
-
-In the meanwhile, the principal personages of the expedition sat at
-the door of their tent, for which the Captain received his due meed of
-praise, he having brought the canvas. They tempered their brandy with a
-little water, after the custom of their country, and they smoked somewhat
-better tobacco than the Norwegians; but after their kind, they indulged
-in very nearly the same relaxations as their attendants.
-
-And thus fell the shades of night upon the first day of the expedition.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE ENCAMPMENT MOSSE EURD.
-
- “Our good house is there,
- Though it be humble:
- Each man is master at home.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-“Rouse out, Birger, my boy,” said the Captain; “recollect we have got
-the Rapids of Oxea to pass before we get any breakfast, and that we have
-our breakfast to catch into the bargain. Come, come,” continued he, as
-Birger stretched himself on his Astrakan cloak, as if he was thinking of
-another spell of sleep, “‘shake off dull sloth, and early rise,’ as Dr.
-Watts says—see me rouse out those lazy hounds down there!” And that he
-did, in good earnest, by firing off both barrels within a foot of their
-ears; a salutation responded to by a chorus of yelping from the dogs, who
-imagined, of course, that shooting was begun already.
-
-This had the effect of speedily setting the whole party in motion; and
-Jacob, who, with provident care, had prepared, over-night, a kettle of
-coffee, raked together the embers of the still burning fires, presented
-each with a full horn of it, a very welcome introduction to the day’s
-labour; and then, as wood was plentiful, threw on some logs for a parting
-blaze.
-
-The river itself formed the fishermen’s washing-basin, and the boat’s
-thwarts their toilet-tables. Bitter cold, indeed, was the water; whatever
-the air may be, there is seldom much caloric to spare in the water till
-autumn is pretty well advanced; but, at least, it had the effect of
-thoroughly waking them, and causing them fully to appreciate the luxury
-of the now blazing fires to dress by.
-
-[Illustration: OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN.
-
-p. 78.]
-
-No one who has any regard for his health should think of going on
-a fishing expedition, however short, without a complete change of
-clothes,—one set for work, and one for dining and sleeping in. No man
-has any business, indeed, on such an expedition at all, who is afraid of
-water; but whether he is afraid or not, he will be sure to be wet, at one
-time or other, during the day. This, while the limbs are in exercise and
-the sun above the horizon, is all well enough; but let no man, however
-hardy he may think himself, sleep habitually in wet clothes, or in
-clothes hastily and imperfectly dried by the camp fire. The very bracing
-of the nerves during the day, which prevents the fisherman from taking
-injury by what would be called imprudence by his stay-at-home friends,
-makes the relaxation and reaction during the night more complete; and
-during that time he is exposed to a host of dangers which vanish before
-the face of the sun. With all his precautions, no man gets up from his
-night’s sleep in the open air without a little stiffness in the limbs for
-the first minute or so, though it may vanish at the first plunge into
-the water of his morning’s ablutions. But without these precautions, he
-is not unlikely to cut short his own expedition by any one of a dozen
-diseases which no amount of animal courage will enable him to bear up
-against, and thus he will be defeating his own object. It is very well to
-bear hardships cheerily when they are unavoidable—cheerfulness itself is
-a preservative. But it is only very young sportsmen indeed, who will seek
-out hardships for the pleasure of undergoing them.
-
-Our fishermen were not young sportsmen, they were men of experience. The
-Parson and the Captain had both of them learned their lesson in Ireland,
-where people soon begin to understand what wet means; and Birger was a
-Swedish soldier, and had learnt these matters professionally. Before
-they started, they had settled the invariable rule of a complete dress
-for dinner, under any circumstances whatever, which implied, of course,
-as complete a dress in the morning: it is necessary almost to bind
-oneself to some such vow, there are so many temptations to break it; in
-Norway especially, where, though the summer days are hot—hotter by many
-degrees than they are in England, and the evenings in the highest degree
-enjoyable, the morning air is generally sharp and bracing, and the water
-which comes down from the snowy ranges bitterly cold.
-
-Jacob, in the meanwhile, whose toilet did not take very long, and who
-rarely occupied himself in any work which did not especially belong to
-his own department, had been parleying with a young fellow, who, roused
-by the Captain’s gun, had pulled across in his boat from the opposite
-side, while the rest of the men were occupied in preparing the boats and
-re-arranging the articles that had been taken on shore the preceding
-evening.
-
-They came up together to where the Parson was standing by the fire,
-busily engaged in exchanging his salmon casting-line for one better
-adapted for trout.
-
-“The young man says that the river is dangy,” said he; for though he
-spoke English well enough, he has his own particular words, which it was
-necessary to make out.
-
-“Dingy,” said the Parson, without any very clear comprehension of what
-was meant, but rather reverting in his mind to the azure transparency of
-the waters; which, in truth, he would gladly have seen a little stained
-by mud. “Well, that is a good job. But I fear he will find himself a
-little mistaken.”
-
-Jacob evidently had not conveyed his meaning: he looked round for Tom or
-Torkel to assist him, but they were both in the boats, working busily
-under the Captain’s orders; so Jacob tried his hand again.
-
-“The young man says that there is a great deal of water in the river from
-the snow. He says that boats are very often sunk at Oxea.”
-
-“Humph!” said the Parson, who began to suspect something.
-
-Here the young man himself broke in with a long story in Norske.
-
-“He says,” interpreted Jacob, “only last week, one boat was upset, and
-two men were drowned.”
-
-“Aye? aye?” said the Parson; “what! sober men?”
-
-Jacob did not see the inference, or would not. “This young man is a
-river-pilot,” said he; “he will take you up for two mark each boat.”
-
-“I tell you what it is, Mr. Jacob,” said the Parson; “I will teach you
-a lesson. When you engaged as our courier, you meant to fleece us all
-pretty handsomely. Well, I have nothing to say against this. As courier,
-it is your undoubted privilege so to do. But remember this, it is equally
-your duty, as courier, to prevent any one else from fleecing us. And
-if I find you only once again failing in that respect, off you go at a
-minute’s notice. Now send your friend home again.”
-
-Without looking behind him, the Parson, who had now finished fitting his
-flies, took his place in his own boat, and, directing Torkel to shove off
-to the other bank, threw his line across the mouth of a small tributary
-to the great river, which he had marked the year before as abounding with
-trout. Jacob looked for a moment inclined to rebel, but no man was more
-alive to his own interests than the ex-smuggler. He had engaged in the
-trip, not like Tom and Torkel, from sheer love of sport and adventure,
-but as a profitable speculation. So, pocketing the affront, much as
-“ancient Pistol” did his leek, he crept down to Birger’s boat, which was
-his place in the line of march, where he sat sulky, but utterly wasting
-his sulkiness; for Birger, anxious to keep up his yesterday’s character
-of a fisherman, was much too intent upon the—to him—difficult manœuvre of
-keeping his flies clear of the oars, to observe whether he was pleased or
-not.
-
-The Captain took the inner line skirting the shore on the right bank, for
-it had been agreed that the flat below the Oxea rapids should be well
-tried, in hopes of getting some fresh fish for breakfast.
-
-Though last in the field, he drew the first blood, hooking and, in a few
-minutes, landing a small salmon, and thus securing a breakfast. And by
-the time the boats came together again, the Parson had brought to bag a
-very fair supply of fjeld öret, or brook trout, from the little streamlet
-he had been trying. And now began the serious business of the day.
-
-Notwithstanding Mr. Jacob’s information, the rapids of Oxea are
-perfectly safe to sober men. It is impossible that an accident can happen
-in them, except from carelessness; for the water, though swift, is
-everywhere deep. The stream falls with some force over a slanting ledge
-of smooth, slaty rock, some three or four hundred yards long or perhaps
-more, and acquires in its slide considerable velocity; but the bottom
-is smooth, and the surface nowhere broken by sunken rocks. The stream,
-therefore, is a steady current, surging up against the numerous islands
-which dot the river, as if they had been pieces of a ruined bridge. Each
-of these was crested with its half-dozen or so of ash or birch, which
-looked as if it was they that were in motion, and not the clear stream
-that was racing past them.
-
-The passage was a sheer trial of strength, requiring no great amount of
-pilotage, or local experience, or even skill. The ropes were got out and
-made fast to two or three thwarts, to take off the strain; the boats were
-lightened of their living incumbrances—except so far as the steersmen
-were concerned,—and were then tracked by main force one by one, every one
-of the party lending a hand, except, indeed, Jacob, who considered it his
-duty, having once said the rapids were dangerous, to act as if he thought
-so, and who had, therefore, been despatched by land to the head of the
-rapid, with orders to light the fires and get the breakfast ready, as
-nothing else could be done with him.
-
-The principal difficulty arose from the uncertainty of the footing among
-the crags, and the gnarled ash-trees that every here and there shot
-almost horizontally from between the fissures of the rock, dipping their
-branches into the stream. These rendered it necessary, every now and
-then, to make fast the boat to the tree itself, and then to float down a
-line to it from some point above the obstacle, for the river fortunately
-ran in a curve at that place. Thus, by giving a broad sheer into the
-stream, while the rest of the party hauled upon the rope, the boat would
-swing clear of the impediment.
-
-But all this was very hard work, and, as the sun was now high in heaven,
-very hot work; and, moreover, it had to be repeated three times before
-all the boats were in safety. Fully as much justice was done to Jacob’s
-breakfast as had been done to his supper on the preceding evening; and
-most luxurious was the hour’s rest which succeeded it.
-
-The remaining part of the voyage was easy: there was a sharp current,
-no doubt, too sharp for anything to speak of to be done with the flies;
-but it was all plain travelling, and, with an occasional help from the
-ropes, before noon their destination had been reached. This was the foot
-of a low fall, or something between a fall and a rapid, called “The Aal
-Foss,” in the middle of which was a picturesque rocky island, covered
-with trees, and on the left bank an equally picturesque peninsula, which
-was destined to be the head-quarters of the expedition, and the basis of
-subsequent operations.
-
-“There,” said the Parson, fixing his rod in the stern-rings, and
-springing on shore as the boat’s keel touched a sandy, slaty beach in the
-isthmus of the peninsula—
-
- “Thus far into the bowels of the land
- Have we marched on without impediment.
-
-Here is the limit of my survey. Thus far have I borne the baton of
-command; and I beg you to observe that we have reached the appointed spot
-twenty minutes before the appointed time.” And he held out his watch in
-proof of it. “I have, as you see, performed my promise; and thus I resign
-the leadership of the expedition.”
-
-“With universal thanks and approbation,” said the Captain; “and I propose
-that now the leadership devolve upon Birger; he is the man of camps and
-bivouacs, for he has experienced what we have only read about.”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “I will not affect modesty. Like others, I have
-passed my degrees, and it would be a great shame if bearing his Majesty’s
-commission, I did not understand what every soldier is taught.” Then,
-suddenly recollecting that the Captain was a military man as well as
-himself, he steered adroitly out of his scrape, continuing, as if his
-concluding paragraph had been part of his original speech—“You have only
-to wait for a war, Captain, and you will be in a situation to give us all
-a lesson. No one understood these things better than your old Peninsula
-men; but Sweden thinks her soldiers ought to learn their business before
-we are called out to fight, and not afterwards.”
-
-To pass the degrees—“gradar,” or rather “gradarne,” for no one ever
-thinks of speaking of them without the definite article “ne,” as if there
-were no other degrees in the world—is anything but a joke in Sweden.
-Military service, so far, at least, as the Guards and the Indelta[7] are
-concerned, is extremely popular. There is ample choice in candidates;
-and very good care is taken that the officers shall be men who know
-their business, and shall not be at a loss in what situation soever
-they may be placed. The “gradar” consists of a series of lectures and
-extremely strict examinations, in everything connected with the service,
-both intellectual or physical, from the construction of an equilateral
-triangle up to the sketch of a campaign, and from the musket drill to
-a year of sea service. Passing out in seamanship is indispensable; for
-Sweden, reversing our principle of hatching ducklings under hens, hatches
-her young death-or-glory cornets and ensigns on board her ships. Properly
-speaking, the Swedish navy has no midshipmen. The cadets, who fill pretty
-numerously the midshipman’s berth, may possibly enter the navy, if they
-are so inclined; but nine-tenths of them are candidates for commissions
-in the army, and are thus learning a lesson which may be of use to them
-hereafter, when they have troops of their own to embark or manage on
-ship-board.
-
-Birger had passed his degrees with credit, or he would not have been
-selected as a travelling student; and his companions were now likely to
-profit by this circumstance, for one of those degrees comprehends all
-these mysteries of camping, and hunting, and cooking, and provisioning,
-and, if scandal may be trusted, a sort of Spartan stealing, which goes
-under the euphemism of “availing one’s self of the resources of the
-country;” these little matters being taught by a three weeks’ actual
-practice in the field every summer.
-
-Birger was altogether in his element. “Now,” said he, “the first thing I
-must do is to borrow all your boatmen, for I shall want every man I can
-lay my hands upon; some for the camps, and some for cutting and drawing
-fuel; I can find something to do for them all, and for more too if I had
-them. And here, you Jacob, take a basket with you, and see what you can
-forage out from the cottages and woods about, in the way of milk, bread,
-butter, berries, and so forth; and hark you, Jacob, no brandy, if you
-please; that is the first thing those scamps always put their hands upon.”
-
-“You have not reckoned us,” said the Captain, “among your effective
-strength; we shall not be of much use in foraging, as we cannot speak
-Norske, but we have hands and heads too.”
-
-“Do not forget how scantily the camp is provisioned,” said Birger; “we
-have not had time or opportunity to catch or shoot anything since we left
-Oxea, where, I am sure, we ate up most of our fresh fish. It will not do
-to be drawing too largely from our supplies.”
-
-“I have no objection, I am sure,” said the Parson; “but you must let us
-have one boat, Birger; even if we are to fish this river from the shore,
-there is half a mile of open space, certainly, between this and the great
-falls of Wigeland; but best throws lie on the right bank, and we really
-must have the power of crossing.”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “I cannot spare you Torkel, that is certain—he
-is much too valuable; take your own boatman; you may halloo out ‘Kom
-öfver elven,[8]’ if you want him, and happen to be on the wrong side;
-and if he cannot hear you, say ‘Skynda paa mid baaten sáa skall du faa
-drikspengar,’[9] and I will warrant he hears fast enough, deaf as he may
-be to the first call. We must have one of the boats above this fall,”
-he continued, musing; “and we may as well do it at once. We will set all
-hands to launch it over this isthmus, before we do anything else, and
-then you can use it for your passage-boat. And now for the camp. Tom,
-Torkel, my own man Peter, my boatman and the Captain’s will be little
-enough for what I have to do, though there are some good hands among
-them, as I saw last night and this morning too at Oxea.”
-
-“We must fish, then,” said the Captain; “for there is no use going about
-after grouse, in this thick forest, without Torkel, or some one that
-knows the place; we should be but wasting our time, poking about these
-trees at hap-hazard.”
-
-“And, I am half-afraid that we shall not do much in fishing either,” said
-the Parson, as they got a sight of the upper reach of the river, which
-lay calm and shining before them. “The sun is as bright as if Odin[10]
-had got his other eye out of pledge, and were shining on us with both at
-once.”
-
-The Captain whistled a few bars of the Canadian Boat Song.
-
-“Yes,” said the Parson, “it is very true, as you whistle, but, though
-the sun be bright, and, though ‘there be not a breath the blue wave to
-curl,’ we must try what we can do. It adds considerably to the interest
-of fishing, when we know that our supper depends upon it.”
-
-“If this were the old Erne,” said the Captain, “we might whistle for our
-supper, in good earnest; but, it must be confessed, that the fish here
-are very innocent; we may deceive one; it is not impossible; for, as Pat
-Gallagher used to say, ‘there are fools everywhere.’ But—look here,” he
-said, as he cast across the stream, “positively, you may see the shadow
-of the line on the bottom, deep as the water is.”
-
-“Let us cross,” said the Parson. “‘Gaa öfver elven,’ as Birger says,
-for I see they have got the boat up: near the great fall there are some
-strong streams that will defy the sun and the calm together.”
-
-Thanks to the innocence of the salmon, which the Captain had hinted at,
-their pot-fishing was not entirely without success: the upper part of
-the reach, where the waters had not yet recovered their serenity after
-undergoing the roar and fury of the great fall, did actually furnish
-them with a graul or two; but the salmon that had arrived at years of
-discretion were very much too cautious to be taken. They had never, it
-is true, been fished for in their lives with anything more delicate than
-a piece of whipcord and a bunch of lobworms, as big as a cricket-ball;
-but, for all that, they were quite old enough to draw an inference, and
-were perfectly aware that natural grasshoppers were not in the habit of
-swimming about with lines tied to their noses.
-
-Towards evening there sprang up a light air of wind, and the rises began
-to be more frequent. The Captain, by making use of Birger’s prescribed
-form of words, had got the boatman to land him on the rocky island which
-divides the Aal Foss into two branches. There, concealed by a stubby fir,
-not quite so high as himself, he was sending out twenty yards of line
-that fell so lightly that it never seemed to touch the water at all.
-
-There is no doubt that, of all the Erne fishermen, it was the Captain who
-threw the longest and the lightest line, and well was the Captain aware
-of that fact: but there is an axiom which “far and fine” fishers would do
-well to bear in mind, and which, though apparently evident to the meanest
-capacity, is very seldom borne in mind by any one; and that is, that it
-is of very little use to fish “far and fine,” when the fish themselves
-are lying, all the while, in the water close under your feet. This was
-precisely the Captain’s position; the waters, divided by the rock on
-which he was standing, were naturally deepest close to the rock itself,
-and, as naturally, the best fish lay in the deepest water. The Captain
-understood this well, but he could not deny himself his length of line,
-and, therefore, contrived to fish the water close to him by raising his
-arms, bringing the point of his rod over his right shoulder, and then
-whisking his flies out for a fresh cast with a dextrous turn of the wrist
-which no man in England but himself could have performed.
-
-“I will tell you what,” said the Parson—who, not having met with much
-success, had stuck up his rod, and had got himself ferried over to the
-island—“it is not very likely that a fish of any size will rise this
-evening, but if such a thing should happen I would not give much for your
-rod.”
-
-“I wish the biggest fish in the river——”
-
-The sentence was never finished, for, at the word, the wish was granted;
-and, if not the biggest fish in the river, certainly the biggest fish
-they had yet seen, rose at the fly when it was not a foot from the rock.
-
-The rod never stood a chance. Raised at a sharp angle over the Captain’s
-shoulder, the whole strain came upon the top-piece, which, as he struck,
-snapped like a flower-stalk, without effort or resistance; and away
-rushed the fish forty or fifty yards up-stream with the top-piece, which
-had run down upon the fly, bobbing against his nose.
-
-The Captain did all that man could do. Carefully did he watch his fish,
-anticipating every movement; instantly did he dip his rod, as the salmon
-sprang madly into air—instantly did he recover it; promptly was the
-line reeled in at the turn; tenderly was it given out at the rush; but
-it was of no avail—the rod had lost its delicate spring; and, despite
-the Captain’s care, every now and then the fish would get a stiff pull
-against the stump, thus gradually enlarging the hold which the hook had
-taken in the skin of the jaw, till, at last, just as the Parson, who had
-been hoping against hope, was taking the cork off the point of his gaff
-and clearing away the brambles to get a good standing place for using
-it, the line came up slack; the hold had given way.
-
-The Parson had the generosity to be silent about his warning that had
-received so immediate a fulfilment.
-
-“Well,” he said, “you have recovered your top; that is something, so many
-miles from Bell Yard; and as for the fish, depend upon it that there are
-more where he came from.”
-
-The Captain mused a little. With the exception of Birger’s chance-medley,
-they had not seen a full-grown salmon[11] since they had come upon
-the river, and the loss was no light one. “I suppose,” he said,
-interrogatively, “it would be hardly worth while to fetch another top
-from the camp?”
-
-“Not at all worth while,” said the Parson; “the wonder is, that you rose
-one full-mouthed fish on such a day as this. You are not going to rise
-another. Besides,” he added, “look at the sun! It is time for us to think
-of cooking, rather than catching. Birger will be wondering what is become
-of us.”
-
-They were at no great distance from the camp, which, to their surprise,
-they found tenanted by Jacob alone, who, having got over his morning
-sulks, was busy in what he called a Långref, a miniature variety of which
-is not altogether unknown to our Hampshire poachers; but Jacob’s was a
-tremendous affair, more like what in sea-fishing is called a spillet or
-bolter, consisting of three or four hundred yards of water cord, and half
-as many hooks.
-
-“Halloo,” said the Captain; “what has become of them all? Why, Jacob,
-where is Lieutenant Birger?”
-
-“He is gone with the men to make an offering to Nyssen,” said Jacob.
-
-“Who the devil is Nyssen?” said the Captain.
-
-Jacob looked distressed. It is not lucky to mention the mundane spirits
-and those of hell in the same sentence; in fact, the less people
-talk about either of them the better, so, at least, the Swedes think,
-and therefore imprecate their curses by saying, “The Thousand take
-you,” leaving it for your own conscience to determine whether they are
-consigning you to saints or devils.
-
-“There they are, you may see them yourself,” replied he, evading the
-question, and pointing to a bare rounded rock which rose above the wooded
-summits about a mile down the river.
-
-The Parson’s telescope was in his hand in a moment; but all he could make
-out was, that they put something on the ground which they left there,
-and immediately entered the thick wood, which hid them from his sight.
-Jacob could not, or at all events would not, satisfy their curiosity, and
-they had nothing for it but to amuse themselves with admiring Birger’s
-handy-work, till that individual on his return should make his own report
-of himself.
-
-And really the Lieutenant would have extorted praise from the head of the
-Kong’s-öfver-commandant’s-Expedition himself, so well and so orderly was
-the encampment made.
-
-The sails were formed into three several tents, not very large ones,
-certainly, and scarcely admitting of the inmates sitting upright, except
-in the centre, but quite sufficient to shelter a man lying at full
-length. At the back of these, where the ground rose a little, a neat
-trench was cut, in order to carry off the drainings of any unforeseen
-shower. These were the sleeping tents; and in front of them were spread
-out a quantity of poplar leaves, which were eventually to form the beds,
-and which were then pretty rapidly undergoing the process of desiccation
-in the hot and bright sunshine which had hitherto been so unfriendly.
-A birch trimmed in its weeping branches, and thickened above with a
-few supplementary boughs of spruce-fir, was evidently arranged for the
-dining-room, and several of the stores were gathered round its trunk
-and thatched with fir-branches, while at some distance below, and not
-far from the sandy beach, stood three or four neat green huts, built
-with a framework of fir-poles, and thatched closely, both in roof and
-walls, with the upper branches of the trees that had been cut down for
-the frame. Not far from where Jacob was sitting over his långref, there
-was an elaborate kitchen, built of rough stones against a natural rock,
-with a cross-beam on the top to swing the kettle from, and beside it
-rose a goodly pile of fuel, cut into lengths, and stacked into what is
-called in the country fathoms, that is to say, square piles, six feet
-long and three high. This had evidently been their last work, for the
-axes and saws were still lying on the unfinished pile. By the river’s
-bank at the edge of the peninsula was a curious erection, which Jacob
-called the smoking-house. It was a pyramid constructed of outsides of
-deals, hundreds of which, rejected from the saw-mills, were floating
-about unheeded in the river, and drifting into every corner that was
-sheltered from the current. This was by no means a place constructed for
-the luxury of smoking tobacco, an amusement in which every individual of
-the party indulged in every possible place and in all places alike. It
-was erected for hanging up superfluous salmon which had previously been
-slightly salted, in order, with the help of smoke from the green juniper,
-to convert them into what in London is called “kipper.”
-
-There was little use for it that evening, however, for the grauls brought
-in by the fishermen would have been but scanty allowance, even for the
-present supper, had they not been helped out by other provisions. But
-Jacob had by no means been idle in his vocation. On a shelf of rock not
-very far from the kitchen, and shaded by a friendly tree, stood gallons
-of milk and piles of flad bröd, with a few raspberries, which were just
-then ripening, and an actual little mountain of strawberries, for the
-woods were carpetted with their bright green leaves and scarlet berries.
-
-Jacob, as was his duty, rolled up his långref as quickly as such a
-combination of tackle could be stowed away, and commenced preparing the
-fish for dinner, while the fishermen changed their clothes, and hung them
-to dry round a supplementary fire which had been lighted for the purpose.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-MAKING A NIGHT OF IT.
-
- “Ale’s not so good
- For the children of men
- As people have boasted;
- For less and less,
- As more he drinketh,
- Knows man himself.
-
- The kern of forgetfulness
- Sits on the drunken
- And steals the man’s senses,—
- By the bird’s pinions
- Fettered I lay
- In Gunlada’s dwelling.
-
- Drunken I lay,
- Lay thoroughly drunken,
- With Fjalar the wise.
- This is the best of drink,
- That every one afterwards
- Comes to his senses.”
-
- _High Song of Odin the Old._
-
-
-Many minutes had not expired, during which brief space the fishermen had
-been luxuriating in their dry clothes, when the boats were seen working
-their way back across the tail of the Aal Foss rapid, as they returned
-with the party from the right bank, which, after bobbing about on the
-ripples and cross currents, shot into their little harbour beneath the
-encampment.
-
-Birger came up the bank, half-laughing, yet looking as if he had been
-doing something he was ashamed of.
-
-“Where the deuce have you been, Birger?” said the Captain, as that worthy
-threw himself on the turf under the birch-tree: “Jacob says you have been
-sacrificing to Nyssen, whoever he is.”
-
-“So I have,” said Birger; “but don’t speak so loud. I will tell you all
-about it.”
-
-“Not speak so loud,” said the Captain; “why not?”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, rather hesitatingly, “Nyssen does not like to be
-spoken of. That is to say, the men don’t exactly like to hear people
-speaking of him, at least by name, if it is above the breath.”
-
-“Come, come, Birger, be honest,” said the Parson.
-
-“Well, if you must have it, I do not quite like it myself. I do not
-believe in such things, of course; but there is no good in doing what
-everybody thinks unlucky.”
-
-“Well, well,” said the Captain, “but tell us what you have been about. I
-am quite in the dark as yet about this mysterious gentleman or lady.”
-
-“Why, the Nyss,” said Birger, sinking his voice at the word to a whisper,
-“is a spirit of the air, just as the Neck (a similar whisper) is a spirit
-of the water.”
-
-“The very familiars of the Lady of Branksome,” said the Parson:—
-
- It was the Spirit of the Flood,
- And he spoke to the Spirit of the Fell.
-
-“Very likely, but our spirits, like our people, are not indifferent to
-the pleasures of eating and drinking; and therefore, whenever we start on
-an expedition, we propitiate them with an offering.”
-
-“And the offering consists of——?”
-
-“What we like best ourselves, cakes and ale.”
-
-“But what had you to do with it,” said the Captain; “I suppose you do not
-believe in spirits?”
-
-“The men asked leave to go, when they had done their work, and wanted me
-to go with them, to that high rock you see down there,—for they always
-choose out some bare and elevated locality, as best adapted to a spirit
-of the air; and so—well, I went with them; don’t laugh at me.”
-
-“That will I not,” said the Parson; “you could not have done a wiser
-thing. Always fall in with men’s superstitions; there is nothing that
-attaches them so much as humouring their little illegitimate beliefs; to
-say nothing,” he added slily, “of believing a little in them yourself.”
-
-“How is this offering made?” said the Captain: “what are the rites
-belonging to the worship of a spirit of the air?”
-
-“They are simple enough,” said Birger, “and not at all like those you
-would see on the stage of London,—no blue fires or poetical incantations:
-they consist in simply placing the cake on the most exposed pinnacle you
-can find, pouring the ale into the nearest hollow that will hold it, and
-then retreating in silence, and without looking behind you.”
-
-“While some thirsty soul, after the manner of Bel in the Apocrypha, plays
-Nyssen and accepts the offering,” said the Captain.
-
-“What! eat Nyssen’s offering! Tom, what do you say to that?”—for the
-men were still fidgetting about the fire,—“what do you say to that? The
-Captain thinks that one of you will eat up Nyssen’s cake; what do you say
-about it?”
-
-“Well,” said Tom, “we have bold men in Norway, as all our histories will
-tell you; but bold as we are, I do not think you will get a man in the
-whole country to do that.”
-
-“There was a young fellow once who did it in my country though,” said
-Jacob, “and dearly he paid for it. The family used to place the yearly
-gifts to Nyssen under the sails of their windmill every Christmas
-Eve;—you Norwegians do not know what windmills are; you grind all your
-corn by water, poor devils!”
-
-Here Tom and Torkel, both Tellemarken men, broke in simultaneously; the
-one swearing that, in the Tellemark, windmills were as plenty as fir
-trees; the other vociferating, somewhat incongruously, that no nation
-two degrees from actual barbarism could ever think of such a piece of
-machinery at all.
-
-Birger stilled their national animosities by wishing “The Thousand” would
-take them all three, and their windmills into the bargain, and Jacob went
-on with his story.
-
-“The eldest son,” he said, “was a sad unbeliever; he had been a very good
-boy as long as he had lived with his father and mother at Lerum, but
-when he grew up he had gone to Copenhagen and got corrupted; for, as his
-honour Lieutenant Birger knows, they are all sad infidels at Copenhagen.”
-Here was likely to be another outbreak; for the Danes, though it is quite
-true that a great many of them are not only sceptics in fairy mythology
-but in religion also, are yet vehemently regretted by the Norwegians, who
-were in no ways pleased with that act of the Congress of Vienna which
-separated them from Denmark; a fact which our friend Jacob was perfectly
-aware of.
-
-Peace was again effected by a vigorous kick from his fellow-countrymen,
-together with some observations respecting a donkey in a state of eternal
-condemnation; and Jacob went on as if nothing particular had happened.
-
-“Well,” said he, “the young man found that the best ale and sweetest
-cake were always given to Nyssen, so he slipped out and gobbled them
-up himself. During the whole year that followed that Christmas, no
-great harm came of it, only there was always something wrong about the
-windmill; now a sail blown away, now a cog broken; there was plenty
-of grist, trade was lively enough, it was always something to do with
-the wind, and, as far as that was concerned, nothing went right. Still
-no one suspected the reason, till Christmas Eve came round again, and
-another sweet cake and another bottle of strong ale were placed under
-the mill for Nyssen. The night was as still and as quiet as this evening
-is,—quieter if possible; there was not a breath of wind, and the snow
-looked like a winding-sheet in the moonlight. Well, the young man slipped
-out again; but scarcely had he stooped to pick up the bottle, when a
-furious gust of wind arose, scattering the snow like flour out of a sack;
-the sails flew round as if they were mad; it was said that a figure in
-a pointed cap and a red jacket sat astride on the axle, and one of the
-sails taking the young man on the side of the head, threw him as far as I
-could fling a stone. He sank into the snow, which closed over him, and no
-one knew what had become of him till the thaw came on. It was very late
-that year, for the ground was not clear till Walpurgis’ Night, and then
-they found him, and Nyssen’s broken bottle still in his hand. It was by
-that they found out how it had happened. I would not be the man to touch
-anything belonging to Nyssen.”
-
-“Nor I neither,” chimed in the two Norsemen.
-
-“Johnstone and Maxwell both agree for once,” said the Parson, laughing;
-“and I will tell you another thing, neither would I. But now, Mr. Jacob,
-that we have done everything that can be expected of us by the spirits
-of the air, who, I hope, in common gratitude, will give us fishermen a
-cloudy sky and a little bit of a breeze to-morrow, I must say I should
-like to take my turn at the cakes and ale; so let us have whatever you
-have got in your big pot there, and bring us a bucket of strawberries and
-cream for dessert.”
-
-The dinner was by no means so elaborate an affair as that of yesterday;
-this was occasioned, in some measure, by their want of sport, but,
-principally, because all had been far too much engaged in the necessary
-business of the camp to think much of eating. The solids, such as they
-were, that is to say, beef and pork, out of the harness cask, were
-soon despatched, and the huge camp kettle, one of the old-fashioned
-ante-Wellingtonian affairs, as big as a mortar, and nearly as heavy,
-was sent down to the men, while the fishermen lounged at full length
-on the turf, enjoying their rest over Jacob’s plentiful provision of
-strawberries and cream.
-
-Fénélon has, somewhere or other, a fable about a man who had the power
-of procuring, “_pour son argent_,” as the good Bishop says, half-a-dozen
-men’s appetites and digestions. The man does not seem, in the fable, to
-have made a very good use of his extraordinary powers, or to have derived
-any extraordinary pleasure from them. If he had only come out campaigning
-in Norway, he might have had his five appetites for nothing, and been
-much the better for them all.
-
-Meanwhile, the lower table did not at all seem to be in want of an
-appetite; the kettle was emptied, and whole heaps of flad-bröd, sour as
-verdjuice, and pots of butter, such as no nose or stomach, out of Norway,
-could tolerate, were fast disappearing beneath the unceasing attacks
-of seven gluttonous Scandinavians—while, as the twilight darkened, and
-diminished the restraint they might possibly have felt at the presence
-of their superiors, the noise grew louder and louder. Jacob began some
-interminable ballad about the sorrows and trials of little Kirstin, a
-very beautiful lady, who went through all sorts of misfortunes, and did
-not seem a “bit better than she should be;” but that goes for nothing
-at all in Swedish song, and very little in Swedish life. This he sang,
-chorus and all, to his own share. It seemed to affect the worthy man very
-little, that he was almost his own audience; no one seemed to attend
-him, but his song went on, stanza after stanza, uninterruptedly, forming
-a sort of running accompaniment to the shouts and screams of “Gammle
-Norgé,” “Wackere Lota, or, Kari,” which startled the echoes alternately,
-according as love, or patriotism, was the prevailing sentiment.
-
-At last, they began drinking healths—“Skaal Herr Carblom,” “Skaal for
-the well-born singer;” for, like the old Spanish nobility, though they
-addressed one another as Tom, Piersen, and so forth, they always gave the
-interloper his full title.
-
-“Jeg takker de,” said Jacob, solemnly, without, however, pausing for one
-moment in his song.
-
- “Little Kirstin, she came to the bridal hall,—
- We will begin with the wooing,—
- And a little page answered to her call,
- My best beloved, I ne’er can forget you”—
-
-Here broke in Tom, beating time to his music with a horn which he had
-replenished to the very brim, and of which he was imparting the contents
-very liberally to the turf round him—
-
- “Wet your clay, Andy!
- Out with the brandy!
- We live in jolly way,—
- Here’s to you, night or day!
- Look at sister Kajsa Stina,
- See her bottles bright and clear-ah!
- Take the horn, good fellow! grin-ah!
- Grin and swill and drink like me!”
-
-Jacob’s voice was again audible—
-
- “She tied her horse in the garden there:
- We will begin with the wooing”—
-
-“Skaal Thorsen! skaal Tom Engelsk! skaal for the British navy!”
-
-“Rule, Britannia!” shouted Tom. Jacob went on—
-
- “We will begin with the wooing:
- She brushed and—”
-
-Here a general chorus—
-
- “To the brim, young men! fill it up! fill again!
- Drain! drain, young men!—’tis to Norway you drain.
- Your fathers have sown it,
- Your fields they have grown it;
- Then quaff it, young men! for he’ll be the strongest
- Who drinks of it deepest and sits at it longest.”
-
-Jacob’s voice became audible, like a symphony, between the verses—
-
- “She brushed and combed her golden hair,”—
-
-when again rose up the wild chorus, overwhelming it under the volume of
-sound:
-
- “To the brim, old men! fill it up! fill again!
- Drain! drain, old men!—’tis to Norway you drain.
- There’s health in the cup,—
- Fill it up! fill it up!
- And quaff it, old men! for he’ll live the longest
- Who drinks of it deepest and likes it the strongest.”
-
-“By the Harp of Bragi,” said Birger, “I’ll back old Jacob against the
-field,—that fellow has such bottom!” for the honest toper’s voice came
-again dreamily up the hill where they were sitting, during the pause that
-followed this outburst.
-
- “Little Kirstin then passed out from the door,—
- We had best begin with the wooing:
- She said, I shall hither come no more,—
- My best beloved! I never will forget thee.
-
- Forth she went to the garden there,—
- We had best begin with the wooing:
- She hung herself with her golden hair,—
- My best beloved! I never can forget thee.”
-
-“Skaal for Birger! skaal for the brave Lieutenant! skaal for the royal
-guard!” shouted one, waxing more bold as the night drew on.
-
-“Gammle Norgé!” screamed back an opponent, and immediately Torkel burst
-out, with his fine bass voice, into the national song, drowning entirely
-poor Jacob’s melancholy ditty, which never got much beyond the wooing
-after all.
-
- “The hardy Norseman’s house of yore
- Was on the foaming wave,
- And there he gathered bright renown—
- The bravest of the brave.
- O, ne’er should we forget our sires,
- Wherever we may be;
- For they did win a gallant name,
- And ruled the stormy sea.
-
- What though our hands be weaker now
- Than they were wont to be
- When boldly forth our fathers sailed
- And conquered Normandy?
- We still may sing their deeds of fame,
- In thrilling harmony;
- They won FOR US that gallant name,
- Ruling the stormy sea!”—
-
-Enthusiasm was at its height, as the full chorus thundered forth from all
-the voices—
-
- “Never will we forget our sires,
- Wherever we may be;
- They won for us that gallant name,
- Ruling the stormy sea!”
-
-Whether Jacob joined in it, or persevered in the sorrows of little
-Kirstin, it is impossible to say; but the loud-ringing alto of Birger
-came in tellingly from the house of the Nobles, accompanied by the
-bass of his two friends. The compliment was taken at once, “Skaal for
-the high-born Fishermen!” “Skaal for the noble gentlemen!” “Skaal for
-Vict_ou_ria!” “Skaal for Carl Johann!” “Skaal for England!”
-
-“Skaal for Sweden,” shouted Jacob at last.
-
-“Gammle Norgé! Gammle Norgé! Sweden and Norway!—Sweden and Norway for
-ever! Skaal! Skaal!”
-
-“Upon my word,” said the Parson, “some one must have been shelling out in
-good earnest. There goes something stronger than water to all that noise.”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “it is very true: they did their work this afternoon
-like men, and then, instead of going and buying brandy, and making beasts
-of themselves, they very properly sent Torkel as spokesman to me, and
-asked my permission to get drunk, which, as they had behaved so well, of
-course I granted them, and gave them five or six orts to buy brandy with.”
-
-The Parson burst out laughing: “Well, Birger, it is very kind of you, to
-save them from making beasts of themselves: rather a novel way of doing
-it, though.”
-
-“O, it is all right,” said Birger; “that is the way we always do in my
-country, we get it over at once: they will be as sober as judges after
-this—if we had not indulged them when they knew they had deserved it,
-they would always have been hankering after brandy, and dropping off
-drunk when they were most wanted: they will be as sober as judges after
-this, I tell you,” he reiterated, observing a slight smile of incredulity
-on the faces of both his companions.
-
-“I do not feel quite so confident of their being as sober as judges
-to-morrow, as I do about their being as drunk as pigs to-night,” said the
-Captain; “though, to be sure, I do not know what judges are in Norway;
-but it does seem to me that five or six orts[12] are rather a liberal
-allowance, in a country where one can get roaring drunk for half-a-dozen
-skillings.”
-
-“That is just the very thing I do not want them to do,” said Birger.
-“Whenever a Norseman gets roaring drunk, he is sure to kick up a row: it
-is very much better that they should get beastly drunk at once; then they
-go to sleep and sleep it off, and no one the wiser.”
-
-“I should have thought, though,” said the Captain, “that you gave them
-quite enough for that, and a good remainder for another day into the
-bargain.”
-
-“It is little you know of the Norwegian, then,” said Birger, “or, for the
-matter of that, of the Swede either: he is not the man to make two bites
-of a cherry, or to leave his brandy in the bottom of the keg. Besides,
-they will consider themselves upon honour. They asked my leave to get
-drunk on this particular night, and I gave them the money to do it with;
-it would be absolute swindling, to get drunk with my money on any other
-occasion.”
-
-“Upon my word,” said the Captain, “this a terrible drawback to your
-beautiful country. Our fellows in Ireland used to get drunk now and then,
-to be sure, but they had always the grace to be ashamed of it. These
-scoundrels do it in such a business-like way.”
-
-“Your countryman, Laing, sets that down to the score of our virtues,”
-said Birger. “He considers it much better to act upon principle, like our
-people, than to yield to temptation, as your English and Irish sots do. I
-must say, though, that he is not half so indulgent to us poor Swedes.”
-
-“My countryman, Laing,” said the Parson, “though a very observant
-traveller, is, also, a very extreme republican and a very prejudiced
-writer. He gives us facts in monarchical Sweden, as well as in republican
-Norway, and he gives them as he sees them, no doubt; but, he looks at the
-two countries through glasses of different tints. Now, my idea is, that,
-in point of drunkenness, there is not a pin to choose.”
-
-“Yes, but there is, though,” said Birger. “The Norwegian is quarrelsome
-in his cups; and you will seldom find that in any part of Sweden, unless
-in Scånia, and the Scånians are half Danes yet. I had the precaution to
-take away those gentlemen’s knives when I gave them the money for their
-brandy (and, I must admit, they gave them up with very good grace),
-or, the chances are, that we should have lost the services of that ass
-Jacob, and given a job for the Landamptman to-morrow. Why, half the
-party-coloured gentlemen in the castle at Christiania have earned their
-iron decorations in some drunken brawl or other.”[13]
-
-“Well, that may be,” said the Parson. “I have not experienced enough to
-gainsay you; but you must admit that as far as simple drinking goes, the
-two nations have the organ of drunkenness pretty equally developed.”
-
-“I should think it must be a barrel organ, then,” said the Captain, “if
-we are to judge by the quantity it contains.”
-
-“Thank your stars it has got a good many stops in it. The Scandinavian
-does not drink irregularly, like your people whom you can never reckon
-upon for two days together. He has his days of solemn drunkenness—some of
-them political, such as the coronation; or the king’s name day; or, here,
-in Norway, the signing of their cursed constitution. Some of them, again,
-are religious—such as Christmas, and Easter, and Whitsuntide: these are
-days in which all Scandinavia gets drunk as one man. And there are a few
-little domestic anniversaries besides—such as christenings and weddings;
-but, this is all, except a chance affair, like this; so that, by a glance
-at the calendar, and a little inquiry into a man’s private history, you
-may always know when to find him sober, and fit for work.”
-
-“Sober, meaning three or four glasses of brandy?” said the Parson.
-
-“Yes,” said Birger. “He seldom goes beyond that, on ordinary days; and,
-therefore, on festivals like this, I think him very well entitled to make
-up for it.”
-
-“I think, though,” said the Parson, “when I was in Sweden, last year, I
-did see such things as stocks for drunkards, at some of the church doors.”
-
-“Yes, you did, at all of them; but, you never saw any one in them. How is
-a mayor to order a man into the stocks, for drunkenness, when the chances
-are, that he was just as drunk himself on the very same occasion?”
-
-“How do you account for this universal system of drinking spirits?” said
-the Captain.
-
-“It is easy enough to account for it,” said the Parson; for Birger rather
-shirked the question. “Every landed proprietor has a right to a private
-still; the duty is a farthing a gallon, carriage is difficult, and brandy
-is much more portable than corn. Will not this account for some of it?
-I do not happen to know what may be the return for Sweden; but, for
-Norway, it is somewhat over five million gallons a-year, in a country
-which does not grow nearly enough of corn to support itself; and this,
-as the population does not come up to a million and a-half, gives three
-and a-half gallons per Christian, to every man, woman, and child, in the
-country.”
-
-“Come, come,” said Birger, “if you go to statistics, look at home. Your
-Mr. Hume moved, last session, for a return of all the men that had
-been picked up, drunk, in the course of the preceding year; and, in
-Glasgow alone, there were nearly fifteen thousand—that is to say, one
-out of every twenty-two of the whole population. Do not talk to us of
-drunkenness. Did you ever hear of the controversy between the pot and the
-kettle?”
-
-“The Scotch are no more our countrymen, than the Norwegians are yours,”
-said the Parson; “and, if I recollect right, that very return gave no
-more than one in every six hundred, picked up, drunk, in our Manchester;
-and Manchester is not what we call a moral place, either.”[14]
-
-“In that very place, Glasgow,” said the Captain, “where, for my sins, I
-was quartered last year, I was actually taken up before the magistrates,
-and fined five shillings, for what the hypocritical sinners call
-‘whustling on the Saubboth,’ and it was only Saturday night, either—the
-rascally Jews! They are fellows to
-
- Compound for sins they are inclined to
- By damning those they have no mind to.
-
-The scoundrels couldn’t whistle a tune themselves on any day of the week,
-‘were it their neck verse at Hairibee;’ they have no notion of music,
-beyond the bagpipe and the Scotch fiddle.”
-
-“Five shillings?” said the Parson, musingly; “that is just the sum they
-fine people, in London, for being drunk and disorderly.”
-
-“Then, in all human probability, the Captain made one individual item in
-Mr. Hume’s fifteen thousand himself.”
-
-“Very possibly,” said the Captain. “It was Saturday night, and I will not
-say I might not have been a little screwed. When one is in Turkey one
-must live as turkeys live.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “I believe all northern nations have a
-natural turn for drunkenness, but laws and regulations may increase or
-diminish the amount of it; and the laws of both these countries tend
-most particularly to increase it. With you it is a regular case of
-‘Drunkenness made easy.’ Besides, public opinion sets that way too. If
-I were suspected of anything approaching to the state of our friends
-down below, I never could face my parish again. Your parish priest might
-be carried home and tucked into bed by a dozen of his faithful and
-hard-headed parishioners on Saturday night, and if the thing did not come
-round too often, would get up not a pin the worse on Sunday morning,
-either in health or in reputation.”
-
-“I think,” said the Captain, “public presents are a very fair test of
-public propensities. In the snuffy days of the last century and the
-beginning of this, every public character, from the Duke of Wellington
-down to William Cobbett, had the freedoms of all sorts of things
-given them in golden snuff-boxes. Now, look at your people. When your
-king paid a visit to the University of Upsala, the most appropriate
-present he could think of making to that learned body, was an ancient
-drinking-horn,—of course, by way of encouraging the national tastes.
-And when he made a pilgrimage to the tomb of Odin and Freya, the most
-appropriate present which that learned body could make to him in their
-turn, was another ancient drinking-horn, which had the additional value
-of having once been the property of those heroic, but, if there is any
-truth in Sagas, exceedingly drunken divinities.”
-
-“Well, well,” said Birger, good-humouredly (and it must be said that his
-was a case of good-humour under difficulties), “every nation has its own
-national sins to answer for, and it is no use for me to deny that ours is
-drunkenness. But what else can you expect from a people whose ideal of
-the joys of heaven used to be fighting all day, and after a huge dinner
-of boiled pork, getting beastly drunk upon beer? Gangler, in the prose
-Edda, asks Har, ‘How do your Heroes pass their time in Valhalla when
-they are not drinking?’ And Har replies, ‘Every day, as soon as they
-have dressed themselves, they ride out into the court, and fight till
-they cut each other in pieces. This is their pastime; but when meal-time
-approaches, they return to drink in Valhalla.’ Or, if you will have the
-same in verse, this is what the Vafthrudnis Mal says:—
-
- The Einherjir all,
- On Odin’s plain,
- Hew daily each other
- While chosen the slain are;
- From the fray they then ride,
- And drink ale with the Œsir.”
-
-“After all,” said the Parson, “this is nothing more than a ghostly
-tournament; and I have no doubt but that the haughty tournaments of the
-middle ages, if deprived of their mediæval gilding, would be very like
-the hewings, ale swillings, and pork banquetings of the Einherjir. I
-hope, though, that they brewed good ale in Asgard.”
-
-“I dare say,” said the Captain, “that, after their carousal, they wanted
-a little sleep to fit them for the toils of the next day; I am sure I do,
-and I vote we try what sort of couches Birger has prepared for us. Our
-once merry friends below seem to be as fast asleep as swine now, and as
-quiet. To tell you the truth, I am a little tired with our day’s work,
-and we certainly have another good day’s work cut out for us to-morrow.”
-
-“With all my heart,” said Birger, finishing off what, from its colour,
-might have been a glass of water, but was not. As Odin says—
-
- “No one will charge thee
- With evil, if early
- Thou goest to slumber.”
-
-“Come along, then,” said the Captain, “turn in; and may the Nyss to whom
-we have sacrificed send us to-morrow ‘a southerly wind and a cloudy sky.’”
-
- There are several national songs in Norway. That which Torkel
- sings is an ancient song, and has been adapted and arranged
- as a chorus, by Hullah; but it is not that which is generally
- known as “Gammle Norgé.” This, though eminently popular, is but
- a modern composition. Its author is Bjerregaard, a Norse poet
- of some eminence. It has been thus rendered into English by Mr.
- Latham:—
-
- Minstrel, awaken the harp from its slumbers!
- Strike for old Norway, the land of the free!
- High and heroic in soul-stirring numbers,
- Clime of our fathers, we strike it for thee!
- Old recollections
- Awake our affections,—
- They hallow the name of the land of our birth;
- Each heart beats its loudest,
- Each cheek glows its proudest,
- For Norway the Ancient, the Throne of the Earth!
-
- Spirit! look back on her far-flashing glory,
- The far-flashing meteor that bursts on thy glance,
- On chieftain and hero immortal in story,
- They press to the battle like maids to the dance.
- The blood flows before them,
- The wave dashes o’er them,
- They reap with the sword what they plough with the keel;
- Enough that they leave
- To the country that bore them
- Bosoms to bleed for her freedom and weal.
-
- The Shrine of the Northman, the Temple of Freedom,
- Stands like a rock where the stormy wind breaks;
- The tempests howl round it, but little he’ll heed them,—
- Freely he thinks, and as freely he speaks.
- The bird in its motion,
- The wave in its ocean,
- Scarcely can rival his liberty’s voice;
- Yet he obeys,
- With a willing devotion
- Laws of his making and kings of his choice.
-
- Land of the forest, the fell, and the fountain,—
- Blest with the wealth of the field and the flood,—
- Steady and truthful, the sons of thy mountain,
- Pay the glad price of thy rights with their blood.
- Ocean hath bound thee,
- Freedom hath found thee,—
- Flourish, old Norway, thy flag be unfurled!
- Free as the breezes
- And breakers around thee—
- The pride of thy children, the Throne of the World!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE HELL FALL.
-
- “If thou hadst not been leading a life of sin—
- The sun shines over Enen—
- Thou wouldst have given me water thy bare hand within—
- Under the linden green.
- Now, this is the penance that on thee I lay:
- Eight years in the wood shalt thou live from this day,
- And no food shall pass thy lips between,
- Save only the leaves of the linden green;
- And no other drink shalt thou have at all,
- Save the dew on the linden leaves so small;
- And no other bed shall be pressed by thee,
- Save only the roots of the linden tree.
- When eight long years were gone and spent,
- Jesus the Lord to Magdalene went—
- Now shall Heaven’s mercy thee restore—
- The sun shines over Enen—
- Go, Magdalena, and sin no more
- Under the linden green.”
-
- _Svenska Folk-visor._
-
-
-Whether the Spirits of the Flood and Fell considered themselves
-complimented by the homage which had been paid to them, or whether things
-would have turned out exactly the same had there been no offering at
-all, is a mystery of mythology which we will not take upon ourselves to
-determine. Certain it is, that when the next morning was ushered in with
-a soft westerly breeze and a dull cloudy sky, interspersed with bright
-transient gleams of joyous sunshine, such as salmon love, the Nyssar got
-the credit of it all. Not that the Norwegians were at first aware of the
-extent of their blessings, for the barbarians are all unversed in the
-mysteries of fly-fishing, but they were not long in finding it out, from
-the smiling looks and congratulatory expressions of their employers.
-
-Englishmen might have felt dull and heavy after the consumption of such
-enormous quantities of brandy: English heads might have ached, and
-English hands might have felt shaky during the operation of getting
-sober. Thor himself could not have risen from the challenge cup, set
-before him by Loki Utgard, with more complete self-possession than did
-Tom and Torkel, and the mighty Jacob. Sleep and drink had fled with the
-shades of night, and it was a steady hand that served out the coffee that
-morning.
-
-The party had long separated to their respective pursuits, for the
-impatience of the fishermen and the actual dearth of provisions in the
-camp did not allow of idling.
-
-Towards noon the breeze had entirely sunk, and the sun, having succeeded
-in dispelling the clouds, was shining in its summer strength into the
-confined valley, concentrating its rays from the encircling rocks upon
-the channel of the river, and pouring them on the encampment as on the
-focus of a burning-glass.
-
-It was not, however, a depressing, moist, stewing heat; there was a
-lightness and elasticity in the air unknown in southern climes, or if
-known at all, known only on the higher Alps, and in the middle of the
-summer. Men felt the heat, no doubt, and the thermometer indicated a high
-degree of temperature; but there was nothing in it enervating, nothing
-predisposing to slothfulness or inaction; on the contrary, the nerves
-seemed braced under it, and the spirits buoyant. Work and exercise were a
-pleasure, not a toil; and if the Parson did stretch himself out under the
-shade of the great birch tree, it was the natural result of a well-spent
-morning of downright hard work. Wielding a flail is a trifle compared to
-wielding a salmon rod; and he and the Captain had, both of them, wielded
-it that morning to some purpose, for the salmon had not been unmindful
-of the soft breeze and the cloudy skies, but had risen to the fly with
-appetites truly Norwegian.
-
-Jacob and Torkel, with one of the boatmen in the distance, were up to
-their eyes in salt and blood, cleaning, splitting, salting, and otherwise
-preparing the spare fish for a three days’ sojourn in the smoking-house;
-while three or four bright-looking fresh run salmon, selected from
-the heap, and ready crimped for the kettle or toasting skewers, were
-glittering from under the green and constantly-wetted branches, with
-which they were protected from the heat of the day.
-
-Birger, who was much more at home with his gun than with his fishing-rod,
-had gone out that morning early, attended by his two men, in order to
-reconnoitre the country, and see what its capabilities were; for the
-Parson’s report had been confined to its excellencies as a fishing
-station. The Captain was still on the river; every now and then distant
-glimpses of his boat could be seen as he shifted from throw to throw, and
-occasionally condescended even to harl the river, by way of resting his
-arms. Such a fishing morning as they had enjoyed, is not often to be met
-with, and the Captain would not take the hint which the cloudless sun had
-been giving him for the last half-hour.
-
-The Parson, whose rod was pitched in a neighbouring juniper, and whose
-fly, a sober dark-green, as big as a bird, floated out faintly in the
-expiring breeze, was stretched at full length on the turf, occupied, so
-far as a tired man who is resting himself can be said to be occupied at
-all, in watching the motions of a little red-headed woodpecker, that was
-darting from branch to branch and from tree to tree, making the forest
-ring again with its sharp succession of taps, as it drove the insects
-out of their hiding-places beneath the outside bark. Taps they were,
-no doubt, and given by the bird’s beak, too, but by no means like the
-distinct and deliberate tap of the yellow woodpecker, every one of which
-may be counted: so rapid were they, that they sounded more like the
-scrooping of a branch torn violently from the tree, and so loud, that it
-was difficult to conceive that such a sound could be caused by a bird
-comparatively so diminutive.
-
-The woodpecker, which seemed almost tame and by no means disconcerted
-by the presence of strangers, pursued its occupation with the utmost
-confidence, though quite within reach of the Parson’s rod.
-
-“Take care,” said the Parson, as Torkel approached, “do not disturb it.”
-
-“Disturb what?” said Torkel.
-
-The Parson pointed to the woodpecker, which was not a dozen yards from
-them. The bird paused a moment, and looked at them, but evinced no
-symptoms of timidity.
-
-“What, the Gertrude-bird?” said Torkel; “no one would disturb her while
-working out her penance, poor thing! She knows that well enough; look
-at her.” And, in truth, the bird did seem to know it, for another loud
-rattle of taps formed an appropriate accompaniment to Torkel’s speech;
-though Birger and the Captain at that moment came up, the one with his
-last fish, the other with a couple of ducks, a tjäder, and two brace
-of grouse, of one sort or another, which he had met with during his
-morning’s exploration.
-
-The Parson nodded to the Captain, congratulated Birger, but, ever ready
-for a legend, turned round to Torkel.
-
-“What do you mean by a Gertrude-bird, and what is her penance?” said he.
-
-Birger smiled—not unbelievingly, though; for the legend is as well
-known in Sweden as it is in Norway; and few people, in either of these
-countries, who believe in anything at all, are altogether sceptical on
-matters of popular superstition.
-
-“That bird,” said Torkel, “or at least her ancestors, was once a woman;
-and it is a good lesson that she reads us every time we see her. God
-grant that we may all be the better for it,” he added, reverentially.
-
-“One day she was kneading bread, in her trough, under the eaves of her
-house, when our Lord passed by, leaning on St. Peter. She did not know
-that it was the Lord and his Apostle, for they looked like two poor men,
-who were travelling past her cottage door.”
-
-“‘Give us of your dough, for the love of God,’ said the Lord Christ; ‘we
-have come far across the fjeld, and have fasted long!’
-
-“Gertrude pinched off a small piece for them, but on rolling it on her
-trough to get it into shape, it grew and grew, and filled up the trough
-completely. She looked at it in wonder. ‘No,’ said she, ‘that is more
-than you want;’ so she pinched off a smaller piece, and rolled it out as
-before; but the smaller piece filled up the trough, just as the other
-had done, and Gertrude put it aside, too, and pinched a smaller bit
-still. But the miracle was just the same; the smaller bit filled up the
-trough as full as the largest-sized kneading that she had ever put in it.
-
-“Gertrude’s heart was hardened still more; she put that aside too,
-resolving, so soon as the strangers had left her, to divide all her dough
-into little bits, and to roll it out into great loaves. ‘I cannot give
-you any to-day,’ said she; ‘go on your journey, and the Lord prosper you,
-but you must not stop at my house.’
-
-“Then the Lord Christ was angry; and her eyes were opened, and she saw
-whom she had forbidden to come into her house, and she fell down on her
-knees; but the Lord said, ‘I gave you plenty, but that hardened your
-heart, so plenty was not a blessing to you; I will try you now with the
-blessing of poverty; you shall from henceforth seek your food day by day,
-and always between the wood and the bark.[15] But forasmuch as I see your
-penitence to be sincere, this shall not be for ever: as soon as your back
-is entirely clothed in mourning this shall cease, for by that time you
-will have learned to use your gifts rightly.’
-
-“Gertrude flew from the presence of the Lord, for she was already a bird,
-but her feathers were blackened already, from her mourning; and from that
-time forward she and her descendants have, all the year round, sought
-their food between the wood and the bark; but the feathers of their back
-and wings get more mottled with black as they grow older; and when the
-white is quite covered the Lord Christ takes them for his own again. No
-Norwegian will ever hurt a Gertrude-bird, for she is always under the
-Lord’s protection, though he is punishing her for the time.”
-
-“Bravo, Torkel,” said the Parson. “I could not preach a better sermon
-than that myself, or give you sounder theology.”
-
-“You seem always on the look-out for a superstition,” said the Captain.
-
-“So I am,” said the Parson. “There is nothing that displays the
-character of a people so well as their national legends.”
-
-“But do you not consider that in lending your countenance to them, and
-looking as if you believed them, you are lending your countenance to
-superstition itself?”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “what would you have me do? laugh them out of
-it, like Miss Martineau? And if I succeeded in that, which I should
-not, what should I have done then? Why, opened a fallow for scepticism.
-Superstition is the natural evidence of the Unseen in the minds of the
-ignorant; to be superstitious, is to believe in a Being superior to
-ourselves; and this is in itself the first step to spiritual advancement.
-Inform the mind, teaching it to distinguish the true from the false, and
-superstition—that is to say, the reverence for the unseen—brightens into
-true religion. Take it away by force, or quench it by ridicule, and you
-have an unoccupied corner of the soul for every bad passion to take root
-in. Superstition is the religion of the ignorant.”
-
-“Well, there is truth in that,” said the Captain. “When a boy becomes
-a man, he will not play prison-base, or go a bird’s-nesting; but
-prison-base and bird’s-nesting are no bad preparation for manly daring
-and gallant enterprise.”
-
-“Very true; and when the boy is capable of the latter he will leave off
-his prison-base and bird’s-nesting without any trouble on your part.”
-
-“There are good superstitions as well as bad,” said Birger. “To be afraid
-of thinning down a noxious bird, like the magpie, as our people are,
-because the devil has them under his protection, is a bad superstition.
-It is a distrust in the power and providence of God; but, though it is
-equally a superstition to imagine that one bird is more a favourite with
-God than another, yet the boy who, in your country, in the ardour of his
-first shooting expedition, turns aside his gun because
-
- Cock-robins and kitty-wrens
- Are God Almighty’s cocks and hens;
-
-or, in our country, from the Gertrude-bird, because she is working
-out the penance which Christ has imposed upon her, has, in so doing,
-exercised self-denial, has acknowledged the existence of a God, and has
-admitted the sanctity of His protection. Many a superstition has as good
-a moral as a parable, and this is one of them.”
-
-The approach of dinner at once scared away the Gertrude-bird, and put an
-end to Birger’s moralising; and as they discussed the pink curdy salmon,
-the produce of the morning’s sport, and revelled in the anticipation
-of strawberry and raspberry jam, the fumes of which every now and then
-were wafted to them from the kitchen, and in the certainty of roast game
-and smoked fish for future consumption, they laid their plans for the
-afternoon’s sport.
-
-The sun was still shining in its strength and cloudlessness, and bade
-fair so to shine for the rest of the day; and the breeze, which had been
-for some time failing, had now sunk into a perfect calm. No salmon or
-trout were to be caught by the usual means—that was clear enough. Jacob,
-however, who had procured what might be called with great propriety a
-kettle of fish, for he had borrowed from a neighbouring farm-house one
-of the kettles in which they simmer their milk, and had got it full
-of minnows and other small fry—proposed setting his långref. This was
-unanimously assented to, for occupation is pleasing, and so is variety;
-and eels, pike, and flounders, which were likely to be its produce, were
-no bad additions to a larder less remarkable for the variety of its
-provisions than for their abundance.
-
-But the grand scheme was one proposed by the Captain, who had been
-reconnoitring the higher parts of the river, and had discovered a very
-likely place for a bright day, but one which could not be reached from
-the shore, or by any of the ordinary means of propelling a boat. It was
-a fall terminating, not as falls generally do, in a huge basin, but in a
-shoot or rapid of considerable length, like a gigantic mill race, which,
-after a straight but turbulent course of a couple of hundred yards, shot
-all at once into the middle of a round and eddying pool. It was called
-the Hell Fall, probably from its fury, for the word is Norske; but
-possibly also, from Hela’s Fall, Hela being the Goddess of Darkness; and
-well did the yawning chasm, through which the waters rushed, deserve that
-name, overshadowed as it was by its black walls of rock. It was upon this
-that the Captain had reckoned; whatever were the case with the rest of
-the world, sunshine or storm must be alike to it, and to the tenants of
-its gloomy recesses.
-
-The Captain was confident the thing could be done, and the Parson was
-as confident that if it could be done, and the fly introduced into the
-numerous turn-holes round which the water boiled and bubbled, the rapid
-would require neither cloud nor wind to make it practicable. And Birger,
-who was a great man at contrivances, asseverated strongly that it should
-be done.
-
-The first job, however, was to set the långref, and that was a mode of
-poaching with which they were all familiar. The långref, a line of two or
-three hundred fathoms in length, with a snood and a hook at each fathom,
-was baited from the minnow kettle, and coiled, so that the baited hooks
-lay together on a board; and one end having been made fast to a stump
-on the landing place, the boat was pulled diagonally down and across
-the stream, and the line gradually paid out in such a manner that the
-hooks were carried by the current, so as to hang free of the back line;
-the other end, which came within a few yards of the farther bank, was
-anchored by a heavy stone, backed by a smaller one, and the whole affair
-left to fish for itself.
-
-In the meanwhile, some of the men had been sent forward with ropes, and
-with the boat-hooks and oars belonging to the expedition; for, though
-boats are always procurable in a place where the river forms the usual
-means of communication, their gear is not always to be relied on in cases
-of difficulty.
-
-The fishermen selected their short lake rods, as better adapted to the
-work they were going about than the great two-handed salmon rods with
-which they had been fishing that morning; and having fitted fresh casting
-lines, which, in consideration of the work they were going about, were
-of the strongest twisted gut they could find, they took the path up the
-river.
-
-“I wonder what are the proper flies of this river,” said the Captain. “In
-Scotland every place has its own set of flies, and you are always told
-that you will do nothing at all, unless you get the very colours and the
-very flies peculiar to the river.”
-
-“You seem to have done pretty well on this river, at all events,” said
-Birger, “without any such information.”
-
-“No information is to be despised,” said the Parson. “The oldest
-fisherman will always find something to be learnt from men who have
-passed their lives on a particular stream, and have studied it from their
-boyhood. There is, however, only one general principle, and that will
-always hold good. By this the experienced fisherman will never be at a
-loss about suiting his fly to the water. Here is the Captain now; we
-have had no consultation, and yet I will venture to say that we are both
-fishing with flies of a similar character. What fly did you catch your
-fish with, this morning, Captain?”
-
-“I have been using my old Scotch flies,” said the Captain, “such as they
-tie on the Tay and Spey,[16] and the largest of the sort I could find.”
-
-“To be sure you did; and tell Birger why you did not use your Irish
-flies.”
-
-“They were too gaudy for the water,” said the Captain.
-
-“That, Birger, will give you the principle,” said the Parson. “The
-Captain has been very successful with flies belonging to another river;
-now, look at mine, which I tied last night, while I was waiting till
-you came home from sacrificing to Nyssen. Except in size, this is as
-different as possible from the Captain’s; and yet its principle is
-precisely the same; mine is a green silk body, black hackle, blackcock
-wing, no tinsel, and nothing bright about it, except this single golden
-pheasant topping for a tail. Now, the Tay flies are quite different to
-look at; they are mostly brown or dun pig’s wool bodies, with natural
-red or brown hackles and mallard wings; but the principle of both is the
-same; they are sober, quiet flies, with no glitter or gaudiness about
-them; and the Captain shall tell you what induced him to select such as
-these.”
-
-“I chose the largest fly I could find,” said the Captain; “because the
-water here is very deep and strong; and as the salmon lies near the
-bottom, I must have a large fly to attract his attention; but I must not
-have a gaudy fly, because the water is so clear that the sparkle of the
-tinsel would be more glittering than anything in nature; and the fish,
-when he had risen and come near enough to distinguish it, would be very
-apt to turn short.”
-
-“You have it now, precisely,” said the Parson; “the depth of the water
-regulates the size of the fly, and the clearness of the water its
-colours. This rule, of course, is not without exceptions; if it were,
-there would be no science in fishing. The sun, the wind, the season,
-the state of the atmosphere must also be taken into consideration; for
-instance, this rapid we are going to fish now, is the very same water we
-have been fishing in below, and therefore just as clear, but it is rough,
-and overhung by rocks and trees. I mean, therefore, to put on a gayer fly
-than anything we have used hitherto. But here we are,” he said, as they
-looked down upon the rush of waters, “and upon my word, an ugly place it
-is.”
-
-The Parson might well say that, for the waters were rushing below with
-frightful rapidity. Above them was the fall, where the river, compressed
-into a narrow fissure, shot through it like an enormous spout, into a
-channel, wider certainly than the spout itself, but still very narrow;
-while the perpendicular walls reminded the spectators of an artificial
-lock right in the middle of the stream; at the very foot of the fall, was
-a solid rock, on the back of which the waters heaped themselves up, and
-found their way into the straight channel by rushing round it. In fact,
-without this check, their rapidity would have been too great for anything
-to swim in them; and as it was they looked anything but inviting.
-
-“A very awkward place!” said the Parson! “and how do you mean to fish
-this?”
-
-“Come away a little from the roar of the waters,” said the Captain, “and
-I will explain my plans. You see that flat ledge of rock below us, just
-above the rush of the water; that spot we can reach by means of the rope.
-Make it fast to that tree, Tom: you learned knotting in the English navy,
-you know.”
-
-Tom grinned, and did as he was told, and the Captain ascertained the
-strength of his work practically, by climbing down the face of the rock,
-and reconnoitring personally the ledge he had pointed out.
-
-“Now,” said he, when he had returned, “we will get the boat as near as
-we can to this rush of water, and then veer out a rope to her from this
-rock: birch ropes will float, and the stream is quite sufficient to carry
-it down. If we make the boat fast to this, we may command every inch of
-the rapid, and you see yourself, how many turn-holes are made by the
-points of the rock which project from either side. You may depend upon
-it, every one of these contains a salmon, and the water is so troubled
-and covered with foam, that not one of these fish will know or care
-whether the sun is shining or not.”
-
-“I think your reasoning is sound enough,” said the Parson; “but if the
-boat capsizes, the best swimmer in Norway would be drowned, or knocked to
-pieces against these rocky points.”
-
-[Illustration: HELL FALL.
-
-p. 119.]
-
-“But what is to capsize the boat? I am not going to take young hands with
-me; we all know our work; at all events, I mean to make the first trial
-of my own plan myself, you have nothing to do but to stand on the rock,
-and haul up the boat.”
-
-The Parson looked at Birger.
-
-“I do not think there is much danger,” said he; “and if the Captain will
-manage the rod, I will see to the boat. Tom shall take the other oar.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “you have left me the safest job; but I do not
-quite like to see you do it. However, I suppose you will; so here goes to
-see that you run no more danger than is absolutely necessary.” So saying,
-he eased himself down the rope to the flat rock, followed by Torkel and
-Pierson, who had previously thrown down a coil of birch rope; while the
-Captain, Birger, and Tom went down to the place below the rapid, where
-the boat was moored to a stump of a tree that grew over the river.
-
-The birch rope floated on the top of the racing water, and soon reached
-the great turn-hole below the rapid, where the current was not so furious
-but that the boat could easily be managed. After one or two misses,
-Birger caught the end of it with his boat-hook, and, passing it round all
-the thwarts, secured it to the aftermost one; placing an axe in the stern
-sheets, in which the Captain had seated himself with his short lake-rod
-in his hand, Tom sat amidships with the paddles, while Birger himself
-stood forward with the boat-hook, to fend off from any point of rock that
-the eddies might sheer the boat against.
-
-When all was ready, he waved his cap—for no voice could be heard amid the
-roar of water—and the Parson and his party began steadily hauling on the
-rope. The boat entered the dark cleft, and, though her progress was very
-slow, cut a feather through the water, as if she were racing over it.
-
-Tom, by dipping one or other paddle, steered from side to side, as
-he was bid; and the Captain threw his fly into the wreaths of foam
-which gathered in the dark corners; for in the most furious of rapids,
-there will always be spots of water perfectly stationary, where the
-eddies, that have been turned off by projecting rocks, meet again the
-main current; and, in those places, the salmon will invariably rest
-themselves, accomplishing their passage, as it were, by stages.
-
-From side to side swung the boat—now at rest, now hauled upon by the
-line, according to the messages which Birger telegraphed with his cap;
-but, for some time, without any result, except that of convincing the
-Parson that the dangers he apprehended, were more in appearance than in
-reality; so that they were beginning to think that their ingenuity would
-be the sole reward of their pains. At length, there was a sudden tug at
-the line, the water was far too agitated to permit the rise to be seen,
-and the Captain’s rod bent like a bow.
-
-“Haul up, a few fathoms,” said he, raising his rod so as to get his line,
-as much as possible, out of the action of the water, which was forcing it
-into a bight. “Now, steer across, Tom, to the opposite side. We must try
-the strength of the tackle—‘Pull for the half,’ as we say in Ireland.”
-
-The fish had not attempted to run, knowing that its best chance of safety
-was in the hole in which it lay, but had sunk sulkily to the bottom.
-No sooner, however, did the boat feel the current on her bow, than she
-sheered across to the opposite side; and the Captain, stopping his line
-from running out, drew the salmon by main force from its shelter, who,
-feeling the strength of the current, for a moment attempted to stem it;
-but soon, the Captain, adroitly dropping his hand, turned tail and raced
-away, downward, with the combined velocity of the stream, and its own
-efforts.
-
-The Captain paused a moment, to make sure that the fish was in earnest,
-and then cut the rope; and boat, fish, and all, came tumbling down the
-rapid into the turn-hole below.
-
-Once there, it became an ordinary trial of skill between man and
-fish—such as always occurs whenever a salmon is hooked in rough water—and
-that the Captain was well up to. It was impossible for it again to head
-up the dangerous ground of the rapid, or to face the rush of the waters
-with the strain of the line upon it; so it raced backwards and forwards,
-and up and down in the deep pool, while Tom took advantage of every
-turn to paddle his boat quietly into still water. At last, the Captain
-succeeded in turning his fish under a projecting tree, upon which the
-Parson, who, as soon as he had seen the turn matters were likely to take,
-had shinned up the rope, and hurried to the scene of action, was standing
-gaff in hand to receive it.
-
-“Well done, all hands!” said the Captain, as the Parson freed his gaff
-from the back fin of a twenty-pound salmon, and Birger hooked on to the
-tree, and brought his boat to shore. “Well done, all hands! it was no
-easy matter to invade such territories as that; but one wants a little
-additional excitement after such a fishing morning as we have had.”
-
-“I think we may set you down as _bene meritus de patriâ_,” said the
-Parson; “it is just as well to have a fresh resource on a bright
-afternoon like this; the time may come when we may want it.”
-
-“Now, then, for another fish,” said the Captain; “Birger shall try his
-hand at the rod this time.”
-
-Birger would have excused himself on account of his want of skill, but
-was very easily persuaded, and, thus they took turns, now securing a
-fish, now cutting a line against an unseen rock, now losing one by
-downright hard pulling, till, when the light began to fail, and the
-dangers to grow more real from the darkness, they made fast their boat
-to the stump, and returned victorious to the camp, having added three
-or four fish to their store, and those the finest they had caught that
-day.[17]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-DEPARTURE FROM TORJEDAHL.
-
- “Og Trolde, Hexer, Nysser i hver Vraae.”
-
- _Finn Magnussen._
-
- And Witches, Trolls, and Nysses in each nook.
-
-
-“Hallo! what is the matter now?” said the Captain, who had been out
-with his gun that morning, and on his return caught sight of the Parson
-sitting disconsolate on the river’s bank. By the waters of Torjedahl we
-sat down and wept. “What has gone wrong?”
-
-“Why, everything has gone wrong,” said the Parson peevishly; “look at my
-line.”
-
-“You do seem to have lost your casting line, certainly.”
-
-“Yes, I have, and half my reel line beside.”
-
-“Very tinkerish, I dare say, but do not grieve over it; put on a new one
-and hold your tongue about it; no one saw you, and I promise not to tell.”
-
-“How can you be so absurd?” said the Parson, “look at the river, and
-tell me how we are to fish that; just look at those baulks of timber
-floating all over it. I had on as fine a fish as ever I saw in my
-life,—five-and-twenty pounds if he was an ounce, when down came these
-logs, and one of them takes my reel line, with sixty yards out, and cuts
-it right in the middle.”
-
-“Well, that is provoking,” said the Captain, “enough to make a saint
-swear, let alone a parson; but, hang it, man, it is only once in the way.
-Come along, do not look behind you; I am in a hurry to be at it myself, I
-came home on purpose, I was ashamed to waste so glorious a fishing day as
-this in the fjeld.”
-
-“That is just the thing that annoys me,” said the Parson; “it is, as you
-say, a most lovely fishing day,—I never saw a more promising one; and I
-have just heard that these logs will take three days floating by at the
-very least, and while they are on the river I defy the best fisherman in
-all England to land anything bigger than a graul.”
-
-“Why,” said the Captain, “have the scoundrels been cutting a whole
-forest?”
-
-“This is what Torkel tells me,” said the Parson; “he says that in the
-winter they cut their confounded firs, and when the snow is on the ground
-they just square them, haul them down to the river or its tributaries,
-where they leave them to take care of themselves, and when the ice melts
-in the spring, down come the trees with it. But there are three or four
-lakes, it seems, through which this river passes—that, by-the-by, is
-the reason why it is so clear; and, as the baulks would be drifting all
-manner of ways when they got into these lakes, and would get stranded on
-the shores instead of going down the stream, they make what they call
-a boom at or near the mouth of the river, that is to say, they chain
-together a number of baulks, end-ways, and moor them in a bight across
-the river, so that they catch everything that floats. Here they get hold
-of the loose baulks, make them into rafts, and navigate them along the
-lakes, launching them again into the river at the other end, and catching
-them again at the next boom in the same way. They have, it seems, just
-broken up the contents of one of these booms above us. It will take three
-days to clear it out, and another day for the straggling pieces.”
-
-“Whew!” said the Captain, “three blessed days taken from the sum of our
-lives; what on earth is to be done?”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “that is exactly what we must see about, for it
-is quite certain that there is nothing to be done on the water. Before I
-began grumbling I sent off Torkel to look for Birger—for we must hold a
-council of war upon it. O! there is Birger,” said he, as they crossed the
-little rise which forms the head of the Aal Foss and came in sight of the
-camp and the river below it; “Torkel must have missed him.”
-
-“Hallo!” said Birger, who was with Piersen in one of the boats, fishing
-up with his boat-hook the back line of the långref, and apparently he had
-made an awkward mess of it—“hallo there! get another boat and come and
-help me, these baulks have played Old Scratch with the långref; it has
-made a goodly catch, too, last night, as far as I can see, but we want
-more help to get it in.”
-
-The Parson had the discretion to keep his own counsel, but the fact
-was, it was he who was the cause both of the abundant catch and of the
-present trouble. The small eels had been plaguing them, for some nights
-successively, by sucking off and nibbling to pieces baits which they
-were too small to swallow, and thus preventing the larger fish from
-getting at them. The Parson had seen this, and had set his wits to work
-to circumvent them. By attaching corks to the back line, he had floated
-the hooks above the reach of the eels, which he knew would never venture
-far from the bottom, while pike, gös, id, perch, the larger eels, and
-occasionally even trout, would take the floating bait more readily when
-they found it in mid-water.
-
-This would have done exceedingly well, had he looked at it early in the
-morning; that, however, he had not exactly forgotten, but had neglected
-to do. Time was precious, and he was unwilling to waste it on hauling
-the långref. Jacob, whose business it was to haul it, had been sent down
-to Christiansand on the preceding day, with two of the boatmen, for
-supplies, and had not yet returned; and the Parson, holding his tongue
-about his experiment, and proposing to himself the pleasure of hauling
-the långref when the mid-day sun should be too hot for salmon-fishing,
-had gone out early with his two-handed rod. In the meanwhile the baulks
-had come down, and the very first of them, catching the centre of the
-floating bight, had cut it in two, and had thus permitted the whole
-of the Parson’s great catch of fish to entangle themselves at their
-pleasure.
-
-[Illustration: p. 124.]
-
-It was these _disjecta membra_ that Birger was busying himself about;
-the task was not an easy one; and if it were, the guardsman was not
-altogether a proficient. But, even when the reinforcement arrived, there
-was nothing to be done beyond lifting the whole tangle bodily into the
-boat, releasing the fish from the hooks, and then, partly by patience,
-partly by a liberal use of the knife, to get out the tangle on shore.
-The further half gave them the most trouble to find; it had been moored
-to a stone, and the back line had been strong enough to drag it some way
-down the river before it broke. It was, however, at last discovered and
-secured, and the catch was of sufficient magnitude to ensure a supply of
-fish, notwithstanding the logs.
-
-“Stop a minute,” said the Captain, as the boats’ heads were put up the
-stream on their return; “we have not got all the långref yet, I am sure;
-I see another fish; just pull across that ripple, Parson, a few yards
-below the end of that stranded log. Yes, to be sure it is, and a salmon,
-too, and as dead as Harry the Eighth. Steady there! hold water!” and he
-made a rake for the line with his boat-hook. “Why, what have we got here?
-it is much too fine for the långref. As I live, it is your own line. To
-be sure; here it runs. Steady! Let me get a hold of it with my hand, it
-may not be hitched in the wood firmly, and if it slips we shall lose it
-entirely. That will do: all right. That must be the log that broke you;
-it must have stranded here after coming down the Aal Foss, with the fish
-still on it—and—hurrah! here is the fish all safe—and, I say, Parson,
-remarkably fine fish it is, certainly! not quite twenty-five pounds,
-though,”—holding up the fish by the tail, and measuring it against his
-own leg; for his trousers were marked with inches, from the pocket-button
-downwards,—a yard measure having been stitched on the seam. “You have not
-such a thing as a steelyard, have you?”
-
-The Parson, laughing—rather confusedly, though,—produced from his slip
-pocket the required instrument.
-
-“Ah! I thought so, ten pounds and a half; the biggest fish always do get
-away, that is certain, especially if they are not caught again; it is a
-thousand pities I put my eye on this one. I have spoilt your story?”
-
-“Well, well,” said the Parson, “if you have spoilt my story, you have
-made a good one for yourself, so take the other oar and let us pull for
-the camp.”
-
-“Birger,” said the Captain, when the boats had been made fast, and the
-spoils left in the charge of Piersen, “Torkel has been telling the Parson
-that we are to have three days of these logs. If the rascal speaks the
-truth, what is to be done by us fishermen?”
-
-“The rascal does speak the truth in this instance, I will be bound for
-it,” said Birger; “he knows the river well, and besides, it is what they
-do on every river in Norway that is deep enough to float a baulk.”
-
-“What is to be done, then? there is no fishing on the river while this is
-going on.”
-
-“I will tell you what we can do,” said Birger; “two or three days
-ago—that day when I returned to the camp so late—if you remember, I told
-you that I had fallen in with a lonely lake in the course of my rambles.
-There was a boat there belonging to a sœter in the neighbourhood, which
-Piersen knew of, and I missed a beautiful chance at a flight of ducks.
-However, that is neither here nor there; the people at the sœter told
-me that the great lake-char was to be found there; so the next day I
-sent Piersen, who understands laying lines if he does not understand
-fly-fishing, to set some trimmers for them. I vote we shoot our way to
-the lake, look at these lines, get another crack at the ducks, and make
-our way to the Toftdahl (which, if the map is to be trusted, must be
-somewhere within reach), fish there for a day, shoot our way back again,
-and by that time the wooden flood will be over.”
-
-“Bravo, Birger,” said the Captain, “a very promising plan, and here, in
-good time, comes Commissary-General Jacob with the supplies. I see his
-boat just over that point, entangled among a lump of logs. I vote we
-take him with us; no man makes such coffee. I have not had a cup worth
-drinking since you sent him down the river.”
-
-“You cannot take the poor fellow a long march to-day,” said the
-Parson, considerately, “he has just been pulling up the stream from
-Christiansand.”
-
-“He pull! is that all you know of Jacob? I will venture to say he has not
-pulled a stroke since he started; look at the rascal, how he lolls at
-his ease, with his legs over the hamper, while the men are half in the
-water, struggling their way through the obstacles.”
-
-“I see the scamp,” said the Parson; “upon my word, he puts me in mind of
-what the nigger observed on landing in England; man work, horse work,
-ox work, everything work, pig the only gentleman; Jacob is the only
-gentleman in our expedition.”
-
-“I admire that man,” said Birger; “that is the true practical philosophy,
-never to do anything for yourself if you can get other people to do it
-for you. But I think those fellows had better make haste about it. I have
-known such a hitch of timber as that bridge the whole river, from side to
-side, in ten minutes; they accumulate very rapidly when they once take
-ground—ah! there goes the boat free; all right; but I certainly began to
-tremble for my provisions.”
-
-“Well, then, we will take gentleman Jacob,” said the Captain, “I cannot
-give up my coffee.”
-
-“I think so,” said Birger; “we will leave our three boatmen here in
-charge of the camp; Tom, Torkel, and Piersen can carry the fishing-rods
-and our knapsacks, which we must pack in light marching order. Jacob
-shall provide for the kitchen, and we will each of us take a day’s
-provisions in our havresacs, and our guns on our shoulders; the odds
-are, we knock over grouse and wild fowl, by the way, enough to supply us
-nobly. And even if we do not meet with sport, we shall at all events have
-a pleasant pic-nicking trip, and see something of the country, while the
-Parson, who is so fond of open air, may indulge himself with sleeping
-under a tree, and contemplating the moon at his ease.”
-
-Torkel, who had come up while they were watching Jacob’s progress,
-and had learnt their plans, informed them of a sœter which lay nearly
-in their proposed course, and in which he had himself often received
-hospitality.
-
-“Well, then,” said the Captain, “that will do for us, and we will leave
-the Parson, if he prefers it,
-
- “His hollow tree,
- His crust of bread and liberty.”
-
-“You may laugh,” said the Parson, “but the time will come when you will
-find out certain disagreeables in a Norwegian dwelling, which may make
-you think with less contempt on the hollow tree.”
-
-“The Parson is of the same mind as the Douglas,” said the Captain, “he
-likes better to hear the lark sing, than the mouse squeak.”
-
-“I like clean heather better than dirty sheep-skin,” said the Parson.
-
-“And musquitoes better than fleas,” added the Captain.
-
-“Bother the musquitoes: I did not think of them.”[18]
-
-“They will soon remind you,” said Birger, “if we happen to encamp near
-standing water.” And he went on packing his knapsack to the tune of
-“Should Auld Acquaintance be Forgot,” which he whistled with considerable
-taste and skill.[19]
-
-Arrangements, such as these, are soon made; the three boatmen were
-left in charge of the camp, with full permission to get as drunk as
-they pleased; and, before Jacob had well stretched his legs, which had
-been cramped in the boat, he was stretching them on the mountain-side,
-marching a good way in the rear of the party, and grumbling as he marched.
-
-The mountains, which, all the way from Christiansand, hem in the river,
-so that not even a goat can travel along its banks, at Mosse Eurd and
-Wigeland recede on both sides, forming a sort of basin; and here, in a
-great measure, they lose their abrupt and perpendicular character. Close
-by the water-side, there are a hundred, or two, of acres of inclosed
-ground comparatively flat, and either arable or meadow; not by any means
-in a ring fence, but spots cribbed here and there from the fjeld, which
-looks more like a gentleman’s park than anything else, with these little
-paddocks fenced out of it. The houses, too, are quite the picturesque
-houses that gentlemen in England ornament their estates with, so that the
-untidy plank fences seemed altogether out of character with the scenery.
-What one would look for here, is the neat park palings of England, or its
-trim quickset hedges.
-
-Beyond this, the ground becomes more broken and wooded, but without
-losing its parkish character; it is something like the forest grounds
-of the South Downs in England, only broken into detached hills and
-deep rises, with, occasionally, a bare ridge of rock forcing its way
-through the short green turf. The forest was mostly birch, with a few
-maples and sycamores, and, here and there, a fir; but every tree big
-enough for a timber stick, had long ago been floated down to the boom at
-Christiansand. The character of the whole scene was prettiness rather
-than beauty. The mountains, however, were no lower than they had been
-further down the river; it was as if their perpendicular sides had, in
-some antediluvian age, given way, and that, in the course of centuries,
-the fragments had become covered with trees and verdure.
-
-Among these broken pieces of mountain it was extremely easy for the
-traveller to lose his way; there was not the vestige of a path, that is
-to say, a path leading to any place to which he could possibly want to
-go. The grass was particularly good and sweet there, and sheep and cows
-are intensely conservative in their idiosyncracy; so stoutly had they
-kept up the principle of _stare super antiquas vias_, that the appearance
-was as if the whole region was thickly inhabited and intersected with
-foot-paths in every direction, while every animal that helps to make them
-rings its own individual bell, and carries its own individual brand, but
-pastures in uncontrolled liberty. A cow is a very good guide to a lost
-man, for, if he has patience to wait till evening, she is sure to feed
-her way to the sœter to be milked; but woe to the man who puts his trust
-in bullocks or in sheep; they feed at ease, and roam at pleasure, till
-the frosts and snows of approaching winter bring them home to the fold,
-the stall, and the salting-tub.
-
-Much of the shrubbery appearance of the scene is produced by the numerous
-plants of the vaccinium tribe, the bright glossy leaves of which look
-like myrtle; and the blue aconite, and the gentian, and the lily of the
-valley, flowers which we seldom meet with in England, absolutely wild,
-and the familiar leaves of the raspberry, and black currant, suggest
-ideas of home, while the turf on which the traveller treads, looks as if
-it had been mown by the gardener that very morning.
-
-The course, though varied by quite as many ups and downs as there were
-ins and outs, was, upon the whole, continually ascending; and, as the
-higher regions were attained, and the facilities of transport diminished,
-the tall stately fir began to assert its natural supremacy among the
-northern sylva. Still, however, there was enough of birch, and even of
-the softer woods, to diversify the foliage, and preserve the park-like
-aspect. Heather, of which the Parson had anticipated making his couch,
-there was none; but, on the other hand, there was no furze to irritate
-the shins, or brambles to tear the clothes. The latter does grow in
-Norway, and is much more prized for its fruit than either raspberry or
-strawberry, but the former cannot stand the winters. Linnæus is said
-to have sat for hours in delighted contemplation of an English field
-of furze in full bloom, and the plant is generally seen in Swedish
-conservatories to this day, or set out in pots as oranges and myrtles are
-with us.
-
-The mid-day sun had scattered the clouds of the morning, as, in truth,
-it very generally does on a Norway summer day, and, shining down in
-patches of brilliant light through the openings, added to the beauty of
-the scene, and diminished in an equal proportion all regrets at leaving
-the Torjedahl behind; for it was quite evident that, except in the Hell
-Fall, or the pools, little or nothing could be done on so bright a day,
-had the baulks been entirely out of the question.
-
-It was an hour or two past noon when they arrived at the ridge which
-divides the valley of the Torjedahl from that of the Aalfjer—not that
-ridge is the proper expression, for the ground had, for some miles,
-become so nearly level that, were it not for a little rill, whose line
-of rushes had been for some time their guide, they would not have known
-whether they were ascending or descending. The country still preserved
-its character of beauty, but its features had gradually become more tame,
-so that the inequalities which, in the beginning of their journey had
-looked like fragments of mountains, were now rounded and regular, like so
-many gigantic mole-hills.
-
-Between two of these, the turf of which was green and unbroken to the
-summit, and shorter and more velvety, if that were possible, than any
-they had passed over, was the source of the rill, a black, boggy, rushy,
-uninviting bit of ground, but covered with myrica bushes, which diffused
-through the still air their peculiarly aromatic and refreshing scent;
-in the centre of this was a deep still hole—it could be called nothing
-else—it certainly was not a spring head, for there was not a bubble
-of springing water; it was perfectly still and motionless, and looked
-absolutely black in its clearness.
-
-It was a welcome halt to all, for the sun was hot and the way was long.
-The well-head was a noted haunt of the dwarfs or Trolls, indeed it was
-said to penetrate to the centre of the earth, and to be the passage
-through which they emerged to upper air.
-
-This was the reason why, though everything around was scorching and
-dropping in the withering heat, and though the unshaded sun fell full
-upon the unprotected surface, the water was at all times very cold, and
-yet in the hardest winter no ice ever formed upon it—its cold was that of
-the well of Urdar which waters the roots of Yggdrassil, the tree of life;
-no frost can bind these waters, neither can they be polluted with leaves
-or sticks, for a dwarf sits continually on guard there, to keep open the
-passage for his brethren.
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “I can readily believe that these are the waters of
-life, I never met with anything so refreshing, it beats all the brandy in
-the universe.”
-
-Jacob put in no protest to this heresy, but expressed a practical dissent
-by applying his mouth to a private bottle and passing it to Tom.
-
-The Captain was proceeding to wash his face and hands in the well-head,
-but the men begged him not to pollute it; the rill below, they said, did
-not so much signify.
-
-The place had been noted by Birger for a halt, and right glad were they
-all to disembarrass themselves of their respective loads, and to stretch
-themselves in various attitudes of repose picturesque enough upon the
-whole, under the great white poplars whose restless leaves fluttered over
-head though no one could feel the breeze that stirred them, and shaded
-the fairy precincts of the haunted well.
-
-The Parson threw himself on his back upon the turf with his jacket,
-waistcoat, and shirt-collar wide open, his arms extended, and his
-neckerchief, which he had removed, spread over his face and bare neck
-to keep off the musquitoes. He was not asleep exactly, nor, strictly
-speaking, could it be said that he was awake; he was enjoying that quiet
-dreamy sort of repose, that a man thoroughly appreciates after walking
-for five or six hours on a burning hot summer’s day. His blood was still
-galloping through his veins, and he was listening to the beat of his own
-pulses.
-
-“This is very delightful, very,” he said, in a drowsy drawling voice,
-speaking rather to himself than to Torkel. “A very curious sound, one,
-two, three, it sounds like distant hammers.”
-
-“Oh, the Thousand!” said Torkel, “where are we lying?”
-
-The Parson, when he threw himself down on the hill side, had been a
-great deal too hot and tired to pay much attention to his couch, beyond
-the evident fact that the turf was very green and inviting, and that
-it contained no young juniper or other uncomfortable bedding: roused by
-Torkel’s observation, he sat upright, and seeing nothing very remarkable
-except a good rood of lilies of the valley at his feet, the scent of
-which he had been unconsciously enjoying, and which did not look at all
-terrible, stared at him. “Well,” said he, “what is the matter? where
-should we be lying?”
-
-“I do not know,” said Torkel, “that is, I do not know for certain; but
-did you not say you heard hammers? Stay,” he said, looking as if he had
-resolved to do some desperate deed—“yes, I will, I am determined,” and
-he took a piece of clay that was sticking on his right boot, and having
-patted it into the size of a half-crown, put it on his head and dashed
-his hat on over it. Then shading his eyes with his hand, he looked
-fixedly at the hill, as if he were trying to look through it. “No,” said
-he, “I do not see anything, I hope and trust you are mistaken.”
-
-“What can you be about?” said the Parson impatiently, “have you found a
-brandy shop in the forest?”
-
-“I thought it must be the Bjergfolk,” he said, “when you heard the
-hammers. I never can hear them myself, because I was not born on a
-Saturday, and I thought perhaps you might have been. It is a very round
-hill too, just the sort of place they would choose, and they have not a
-great deal of choice nowadays, there are so many bells in the churches,
-and the Trolls cannot live within the sound of bells.”
-
-“No?” said the Parson, “why not?”
-
-“None of the spirits of the middle earth like bells,” said Torkel,
-“neither Alfs, nor Nisses, nor Nechs, nor Trolls, they do not like to
-think of man’s salvation. Bells call people to church, and that is where
-neither Troll nor Alf may go. They are sometimes very spiteful about it,
-too.”
-
-“In the good old times, when it was Norway and Denmark, and we were not
-tied to those hogs of Swedes as we are now” (sinking his voice, out of
-respect to Birger, but by no means so much so that Birger could not
-hear him), “they were building a church at Knud. They pitched upon a
-highish mound near the river, on which to build it, because they wanted
-the people to see their new church, little thinking that the mound was
-the house of a Troll, and that on St. John’s eve, it would stand open
-supported on real pillars. Well, the Troll, who must have been very young
-and green, could not make out what they were going to do with his hill,
-and he had no objection whatever to a house being built upon it, because
-he reckoned upon a good supply of gröd and milk from the dairy. He could
-have seen but very little of the world above the turf not to know a
-church from a house. However, he had no suspicions, and the bells were
-put up, and the Pröbst came to consecrate. The poor Troll could not bear
-to see it, so he rushed out into the wide world, and left his goods and
-his gold and his silver behind him.
-
-“The next day a peasant going home from the consecration saw him weeping
-and wringing his hands beyond the hearing of the bells, which was as near
-as he could venture to come. And the Troll told him that he was obliged
-to leave his country, and could never come back, and asked him to take a
-letter to his friends.
-
-“I suppose the man’s senses were rather muzzy yet—he could hardly have
-had time to get sober so soon after the ceremony; but somehow or another
-he did not see that the speaker was a Troll, but took him for some poor
-fellow who had had a misfortune, and had killed some one, and fancied he
-was afraid of the Landamptman, particularly as he had told him not to
-give the letter to any one (indeed it had no direction), but to leave it
-in the churchyard of the new church, where the owner would find it.
-
-“One would naturally wish to befriend a poor fellow in such a strait; so
-the man took the letter, put it into his pocket, and turned back.
-
-“He had not gone far before he felt hungry, so he took out a bit of flad
-bröd and some dried cod that he had put into his pocket. They were all
-wet. He did not know how that could be; but he took out the letter for
-fear it should be spoiled, and then found that there was wet oozing out
-from under the seal. He wiped it; but the more he wiped it, the wetter
-it was. At last, in rubbing, he broke the seal, and he was glad enough
-to run for it then, for the water came roaring out of the letter like
-the Wigelands Foss, and all he could do he could only just keep before
-it till it had filled up the valley. And there it is to this day. I have
-seen it myself—a large lake as big as our Forres Vand. The fact was, the
-Troll had packed up a lake in the letter, and would have drowned church,
-bells, and all, if he had only sealed it up a little more carefully.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “this beats our penny-post; we send queer things
-by that ourselves, but I do not think anybody has ever yet thought of
-sending a lake through the General Post Office.”
-
-“Is there not some story about Hercules cleaning out the Admiralty, or
-some such place, in a very similar way?” said the Captain.
-
-“No,” said the Parson, “I never heard that the Admiralty has ever been
-cleaned out at all since the days of Pepys. If ever it is done, though,
-it must be in some such wholesale way as this—I do not know anything else
-that will do it.”
-
-“The hill-men are not such bad fellows, though,” said Tom, on whom all
-this by-play about the Admiralty was quite lost, British seaman as he
-was; “and, by the way, Torkel, I wish you would not call them by their
-names, you know they do not like it, and may very well do us a mischief
-before we get clear of this fjeld. Many people say that there is no
-certainty of their being damned after all—our schoolmaster thinks they
-certainly will not, for he says he cannot find anything about damning
-Trolls in the Bible, and I am sure I hope it will not be found necessary
-to damn them, for they often do us a good turn. There was a Huusbonde
-in the Tellemark who had one of their hills on his farm that no one had
-ever made any use of, and he made up his mind to speak to the Troll about
-it. So he waited till St. John’s eve came round and the hill was open,
-and then he went, and sure enough he found the Bjergman. He seemed a
-good-humoured fellow enough, but he was not so rich as most of them; he
-had only a very few copper vessels in his hill and hardly any silver.
-
-“‘Herr Bjergman,’ said the Huusbonde, ‘you do not seem to be in a very
-good case, neither am I, but I think we may make something of this hill
-of yours between us—I say between us, for, you know, the top of the soil
-belongs to me, just as the under soil belongs to you.’
-
-“‘Aye, aye!’ said the Bjergman, ‘I should like that very well. What do
-you propose?’
-
-“‘Why, I propose to dig it up and sow it, and as we have both of us a
-right to the ground, I think in common fairness we ought both of us to
-labour at it, and then we will take the produce year and year about. The
-first year I will have all that is above ground and you shall have all
-below; and the next year we will change over, and then you shall have all
-that is above and I will have all that is below.”
-
-“‘Well,’ said the Troll, greatly pleased, ‘that is fair; I like dealing
-with an honest man. When shall we begin?’
-
-“‘Why, next spring, I think; suppose we say after Walpurgis night,[20] we
-cannot get at the ground much before.’
-
-“‘With all my heart,’ said the Bjergman—and so they did. They worked very
-well together, but the Bjergman did twice as much work as his friend;
-they always do when they are pleased; and they sowed oats and rye and
-bear; and when harvest came the Huusbonde took that which was above
-the ground, the grain and the straw which came to his share, while the
-Bjergman was very well contented with his share of roots.
-
-“‘When next Walpurgis night came round they dug up the ground again; and
-this time the Bjergman was to have all that was above ground, so they
-manured it well, and sowed turnips and carrots; and by and by, when the
-harvest came, the Huusbonde had a fine heap of roots, and the Bjergman
-was delighted with his share of greens. There never came any harm of
-this that I know, each was pleased with his bargain, and the Huusbonde
-came to be the richest man in the Tellemark. You know the family, Torkel,
-old Nils of Bygland, it was his grandfather Lars, to whom it happened.”
-
-“Well,” said Torkel, “it is quite true, then, I can testify, I only wish
-I had a tenth part so many specie-dalers in the Trondhjem Bank as old
-Nils has.”
-
-“And our Norfolk squires,” said the Captain, “fancy it was their sagacity
-that discovered the four-course system of agriculture! The Trolls were
-before them, it seems.”
-
-“The system seems to answer quite as well in Norway as ever it did in
-England,” said the Parson, “If all that Tom tells us about Nils of
-Bygland be true.”
-
-“There is not a doubt of that,” said Torkel, “all Tellemarken knows Nils
-of Bygland, and it is a great pity, when we were crossing the lake the
-other day, that we did not stop at his house; he was never known to let a
-stranger go to bed sober yet.”
-
-“I should think he was seldom without company, then,” said Birger.
-
-“It seems to have answered very well in this particular case,” said
-Jacob, “but I do not think you can trust beings without souls, after all.
-It is best just to make your offering to Nyssen, and to the Lady of the
-Lake, and two or three others, and then to have nothing more to do with
-them.”
-
-“You certainly had better keep a sharp look-out,” said Torkel, “But
-I think we Norwegians know how to handle them, and so do our gallant
-friends the Danes. Did you ever hear how Kallendborg Church was built?”
-
-The Englishmen, at all events, had not, and Torkel went on.
-
-“Esberne Snorre was building that church, and his means began to run
-short, when a Troll came up to him and offered to finish it off himself,
-upon one condition, and that was, that if Snorre could not find out his
-name he should forfeit his heart and his eyes.
-
-“Snorre was very anxious to finish his church, and he consented, though
-he was not without misgivings either; and the Troll set about his work
-in earnest. Kallendborg Church is the finest church in the whole country,
-and the roof of its nave was to stand on four pillars, for the Troll
-drew out the plan himself. It was all finished except half a pillar, and
-poor Snorre was in a great fright about his heart and his eyes, when one
-evening as he came home late from the market at Roeskilde he heard a
-Troll woman singing under a hill—
-
- “Tie stille, barn min,
- Imorgen kommer Fin
- Fa’er din,
- Og gi’er dig Esberne Snorre’s öine og hjerte at lege mid.”[21]
-
-“Snorre said nothing; but the next morning out he goes to his church, and
-there he meets the Troll bringing in the last half pillar.
-
-“‘Good morning, my friend FIN,’ said he, ‘you have got a heavy weight to
-carry.’
-
-“The Troll stopped, looking at him fiercely, gnashed his teeth, stamped
-on the ground for rage, flew off with the half pillar he was carrying;
-and so Snorre built his church and kept his heart and eyes.”
-
-“Do not believe a word of that,” said Jacob, “there is not a word
-of truth in the story; and as for Esberne Snorre building a church,
-everybody knows he was no better than he should be at any time of his
-life.[22] He was not the man to build a church, much less to give his
-eyes for it.”
-
-“It is true,” said Torkel, “I have been at Kallendborg Church myself; and
-have seen the half pillar with my own eyes. The roof of the nave stands
-on three pillars and a half to this day.”
-
-“More shame to the Kallendborgers, who never had religion enough to
-finish it,” said Jacob, “nor ever will. Do you mean to deny that the
-Devil carried off Esberne Snorre bodily? I think all the world knows that
-pretty well.”
-
-“That shows that he thought him worth the trouble of carrying,” said
-Torkel, “he would never put himself out about carrying off you, because
-he knows you will go to him of your own accord.”
-
-“Come, come, Torkel,” said the Parson, “do not be personal, and take your
-fingers off your knife handle; we cannot spare our cook yet, and you seem
-to like Jacob’s gröd yourself, too, judging by the quantity you eat of
-it; and now, Jacob, do not grind your teeth, but let us hear why you do
-not believe Torkel’s story, which certainly is very circumstantial, not
-to say probable.”
-
-“Because every one knows that it was Lund Cathedral that was built by the
-Trolls, at the desire of the blessed Saint Laurentius,” said Jacob; “it
-was he who promised his eyes for it, and had them preserved by a miracle,
-not by a trumpery trick. Esberne Snorre, indeed; or any Dane, for matter
-of that! A set of infidels! It is only a Swede who would give his eyes
-for the church.”
-
-“I should like to know who Scånia belonged to at the time when Lund
-Cathedral was built,” said Tom, “I do not think it was to the Swedes; and
-I should like to know who took away its archbishopric when they did get
-it, and made the great metropolis of all Scandinavia a trumpery little
-bishopric under the see of Upsala?”
-
-“And I should like to know,” said Torkel, “who made bishops ride upon
-asses, and drink ‘du’ with the hangman. The Swedes give their eyes for
-the church, indeed! That for the Swedes!” snapping his fingers, and
-spitting on the ground.
-
-This was a poser. Jacob was not only in the minority, but clearly wrong
-in matter of fact. At the dissolution of the union of Kalmar, Scånia,
-though situated in Sweden, was a Danish province, and its archbishop was,
-as he always had been, the metropolitan.
-
-At the present time it is quite true that Scånia is a Swedish province;
-but this is a comparatively modern arrangement. In the days when the
-cathedral was built, though geographically a portion of Sweden, it was
-politically a province of Denmark; nor was it till its union with the
-former state that its capital, Lund, was deprived of its ecclesiastical
-primacy. And the treacherous conduct of Gustavus Vasa towards Canute,
-Archbishop of Upsala, and Peter, Bishop of Westeras, and the contumelies
-to which they were exposed, previous to their most unjust execution, are
-a blot even in that blood-stained reign, which Geijer himself, with all
-his ingenuity, cannot vindicate, and which the Norwegians, from whose
-protection the bishops were lured, are continually throwing in the teeth
-of their more powerful neighbours.
-
-Birger himself was a little taken aback, not exactly liking that the weak
-points in his country’s history should be thus exposed to strangers.
-
-“Never mind them, Jacob,” said he, forcing a laugh, “they are only
-Tellemarkers, and know no better. You and I shall see them, some of these
-days, climbing the trees of Goth’s garden themselves.”[23]
-
-This bit of national slang, which fortunately was lost on the Norwegians,
-had the effect of soothing the ire of the sulky Jacob, who drew near to
-his countryman with a happy feeling of partisanship.
-
-“The sooner the better,” said he, bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE MOUNTAIN MARCH.
-
- “Onward amid the copse ’gan peep,
- A narrow inlet still and deep,
- Affording scarce such breadth of brim
- As served the wild duck’s brood to swim;
- Lost for a space through thickets veering,
- But broader when again appearing,—
- Tall rocks and tufted knolls their face
- Could in the dark-blue mirror trace;
- And farther as the hunter strayed,
- Still broader sweep its channels made.”
-
- _Lady of the Lake._
-
-
-“How shall it be? Will you look your lay-lines to-day or to-morrow?”
-said the Parson, who, though not a little amused at the tilting between
-the rival champions, and by the manner in which Birger had suffered
-himself to be drawn into the squabble, began to think it had gone quite
-far enough for the future peace and unanimity of the expedition. “Come,
-Jacob, shoulder your knapsack, and march like a sensible Swede.”
-
-“There never was but one sensible Swede,” said Torkel, in a grumbling
-aside, “and that was Queen Kerstin, when she jumped over the boundary,
-and thanked God that Sweden could not jump after her.”[24]
-
-Jacob had sense enough not to hear this laudatory remark on his late
-sovereign’s discrimination, but, with his ordinary phlegm, resumed his
-load and his place in the line of march.
-
-“By the way,” said the Parson, as they resumed their journey, “what was
-it, Torkel, that made you scrape the mud from your right foot and put it
-on your head in that insane manner, just now?”
-
-“I can answer that,” said Birger; “you know that the whole tribe of Alfs,
-white, brown, and black, and the Trolls, and in fact the whole class
-that go under the generic name of Bjerg-folk, or Hill-men, live under
-the earth. To see them, therefore, on ordinary occasions, you must put
-yourself—at least, typically—in a similar condition. That upon which
-you have trod must cover your head; and you take it from the right foot
-rather than the left, partly as being more lucky, and partly because the
-left being a mark of disrespect, would incense the dwarfs, who would be
-sure to make you pay for it sooner or later; in fact they are a dangerous
-race to meddle with at all, they take offence so very easily. I believe,
-however, this is the safest plan, for they are not aware, unless you
-betray yourself, that the veil is removed from your sight. Did you never
-hear the story of the Ferryman of Sund?”
-
-The Englishman, of course, had not heard it, neither had any of the men,
-for the legend is Danish and local; and though anything Danish is much
-better known in Norway than stories or legends relating to Sweden, it so
-happened that it was new to them all, and they closed up to listen to it.
-
-“One evening, between the two lights,[25] a strange man came to the ferry
-at Sund and engaged all the boats: no sooner had the bargain been made,
-than they began to sink deeper and deeper into the water, as if some
-heavy cargo had been put into them, though the astonished boatmen could
-see nothing, and the boats looked quite empty.
-
-“‘Shove off,’ said the stranger, ‘you have got quite load enough for one
-trip;’ and so they had, for the gunwales were not a couple of inches from
-the water, and the boats pulled so heavily, that it was as much as the
-men could do to get to the Vandsyssel side; if the water had not been
-wonderfully calm, they could not have done it at all—but it was calm;
-and all under the wake of the moon it looked as if it was covered with a
-network of silver filigree, to chain down the ripples.
-
-“As soon as the boats touched the Vandsyssel shore, they began rising
-in the water again, as if their freight had been taken out of them, and
-then the stranger sent them back again; and so it went on throughout the
-whole night, and very hard work the ferrymen had, bringing over cargoes
-of emptiness.
-
-“Then the day began to break, and the eastern sky to whiten; and just as
-the coming sun shot up his seven lances to show the world that King Day
-was at hand, the stranger, who had arranged all this, paid the ferrymen,
-not counting the coins, but filling their hats with them with both hands,
-as a boy shovels out his nuts.
-
-“‘What had they been bringing over?’ asked one of them. ‘Cannot you be
-quiet, and know when you are well off,’ said the stranger; ‘you need not
-be afraid of the custom-house dues; they will have sharp eyes to see
-anything contraband in what you have carried over last night; put your
-money in your pockets and be thankful—you will not earn so much in the
-next three years.’
-
-“But in the mean while one of the ferrymen, a sharper fellow than his
-neighbours, jumped on shore, and did just exactly what Torkel did just
-now—put a piece of clay from the sole of his shoe on the crown of his
-head. His eyes were opened at once; all the sandhills about Aalberg were
-alive with little people, every one of them carrying on his back gold and
-silver pots, and jugs, and vessels of every description—the whole place
-looked like one gigantic anthill.
-
-“‘O-ho,’ said he, ‘that’s what you are about; well, joy go with you, we
-shall not be plagued with you any more on our side of the water; that’s
-one good job, anyhow.’
-
-“But it was not a good job for him; it is very possible to be too sharp
-for one’s own good. All his gold money turned to yellow queens,[26]
-and his silver money to chipped oyster-shells, and he never got rich,
-or anything more than a poor ferryman of Sund, while his companions had
-their hats full of ancient Danish gold and silver coins, and bought ships
-of their own, and went trading to Holland and the free towns, and became
-great men.”
-
-“Upon my word, Torkel,” said the Parson, “you are too venturesome; it is
-just as well that there were no Trolls to be seen just now at the well;
-but you must not try it again, or you will never become a great man, or
-command a ship—not that this would suit you very well, I suppose.”
-
-“Torkel would undertake the command of the _Haabet_, just now, I’ll
-engage, little as he knows about seamanship, if he could only get young
-Svensen out of her,” said Mr Tom, with a knowing grin; to which innuendo,
-whatever it might mean, Torkel playfully replied by kicking out behind at
-him with one foot, after the manner of a donkey. He missed Tom, however,
-to his and Piersen’s intense mirth; but what was the precise nature of
-the joke, there was now no opportunity of explaining, as the descent had
-become so steep that the assistance of the hand was necessary, in order
-to keep their footing.
-
-At a few hundred yards from the dwarf’s well, they had fallen in with a
-little streamlet, running eastward, on a pretty rapid descent, even from
-the first, but which now began to form a series of diminutive cascades,
-leaping in so many spouts from rock to rock, while the ground, over which
-it ran, seemed as if it was fast changing from the horizontal to the
-perpendicular; indeed, had there not been plenty of rocks jutting out,
-and a good crop of twisted and gnarled trunks and roots, many portions of
-the journey might have been accomplished with more speed than pleasure.
-
-The rapidity of the descent soon brought them to the bottom of a deep
-hollow valley, far above the level of the sea, indeed, but low compared
-with the abrupt heights that surrounded it. It was one of those singular
-features in Norwegian scenery, a valley without an outlet; its bottom
-occupied by a deep, black, still lake, whose only drain—if it had any
-drain at all except the porous nature of the soil—was under the surface.
-As the ground rose rapidly on every side, it did not answer to cut timber
-which could never be carried, and the forest here was left in the wildest
-state of desolation. Solid, substantial firs, of ancient growth, were the
-predominant tree; but the soil was rich and the valley sheltered, and
-there was a plentiful sprinkling of birch and wych-elm, interspersed with
-a much rarer tree, the stubborn old oak himself.
-
-Beneath this mingled canopy was a plentiful undergrowth of juniper, and
-enormous ferns. There was a still, calm desolateness about the whole
-scene, for many of the trees were dead, not by accident or disease,
-but from pure old age, and stood where they had withered, or reclined
-against the younger brethren of the forest, exhibiting their torn and
-ragged bark, and stretching forth their bare and leafless arms: the very
-rill—their lively and noisy companion hitherto—seemed to be sobered down,
-and to partake here of the general sadness, as it soaked its still way
-among the rushes and weeds that encumbered its course.
-
-Where it ran, or rather crept, into the lake, a small marshy delta was
-formed of the sand carried down in its course; and here was moored an
-old crazy boat, half full of water, with a couple of old primitive oars;
-the whole had a bleached and weather-stained appearance, well in keeping
-with the general character of the scene. The boat belonged to a sœter
-some three or four miles off, on the western slope of the mountains, and
-was used occasionally by the inhabitants, when, at rare intervals, they
-amused themselves by setting lay lines for the char, for which the lake
-had a local celebrity. The sœter belonged to Piersen’s brother, and it
-was he who had induced Birger to visit the spot.
-
-Having baled out the boat with their mess tins, they pulled out into
-the lake, which turned out to be very much larger than they expected to
-find it. The spot where the boat was moored, and which indeed looked
-like a small, deep, still tarn, was in fact only a bay, or inlet, and
-the whole lake was a body with numerous arms, none of them very large in
-themselves, but making a very large piece of water when taken together.
-
-Of course it had a name; every rock, and stream, and splash of water in
-Norway, has a name of one sort or other; but whatever it might have been,
-it was unknown to the fishermen, and this dark pool was entered into
-their diaries by the appropriate appellation of the “Lake of the Woods.”
-Mountains surrounded it on every side, steep, abrupt, plunging into the
-deep dark water, and wooded from base to summit with a dense black mass
-of wood wherever tree could stand on rock. There was not beach or shore
-of any kind; the mountain rose from the water itself, so steep as to be
-scarcely accessible, and, in many places, not accessible at all. As for a
-bird, Avernus itself could not be more destitute of them. Not a sound was
-heard, except the splash of the cumbersome oar, and the creaking of the
-rowlock, and that sounded so loud, and so out of place in the universal
-stillness, that the rowers tried to dip them quietly, as if they feared
-to awaken the desolate echoes.
-
-“Ah,” said Birger, in a whisper, “this is just the place for the ‘Lady
-of the Lake;’ I hope she will do us no harm for trespassing on her
-territories.”
-
-The men looked uneasy, and a little whispering went on between Tom and
-Piersen, who were pulling, they resting on their oars the while, from
-which the drops trickled off and dripped into the silent water. Tom
-brightened up. “I do not think she will hurt us,” he said; “she had a
-very fine cake from Piersen’s family last Christmas, and she will not
-hurt any one while he is with us.”
-
-“What a confounded set of gluttonous sprites you have in your country,”
-said the Captain; “mercenary devils they are too.”
-
-“Hush, hush, don’t abuse them, at all events while you are on their
-territories. The fact is, the ‘Lady of the Lake’ is the easiest
-propitiated of all the sprites: she is an epicure, too, and not a
-glutton; she likes her cake good, but she does not care how small it is.
-On Christmas Eve you pick a very small hole in the ice, and put a cake by
-the side of it, only just big enough to go through it; and if you watch,
-which is not a safe thing to do if you have any sins unconfessed,[27]
-you may see, not the lady herself, for she is never seen, but her small
-white hand and arm, as she takes the offering and draws it down through
-the hole in the ice. Those see her best who are born on the eves of the
-holiest festivals.”
-
-“That is all nonsense,” said Jacob, “I never could see her at all, often
-as I have looked, and I was born on Easter Eve.”
-
-“Why you precious rascal,” said the Captain, “how could you expect it?
-When were your sins shriven, I should like to know?”
-
-The men were not by any means displeased at Jacob’s rebuff, who seemed
-much more disconcerted by it than the occasion at all required; when
-Birger took up the conversation. “There is danger in that,” said he, “not
-that you should miss seeing the Lady, but that you should suffer for
-your rashness. The fact is,” he continued, turning to his friends, “the
-Lady of the Lake is the impersonation of the sudden squalls which fall
-unexpectedly on open spaces of any kind in mountainous countries, and her
-small white hand and arm are the dangerous little white breakers that
-are stirred up by the gusts, which, though diminutive when compared with
-the mighty rollers of the ocean, very often do draw men down, just as
-the hand draws Torkel’s cake. There is a similar spirit for the rivers,
-called the Black Horse, and another for the sea. This latter is called
-King Tolf, and is represented as driving furiously across the Sound,
-his chariot drawn by water-horses, and cutting right through any ship
-or boat that may lie in his path. But they all signify the same thing,
-in different situations to which their several attributes are very well
-adapted.”
-
-“And that thing is?”
-
-“Death, by drowning.”
-
-“Here are the corks,” broke in Piersen in very indifferent English; “we
-shall have gjep for supper to-day, I see the floats bobbing.”
-
-The corks which he had pointed out were, in reality, a string of
-birch-bark floats, which on being examined, were found attached to lines
-anchored in the very deepest spot of the whole lake; for the gjep, or
-great lake char, unlike any of its congeners, and indeed unlike any
-fresh-water fish whatever, except the common char, the eel, and the
-fictitious mal,[28] is never found but in the deepest waters.
-
-Birger, who was the hero of this fishing, caught the nearest float in the
-crook of his gaff, and began hauling in—evidently there was something,
-for at first the line twitched and twitched and was nearly jerked out
-of his hand; but as he hauled on (and in good truth the line seemed as
-long as if some one, as Paddy says, had cut off the other end of it), it
-came lighter and lighter, and before he had got it in, a large ugly fish,
-three or four pounds weight, with an enormous protuberant belly, lay
-helpless on the surface.
-
-“That’s the fellow,” said Piersen, pouncing on him,—but the fish made
-little effort to get away; it was almost dead before he got hold of it.
-The gjep, though classed as a char by the learned, is as little like the
-bright crimson char of our own lakes or of the mountain lakes of Norway
-as can well be imagined; never met with except in water of immense depth,
-never found out of his hole, never caught except with a still and (so the
-Swedes assert) a stinking bait, he bears the colours and character of
-his local habitation, a sober dark olive brown back, a dark grey side
-shot with purple, which turns black when the fish is dead; no red spots
-or very minute ones, no splashes of red or anything red about it, except
-one bright line along the edge of the fins. The most remarkable point
-about it, its enormous belly, from which it derives its name, _Salvelinus
-ventricosus_, is really no distinguishing mark at all, except of its
-habitat. The fact is, drawn suddenly and against its will from the depths
-of the lake, its air-bladder swells so enormously as to kill the fish,
-and give it that peculiarly inelegant appearance.
-
-Inelegant as it looks, and disagreeable as it is to catch, it is by far
-the best eating of any Swedish fish, and, from its rarity, and from the
-difficulty of catching it, bears, when it is to be had at all, which is
-very seldom, by far the highest price of any fish in the market. In fact,
-to eat it at all in perfection, a man must go after it; it will never
-answer to catch it for amusement; but the men may easily be set to lay
-lines for it while other sports are going forward.
-
-Four or five of these highly prized fish were hauled in one after another
-by Birger, who looked as proud of his exploit as if he had landed a
-schoolmaster.[29] When the lines had been all coiled up and deposited in
-the boat, Birger proposed visiting some rushes that he remembered, in
-a hope of meeting with wild fowl; a hope in which he was disappointed,
-not at all to the surprise of his brother fishermen, for the whole lake
-looked so black and gloomy that no duck of ordinary taste would think of
-pitching there; it was, however, an interesting voyage among the sad and
-silent intricacies of the lake; but it so happened, that in returning
-they took a turn short of their point and wandered into another deep and
-narrow inlet, very like that from which they had started, but still not
-the same.
-
-So like was one spot to another that they had pulled some considerable
-distance before the mistake was found out, and when it was, so much time
-had been lost that they were unwilling to pull back.
-
-“Piú noja un miglio in dietro che dieci in avanti,” said the Captain;
-“let us pull on and see what luck will send us.”
-
-Piersen, on being consulted, as best acquainted with the country, did not
-seem to know a great deal about it, but imagined that if once on shore he
-could cut into the right track; and the fishermen having taken a look at
-their compasses, and the sun, and the wind, what little there was of it,
-decided that at all events the adventure should be tried.
-
-Hardly had this conclusion been arrived at, when the boat grounded on a
-bed of spongy rushes, so like that from which they had embarked, that it
-was with difficulty they could persuade themselves that it was not the
-very same—there was the same little soaking rill, the same mossy, soppy
-turf, and when they had gone on a little further, there was the same
-leaping, sparkling brooklet, bounding from rock to rock, just like that
-by which they had descended.
-
-A good stiff pull it took them to reach the top, and then it was evident
-enough that the spot they had attained was not the same as that from
-which they had descended. There was no hill on the other side, properly
-so called, but a wide smooth plain of light sand, shelving, certainly,
-towards the east, but shelving so gradually, that the declivity was
-scarcely perceptible; it was completely overshadowed by large massive
-well-grown pines, not growing together closely but in patches (as is
-generally the case both in Norway and Sweden), so as to leave grassy
-glades and featherly copse-wood between the groups, but regularly and
-evenly, as if they had all been planted at measured distances. The
-branches formed a complete canopy over head, shutting out both air and
-sunshine, and effectually destroying everything like verdure beneath: the
-tall straight monotonous trunks with a purplish crimson tint on their
-bark, effectually walled in the view on every side, and the whole ground
-was carpeted with a slippery covering of dead pine-leaves.
-
-“I hope this will not last long,” said the Captain, “the place is so dark
-and the air so close and stifling, that it seems like walking through
-turpentine vaults. However, our road lies this way, that is certain,”
-putting his compass on the ground so that it could traverse easily, “and
-at all events we must come to a water-course sooner or later.”
-
-But they did not come to a water-course; whether there were none, the
-sand being sufficiently permeable to sop up the rain, or whether they
-were travelling on the rise between two parallel brooks, did not appear;
-but mile after mile was skated and slid over with considerable fatigue
-and exertion, and the same scene lay before them, and around them, and
-above them. Tall clear branchless stems, with long vistas between them
-opening and closing as they went on, vistas which led to nothing and
-terminated in nothing but the same bare, branchless, dead-looking poles.
-Their compasses and a slight declivity told them that they were not
-travelling in a circle, and their reason enlightened them as to the fact
-that everything except a circle must have an end; but after three hours’
-very hard work and some dozen of tumbles a piece, that end seemed as far
-off as ever.
-
-The only variety was a dead tree, and the only apparent difference
-between the living and the dead was, that in this case the straight
-perpendicular lines were crossed by lines as straight, which were
-diagonal; for the dead trees for the most part reclined against their
-living neighbours, very much to the detriment of the latter. As for a
-bird, it did not seem as if birds could live there; nor could they in the
-close space beneath that dark-green canopy; but every now and then there
-was a tantalizing whirr of wings, as a black-cock threw himself out from
-the topmost branches, and, far above their heads, skimmed along in that
-bright sunshine which could not penetrate to them. This is a favourite
-haunt of the black-cock, for the pine-tops and their young buds are its
-most welcome food, and often render its flesh absolutely uneatable from
-the strong turpentiny flavour they impart to it.
-
-At last, and after they had well-nigh begun to despair, the trees began
-to be thinner. Here and there a patch of sky relieved the monotonous
-black, here and there a sunbeam would struggle down; then a little
-grass, weak and pale, would cast a shade of sickly green over the ashy
-brown of the dead fir leaves, and afford a somewhat steadier footing; a
-patch of birch was hailed with the joy with which one meets a welcome
-friend; cattle paths, deceptive as they are, afforded at least a token
-of civilization: and now the whort and the cranberry began to show
-themselves, and the hospitable juniper too, the remembrancer of bright
-crackling fires and aromatic floors, and—
-
-“Oh, positively we must have a halt now, for the difficulties are over,”
-said Birger, and, though he had plenty of tobacco in his havresac, out of
-sheer sentiment he stuffed his pipe with the dead strippy bark of that
-useful shrub, which is generally its mountain substitute.
-
-A few minutes were sufficient for their rest; breathing the fresh air
-again was in itself a luxury, and treading the firm elastic turf a
-refreshment. As they went on, the landscape began to resume its park-like
-character, glades to open, trees to feather down, gentians to embroider
-the green with their blue flower work, and lilies of the valley to
-perfume the air. They were as much lost as ever, but the country looked
-so like the beautiful banks of the Torjedahl, that they could not but
-think themselves at home.
-
-“This will do,” said Torkel, at last, who apparently had recognised some
-well-known landmark, “we shall soon find a night’s lodging now, and a
-kind welcome into the bargain.”
-
-The track into which he had struck, did not at first appear more inviting
-than any of the numerous cattle-paths which they hitherto passed on their
-way; but Torkel followed it with a confidence which, as it turned out,
-was not misplaced; for it soon widened out into a broad green glade, at
-the further end of which stood a sœter of no mean pretensions.
-
-The portions of cultivated and inhabited land in Norway are almost always
-mere strips, the immediate banks of rivers or of lakes—most of them are
-actually bounded by the forest; and in no case is the wild unenclosed
-country at any great distance from them. Every farm, therefore, has, as
-a necessary portion of its establishment, its sœter, or mountain pasture,
-to which every head of cattle is driven as soon as the grass has sprung,
-in order to allow the meadows of the lower farms to be laid up for hay.
-At these it is often a very difficult thing to get a mess of milk in the
-summer, for almost all the cheese and butter of the kingdom is made at
-the sœters. They are generally abundantly stocked with dairy furniture,
-but, as they are abandoned in the winter, they seldom exhibit any great
-amount of luxury. They consist generally of rude log-huts, of sufficient
-solidity, no doubt, for these logs are whole trunks of pines roughly
-squared and laid upon one another, morticed firmly at the corners, but
-of very little comfort indeed, notwithstanding. They contain generally a
-single room, a chimneyless fire-place, and a mud floor, in most places
-sufficiently dirty, with a few sheds and pens surrounding the main hut.
-
-The present sœter, however, was one of far greater pretensions, it
-was built of sawn timber, and boasted of an upper floor, implying, of
-necessity, a separation between human beings who could climb a ladder,
-and cows and pigs who could not. This projected some two or three feet
-on every side beyond the lower storey, forming at once a shade and a
-shelter for the cattle, according as the weather required one or the
-other, and, in its turn, was crowned with a low-pitched shingled roof,
-whose eaves had another projection of two or three feet, so that, seen
-end on end, it had the appearance of a gigantic mushroom standing on
-its stalk. The dairymen had been men of taste as well as of leisure,
-for the barge-boards which protected its gables were ingeniously carved
-and painted with texts from Scripture, and the heavy corners of the
-projecting upper storey terminated in pendants no less grotesque than
-elaborate. There was one window in each gable and two in the side, the
-sills of which had been planed and painted with some date, text, or
-motto, like the barge-boards.
-
-Round these sœters there are generally some patches of enclosed ground
-where hay is made, or where the more tender of the herds or flocks are
-protected, but here there seemed to be a complete farm; full forty
-acres had been redeemed from the forest, and enclosed by the peculiar
-fence of the country; which, except that it is straight, is in its
-general appearance not unlike the snake fences of America. It is formed
-by planting posts in the ground by pairs at small distances between
-pair and pair, and then heaping a quantity of loose planks and stems,
-and any other refuse timber which comes to hand, between them, the tops
-being kept firm by a ligature of birch-bark or some such material. These
-fences, when they begin to rot, which they do very soon, are the harbour
-of all sorts of small vermin, and are, in fact, the great eye-sores of
-Swedish scenery.
-
-In the present instance, this was pre-eminently the case; not only the
-fences, but everything else, was in a terrible state of disrepair—in
-many places the posts were gone, in others the birch ropes had rotted
-through, and the miscellaneous timber which had formed the fence was
-lying about entwined with a spiry growth of creepers and brambles, a mass
-of rottenness. The house itself was in a more promising state; it was
-evident that it had been partially repaired and put in order, and that
-very recently, for many of the timbers showed by their white gashes, the
-recent marks of the axe, and the axe which had made them was lying across
-the door sill.
-
-Torkel lifted the latch—that was easy, for there was no bolt or lock to
-prevent him—but the place was evidently uninhabited—he looked on Tom with
-a face of disappointment.
-
-“Faith!” said he, “this is too bad. Torgenson told me that the Soberud
-party were to drive their cattle to the fjeld on Thursday last, and the
-weather has been as fine as fine can be. Well! there is no trusting
-people.”
-
-“There is no trusting Torgenson’s daughter, at all events,” said Tom,
-“for I suspect it was from her that you had the information; Lota is
-much too pretty to be trusted further than you can see her; and I have
-no doubt she made some excuse herself for not coming last Thursday. It
-was natural enough too; of course she would not like to come to the sœter
-before young Svensen sailed.”
-
-“The Thousand take young Svensen, and you too!” said Torkel, turning
-round as sharply as if Tom had bitten him in earnest, but catching a grin
-upon the latter’s countenance which he had not time to dismiss, looked
-very much as if he meditated making him pay for his ill-timed joke, when
-a loud, clear voice was heard in the glade below, making the leafy arches
-of the old forest ring with the ballad of master Olaf—
-
- “Master Olaf rode forth ere the dawn of day,
- And came where the elf folk were dancing away,
- The dances so merry,
- So merry in the green-wood.”
-
-Torkel stopped to listen, and Tom laughed.
-
- “The elf father put forth his white hand, and quoth he,
- Master Olaf stand forth, dance a measure with me,
- The dances so merry,
- So merry in the green-wood.”
-
-“Here they come at last,” said Tom; “pretty Lota is not half so false
-as you thought her, Torkel. The _Haabet_ has sailed, I suppose,” added
-he, in a stage whisper. Torkel, however was much too happy to pay the
-smallest attention to his malicious insinuations, but took up the song
-for himself. Whether Lota put any particular meaning on the words of it,
-we will not take upon ourselves to say—
-
- “And neither I will, and neither I may,
- For to-morrow it is my own wedding-day,”
-
-shouted he, at the full pitch of his voice, while the whole party took up
-the chorus—
-
- “The dances so merry,
- So merry in the green-wood.”
-
-By this time the approaching party had emerged from the forest, and came
-along the glade in an irregular procession, putting one in mind of the
-Nemorins and Estelles of ancient pastorals, and all the more so from
-their picturesque costumes. The men wore certainly absurdly short round
-jackets, but they had rows of silver buttons on them, and brown short
-trousers worked with red tape, very high in the waistband, to match the
-jacket, but coming down no further than the calf of the leg, which was
-ornamented with bright blue stockings, with crimson clocks.
-
-The women had all of them red kerchiefs on their heads, the ends of
-which hung down their backs, and red or yellow bodices with great silver
-brooches on them, and blue petticoats trimmed with red or yellow. Both
-sexes adorn themselves with all the silver they can collect; the men’s
-shirt buttons are sometimes as big as a walnut, and on gala days they
-will wear three or four of them strung one under another.
-
-All the party were loaded with the utensils necessary for following their
-occupations in the fjeld; the women were carrying the pails, while the
-men’s loads, which consisted of all sorts of heterogeneous articles, were
-topped with the great iron kettles in which they simmer their milk, after
-the Devonshire fashion, in order to collect the whole of the cream.
-
-There were little carts, too, that is to say, baskets placed upon two
-wheels and an axle, and drawn by little cream-coloured ponies; stout,
-stubby little beasts, very high crested, and with black manes and
-tails—the former hogged, the latter peculiarly full and flowing. A Swede
-generally values his horse according to the quantity of hair on his tail.
-These were loaded—it did not take much to load them—with meal for the
-summer’s gröd, and strings of flad bröd, a few sheep skins, particularly
-dirty, though in very close proximity to the provisions,—and now and then
-the black kettle, which its owner was too lazy to carry. Then came the
-goats and sheep, and the little cows following like dogs, now and then
-stopping to take a bite, when the turf looked particularly sweet and
-tempting—little fairy cows were they, much smaller than our Alderneys,
-finer in the bone, and more active on their legs; they looked as if they
-had a cross of the deer in them. They were all of one colour—probably
-that of the original wild cattle—a sort of dirty cream colour,
-approaching to dun, and almost black on the legs and muzzle.
-
-The party was a combined one, and was bound eventually to several other
-sœters besides this, but they had agreed to make their first night’s halt
-in Torgenson’s pasture, and beside the regular herdsmen and dairymaids,
-as many supernumeraries as can possibly find excuse for going, accompany
-the first setting out of the expedition, which is always looked upon in
-the light of a holiday and a merry-making.
-
-And a holiday and a merry-making it seemed to be, judging by the shouts,
-and screams, and laughter, and rude love-making that was going on among
-the gentle shepherds and shepherdesses of the north; but, for all that,
-there was a good deal of real work too. Sœter-life may be a life of
-pleasure, but it certainly is anything but a life of ease.
-
-The Soberud division, bestial as well as human, evidently seemed to
-consider themselves quite at home; and the cows belonging to it, which
-looked as if they recognised the old localities, roamed at liberty;
-but the parties bound to the more distant mountains were occupied in
-hobbling, and tethering, and knee-haltering their respective charges,
-mindful of their morrow’s march and of the difficulty of collecting
-cattle and even sheep, which, except that they keep together, are just as
-bad, from among the intricacies of a strange forest. Some were forming
-temporary pounds, by effecting rude repairs in the dilapidated fences,
-chopping and hewing, for that purpose, great limbs of trees and trees
-themselves, with as little concern as, in England, men might cut thistles.
-
-Streams of blue smoke began now to steal up through the trees, and fires
-began to glimmer in the evening twilight, while the girls brought in
-pail after pail of fresh milk, and swung their kettles, gipsy fashion,
-and, opening their packages, measured out, with careful and parsimonious
-foresight, the rye-meal that was to thicken it into gröd. Meal is
-precious in the mountains, though milk is not.
-
-Whether the _Haabet_ had sailed, or what had become of poor Svensen, did
-not transpire; but certain it was that the damsels from Soberud, after
-looking in vain for their mistress, were obliged, that evening, to act
-on their own discretion—and equally certain it was that the Parson,
-whose knife had been inconsiderately lent to Torkel on the preceding
-day, was obliged to eat his broiled gjep with two sticks, the knife and
-the fortunate individual in whose pocket it was, being, for the time,
-invisible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE HOMESTEAD.
-
- “’Tis a homestead that scarce has an equal,
- Plenteous in wood and corn-fields, with rich grassy meadow and moorland—
- This won my father, long since, in wedding the farmer’s fair daughter;
- Here, at length he grew old, like a summer’s eve calmly declining,
- Here he spent the best years of his life, and dwelt like a king, amid
- plenty.
- Servants he had by the score—men servants to plough with the oxen,
- And maids in the house besides, and children, the joy of their mother—
- Thus sowing and reaping, in comfort, from season to season, abode he,
- Envied by all around—but having the good will of all men.”—
-
- _The Elk Hunters—Runeberg._
-
-
-Sunrise found the whole bivouac in a stir; the habits of the Norwegian
-are always early—at least in the summer time—and many of the parties had
-to travel to the yet distant sœters and wilder uplands: cows are not very
-fast travellers, and the load which a dairyman carries on his back when
-he is bound to those fjelds, which are inaccessible to carts, is by no
-means a light one: ponies sometimes carry the heavier loads, but this is
-not often, as they are useless in the fjeld life, and in the summer are
-generally wanted for posting, as well as for agricultural purposes; the
-loads are generally carried by the men—sometimes by the women even,—and
-the milk-kettle which crowns the pack is alone a weight which few would
-like to carry far, even on level ground.
-
-The white smoke was already curling about the trees in long thin columns,
-and the girls were already bringing in their pails of new milk, a very
-fair proportion of which would be consumed with the morning’s gröd, which
-was already bubbling in the kettles.
-
-Gröd, in high life, means all sorts of eatables that are semi-liquid;
-but in the fjeld it is invariably made thus: the water is heated in the
-great milk-kettle to a galloping boil, and its temperature is raised to
-a still higher point by the addition of salt; meal, generally rye-meal,
-is then thinly sprinkled into it, the great art being to separate the
-particles, so as to prevent them from forming lumps. As soon as the
-contents of the kettle are thick enough for the bubbles to make little
-pops, the gröd is taken off the fire and served up with milk. When that
-milk is fresh, no one need desire a better breakfast; but when, as is
-generally the case, they mix it with milk that has been purposely kept
-till it is curdled over with incipient corruption, in which state they
-prefer it, it is as disgusting a mess as ever attained the dignity of a
-popular dish.
-
-In the present instance they were obliged to put up with fresh milk, no
-other being procurable; and the fishermen, having grilled the remains of
-their gjep (an especial delicacy), and added to it some of the contents
-of their havresacs, sent a deputation, headed by Birger, to invite Miss
-Lota and her hand-maidens to partake of their breakfast. This was a
-proceeding which Torkel regarded with very questionable pleasure. He
-was flattered, no doubt, at the attentions paid to his lady-love by the
-fishermen, who could not speak Norske; but, at the same time, was rather
-jealous of those of Birger, who could.
-
-Lota, however, was in no way disconcerted; she came smiling and blushing,
-indeed, but without any sort of affectation or bashfulness, and listened
-graciously, and without laughing, to the blundering compliments paid her
-by the Englishmen; and without any great amount of coquetry, considering
-the rarity of guardsmen in the Tellemark, to the tender elegance of the
-Swede. Torkel had very good reason to be proud of her, and none at all to
-be jealous, particularly as the knapsacks were already packed up for the
-march.
-
-The fishermen were in no particular hurry: the track to Soberud was
-perfectly known; even if the droves of cows and the flocks of sheep
-that had come up it the day before had not already marked it very
-sufficiently. The way was not long either, for it was but a day’s journey
-to the herds; the breaking up of the bivouac was very picturesque; Lota
-was very pretty, and Birger found her very entertaining. It is no wonder
-that they lingered.
-
-However, the shadows of the trees began to shorten. Party after party
-came up with their merry “farvels;” the songs and the laughter, and the
-tinkling of the bells, sounded fainter and fainter from under the arches
-of the forest; and, last of all, the fishermen, reluctantly shouldering
-their knapsacks, took their journey down the glade; with the exception of
-Torkel, who, having something to adjust about his straps, was not exactly
-ready, and in fact was not seen for a couple of hours afterwards. He did
-not join them, indeed, till the party had made their first halt near the
-banks of a mountain lake.
-
-The halt was called somewhat sooner than usual, for the Captain, who,
-with his gun in his hand and old Grog at his heels, was a little in
-advance, and had first caught sight of the lake, had caught sight also of
-an object floating quietly along in the middle of it, which his practised
-eye at once assured him was that very rare and beautiful bird, the
-northern diver.
-
-He threw himself flat on the ground, an action in which he was implicitly
-imitated by the rest of the party, who, though they had not seen the
-bird, were quite aware that there was some good reason for the caution.
-
-In truth, there are few birds more difficult to kill than the northern
-diver; to the greatest watchfulness he unites the most wonderful
-quickness of eye and motion, and, large as he is, he is fully able to
-duck the flash, as it is called,—that is to say, to dive between the time
-of seeing the flash and feeling the shot.
-
-They retired a hundred yards or so and smoked the pipe of council, thus
-giving Torkel the opportunity of coming up with them.
-
-Torkel was well acquainted with the ground, as was natural, not only
-because the lake was celebrated for ducks and the country round it for
-tjäder, but also because it happened to lie on the mountain track between
-his own home and Torgenson’s farm, a road which business (he did not
-state of what nature) required him to travel very often.
-
-His plan was founded on a well-known characteristic in the nature of
-diving birds: during their dive they cannot breathe, and therefore on
-rising to the surface for a moment or so, they cannot make any immediate
-effort either to dive or to fly. He proposed, therefore, that the Captain
-should conceal himself among the understuff, and that the rest, taking
-different positions about the lake, which was not large, should break
-twigs and slightly alarm the bird, who would naturally edge away toward
-the point occupied by the Captain, and the object being a valuable prize,
-an hour or so was not grudged, as there was plenty of time to spare. The
-party having first reconnoitred their ground, marked the position to be
-occupied by the Captain on the lee side of the lake, and ascertained
-that the bird was still resting on the water, separated, taking a wide
-circuit, lest they should alarm it prematurely.
-
-The Captain, with his gun ready cocked, lay at full length on the top of
-a little ledge of rock about six feet high, which sloped away from the
-water, forming a sort of miniature cliff. It afforded very little cover
-apparently—there was nothing between it and the water but a light fringe
-of cranberry bushes—but the cover was perfect to a man in a recumbent
-position, and the Captain being dressed entirely, cap and all, in Lowland
-plaid, the most invisible colour in the world, looked, even if he had
-been seen, like a piece of the rock on which he lay. This place had been
-selected with forethought, for the bird is wonderfully suspicious, and
-will not approach any strong cover at all.
-
-For half an hour after the Captain had wormed himself to the edge of the
-rock, the bird lay as still as if it had been asleep, which it certainly
-was not; at the end of that time there was a quick turn of its neck, and
-its eye was evidently glancing round the margin, but the body remained as
-quiet and motionless as before; there was not a ripple on the water, and
-it was only by observing the diminishing distance between it and a lily
-leaf that happened to be lying on the surface, that even the practised
-eye of the Captain could tell that it was in motion, and was nearing him
-imperceptibly. There had been no sound, nor had the bird caught sight of
-anything; but the Parson had come between it and the wind, and the light
-air, that was not sufficient even to move the surface, had carried down
-the scent.
-
-The Parson had caught sight of the lily, as well as the Captain, and,
-seeing the bird in motion, had halted, leaving it to the scent alone to
-effect his purpose. But in a few minutes it was evident that the bird had
-become stationary, having either drifted out of the stream of scent, or,
-possibly, having imagined that it was now far enough from the suspected
-shore.
-
-A slight snapping of dry wood just broke the stillness; again that sharp,
-anxious glance, and the imperceptible motion, was renewed; another
-and another snap, and now the water seemed to rise against the bird’s
-breast, and a slight wake to be left behind him,—but it was still that
-same gliding motion, as if it were slipping through the water: at last,
-when the distance was sufficiently great to secure against flying, a cap
-was raised, and responded to by two or three hats at different places;
-the bird had disappeared, while the calm, quiet water showed no trace
-of anything having broken its surface. Half-a-dozen pair of eyes were
-anxiously on the look-out, and long and long was it before the smallest
-sign rewarded their vigilance. At last, and many hundred yards from the
-point at which they had lost sight of it, a black spot was seen floating
-on the water, as quietly and unconcernedly as if it had never been
-disturbed. It was, however, a good way to the right of the line in which
-they were endeavouring to drive it; the hats had disappeared, and for
-ten minutes the lake was as quiet as if the eye of man had never rested
-upon it. Then came again the glance, the move, the dive,—then an anxious
-moment of watchfulness,—then a white puff of smoke and a stream of
-hopping shot playing ducks and drakes across the water,—then the sharp,
-ringing report, caught up and repeated by echo after echo,—and there
-lay the bird, faintly stirring the surface, in the last struggles of
-death,—and there was gallant old Grog, plunging into the lake, and making
-the water foam before him in his eagerness. Four or five ducks, which had
-hitherto been basking unseen among the stones, sprang into air; and a
-flight of teal appeared suddenly whistling over the water, and, turning
-closely and together as they came unawares within a dozen yards of the
-Parson, received his right and left shots among them, and, with the loss
-of three or four of their company, scattered hither and thither among the
-trees.
-
-“Hurrah, Grog!—bring him along, boy! bring him along!” shouted the
-Captain; and on every side, instead of the quiet, gliding, creeping
-figures, just peering about the understuff, were seen forms bounding and
-tearing through the cover.
-
-The prize was one which the Captain, a taxidermist and a veteran
-collector, had long desired to possess, and great was the care with which
-it was secured on the top of Jacob’s knapsack; it being entrusted to him,
-as the most phlegmatic of the party and the least likely to be led away
-by any excitement of sport,—for at last they had arrived into something
-like shooting country: the character of the ground was more open and free
-from timber than anything they had seen, and the understuff of whort and
-cranberry was proportionally thicker and more luxuriant; it was ground
-which a dog could quarter without any very great amount of difficulty,
-particularly as it was absolutely free from brambles, and that furze was
-unknown in those latitudes anywhere outside of a greenhouse.
-
-It was more for the amusement of the thing, and for the sake of
-ascertaining the resources of the country, that the party extended
-themselves into a line and beat their way onwards, for it was too early
-in the year for shooting anything but wild ducks. Game laws in Norway
-exist, certainly, but are utterly disregarded; still the broods of
-grouse were, as yet, too young to take care of themselves, and it would
-have been sheer murdering the innocents to injure the grey hens, which,
-into the bargain, are at this time not fit for eating. This proceeding
-seemed very absurd to Torkel and to Tom, for a Norwegian has no idea of
-preserving the game—in reality, he can eat and relish much that most
-civilized people cannot; but, besides that, he is a selfish animal, and
-the poor lean bird that he secures for himself in spring, is better than
-the fine, fat, plump, autumnal one that he has left for his neighbour.
-
-Hen after hen got up and tumbled away before the dogs, who were too well
-broke to disturb her, had they even been deceived by her antics, but no
-shot was fired to convert her pretence into reality. Now and then, it
-must be confessed, when an old, selfish, solitary cock, as black as a
-hat, and as glossy as a whole morning’s dressing could make him, whirred
-off as if he cared for no one but himself and had not a wife or family in
-the world, he paid the penalty of his selfishness, and fell fluttering on
-the cranberries—deservedly, perhaps; at all events, he left no one behind
-him to lament his fate, for the black-cock is a roving bird, and never
-pairs: but no exclamations of Torkel’s could induce the English sportsmen
-to sever the loves of the smaller description of grouse, and Birger,
-though a Swede—for very shame—was obliged to imitate their forbearance.
-But, every now and then, a blue Alpine hare was knocked over without
-mercy; once an unlucky badger came to an untimely end, and, upon the
-whole, the bags were getting quite as heavy as the men approved of, when
-a light, graceful, elegant roe, for once in its life was caught napping,
-though there had been noise enough, not only from shots, but from talking
-also, along the whole line, to have awakened a far less watchful animal.
-It sprang from a thicker piece of covering than common, which probably
-had been the means of deluding it into staying, in the false hope that it
-could possibly escape the keen scent of old Grog, whose flourishing tail
-said as plainly as tail could speak (and dogs’ tails are very eloquent),
-“look out, boys; I have got something here for you, this time, that is
-worth having.”
-
-Jacob was pretty well strung with hares, and remonstrated against the
-additional load, which was finally slung around Torkel’s body like a
-shoulder-belt, and he was dismissed at once with directions to follow the
-path to Soberud, a place where he was well known, and to prepare, as well
-as he could, for the reception of the party, and their provisioning.
-
-Torkel undertook the mission readily enough, and went off gaily under a
-load of game that would have been quite enough for a pony, casting back
-a knowing look to Tom, who seemed perfectly to understand him, implying
-that he had some project in his head by which he intended to astonish the
-strangers.
-
-The day wore on in this pleasant exercise—perhaps the halt for Middagsmad
-might have been a long one, and the pipe after luxurious; in fact,
-there is not so luxurious a couch in this sublunary world as a heap
-of heather, and no sensation so luxuriously happy as that of basking,
-half-tired, in the warm, pleasant sunshine, after a well-spent morning
-of honest exercise, with our gun beside us, and our dogs half sleeping,
-like ourselves, around us; but the sun was not a very great way from the
-horizon when the party gained the first view of the village which was to
-be their resting-place for the night.
-
-The fjeld was not high, for it had been sloping away gradually to the
-eastward ever since they left the high mountains which surround the Lake
-of the Woods, but, as it almost always does, it terminated abruptly
-in a sort of cliff, portions of which were precipitous, and the rest
-extremely steep. The path which Torkel had taken, following the course
-of a largish brook, had found an easy access to the valley, practicable
-even for the carts of the country; but at the point at which they had
-struck the valley, there was nothing for it but a stiff scramble down the
-face of the hill, a proceeding which their loads rendered anything but
-pleasant and easy. It was a beautiful scene that lay before them, and
-perfectly different from anything they had seen before, though they had
-been passing through scenery of wood and lake ever since they left the
-Torjedahl.
-
-In the present instance the broad, still lake, broad as it was, filled
-up but half the amphitheatre of the wooded mountains. There was an ample
-margin of cultivated land round it, fields rich with the promise of
-autumn, and green quiet meadows; here and there a wooded spur shot out
-from the frame of highlands, forming sometimes a cape or promontory in
-the water, while, in return, narrow secluded valleys would wind back into
-the recesses of the mountains, each with its own little brook and its
-own secluded pastures. Besides the village, there were several detached
-farmsteadings and scattered cottages, all looking trim and tidy and well
-to do in the world, and through the middle of them ran a well-kept but
-very winding road, with a broad margin of turf on each side. The fences
-might have been a dissight a little nearer, for they were the post and
-slab fence so common in the north, but, at the distance, they looked like
-park paling; and the swing poles for opening the gates across the road,
-formed a picturesque feature in the landscape.
-
-Close by the lake-side was the church, a grey and weather-stained
-building, which looked like one solid mass of timber, supporting on
-its steeply-pitched and shingled roof, three round towers of different
-heights, each surmounted with its cross. Dominating over the whole sat a
-huge golden cock, which, newly gilded, glowed in the light of the setting
-sun as if it were a supplementary sun itself. The houses of the village
-were a good deal scattered, but, with the exception of the Præstgaard, or
-parsonage, did not hold out any very magnificent hopes of accommodation
-for the night.
-
-This, however, was of little importance to men whose last night’s abode
-had been the shelter of the thickest tree; and they proceeded, with very
-contented minds, to descend the steep hill-side, in order to reach the
-path they ought to have taken, which they now discovered, far below them,
-winding along the edge of the cultivated ground.
-
-“And now,” said the Captain, as they reached it and rallied their forces,
-which had been a good deal scattered during the sharp descent, “where to
-bestow ourselves for the night? I should like to sleep in a bed, if it
-were only for the novelty of the thing; and here, in good time, comes
-Torkel, who looks as if he had made himself pretty well at home already.”
-
-Torkel, considerably smartened up—however he had contrived it—and
-sporting a clean white shirt-front, like a pouter pigeon, with his
-silver shirt buttons newly polished, came up the church path in close
-conversation with a respectable, fatherly, well-to-do-in-the-world sort
-of farmer, or huusbonde as he was called, in whom, as he introduced him
-by the name of Torgensen, the fishermen recognized the father of the
-pretty hostess of the sœter. Not one word of English could the good-man
-speak, though he looked as like an honest rough-handed English farmer
-as one man could look to another; but he wrung their hands, as if, like
-Holger, he meant to test their manhood by their powers of endurance, and
-smiled, and looked pleasant, which Torkel interpreted to mean that he
-heartily desired to see the whole party under his hospitable roof that
-night, and would be right glad to make them all drunk in honour of his
-roof-tree. And poor Torkel looked so excessively happy, that it was easy
-to see that, in spite of the _Haabet_ and her skipper, he had not only
-sped in his wooing at the sœter, but had contrived to ingratiate himself
-with the elders of the household.
-
-A grand place was that homestead, which, hidden by a projecting point,
-and occupying a secluded valley of its own, had hitherto escaped their
-observation,—a good, snug, wealthy farm it really was, even as compared
-to others in the country; but in Norway, so much cover is always wanted;
-and building—at least timber building—is so cheap, that moderate-sized
-farm-houses, with their appurtenances, are little villages; and the house
-itself looks always larger than it is, as an habitation, because the
-whole upper storey, frequently called the rigging loft, is invariably
-used as a store-room for their provisions, and hides, and wool, and flax,
-and apples, and sometimes corn, in the winter, and not unfrequently as a
-ball-room, when they have eaten out sufficient space in it.
-
-The house, like all the rest, a wooden building with a planked roof and
-gabled ends, was unusually painted. Torgensen, in his youth, had himself
-commanded the _Haabet_, and had traded in her for provisions and corn
-along the coast of Scånia, and from it had imported Scånian fashions.
-Instead of the deep, dull red, which harmonizes so well with the tints
-of the country, he had painted his house in figures, blue, and yellow,
-and white, and black, which had a singular, but, upon the whole, a
-not unpleasant effect. Texts of Scripture in rough black letter, and
-dates, and monograms of himself, and wife, and children, were written
-under every window and every gable; and the barge-boards and ridge
-timber-ends, were carved as elaborately and grotesquely as those of the
-church.
-
-There was but little delicacy in accepting Torgensen’s hospitality; his
-house was large enough for a barrack, and its doors were as wide open as
-those of an inn. A large room, that could not exactly be called kitchen,
-hall, workshop, or dining-room, but served equally for any one of these
-offices (and occasionally for a ball-room also, when the store-room
-was too full to be used in that capacity), was open to all comers;
-half-a-dozen boards, as thick almost as baulks of timber, and placed
-upon trestles that might have supported the house, formed the principal
-table; two great chairs, like thrones, elaborately carved, and looking
-as if they required a steam-engine to move them, stood on a sort of
-dais;—these are not uncommon pieces of furniture in old houses; they are
-called grandfather and grandmother chairs, and are the seats of honour,
-though very seldom occupied at all, unless the master and mistress of the
-house are old enough to have lost their active habits. The more ordinary
-seats were substantial benches, with or without backs, and three-legged
-stools. Here and there was a great chest, a sort of expense magazine for
-stowing away the wool, and the flax, and the skins, which were in process
-of being converted into linen, wadmaal, or shoes, by the farm servants.
-Over these a series of shelves, like an ancient buffet, containing pewter
-drinking-vessels, large brass embossed plates with the bunch of grapes
-from the promised land or the expulsion of Adam and Eve glittering upon
-them in all the brightness of constant polish. Over these, again, were
-slung a row of copper cauldrons and pots; and on the opposite side
-a chest of drawers, carved and painted with grotesque figures, was
-ornamented with heaps of blue and white dishes, and pewter dinner-plates,
-and rows of brass candlesticks.
-
-All this was beautifully clean and tidy, for the Norse men and women keep
-all their cleanliness for their ships and houses, and waste none of it on
-their persons.
-
-A strong aromatic smell pervaded the whole room, from the fresh sprigs of
-fir and juniper with which it was strewn every morning, as old English
-halls were with rushes; it might indeed have well passed muster for
-an English hall in the olden times, but for the absence of the great
-gaping fire-place with its cozy chimney-corner and fire-side benches; the
-place of all this was ill supplied by the pride of Torgensen’s heart,
-which he pointed out before they had been in the room for five minutes,
-and called his “pot-kakoluvne”—a great pyramidal heap of glazed tiles,
-portraying Scripture subjects in Dutch costumes, and doing duty as a
-stove. This being an importation from foreign parts was of course of
-additional value; its pyramidal shape indicated Denmark as the country
-of its manufacture, for in Sweden the corresponding piece of furniture
-is cubical; and both are great improvements on the cast-iron stoves of
-Norway, which get nearly red hot, dry and parch the skin, crack the
-furniture, and fill the rooms with a description of gas, which, whatever
-it may do to a native, ensures to the stranger a perpetual headache.
-
-It is rare to find in Norway a farm, and consequently an establishment
-of the size of Torgensen’s, though in Sweden it is common enough. The
-Odal law, which enforces equal division of property among the children,
-prevents any accumulation of territorial property, and will ultimately
-reduce Norway to a population of agricultural peasants with a commercial
-aristocracy. The homesteads of the old Norwegian nobility are deserted
-and decaying, like their families, but Torgensen had been educated as a
-merchant and shipowner, as elder sons frequently are, and having been
-fortunate in his speculations, had been able to buy out his brothers, and
-to keep up unimpaired the old hospitalities of his father’s mansion; and
-thus fourteen or sixteen farm-servants, and as many girls, with, it must
-be confessed, an indefinite number of children that had found themselves
-by chance in the establishment without any fathers at all, sat daily
-round that mass of timber which was called the meal-board (_mad borden_),
-and supped their daily gröd and drank their daily brandy.
-
-Although the head of so great an establishment, Frue[30] Kerstin—as
-Madame Torgensen was usually called, though in truth she had no great
-right to the title—did not consider herself exempt from household duties;
-in fact she was but the principal housekeeper of the establishment, and
-wore a bunch of keys big enough for an ordinary jail as a badge of this
-distinction. It was not a very easy matter to catch her unprepared, for
-frugality was by no means the order of the house; but this day was really
-an exception to the general rule, and she saw with some dismay the party
-which her husband was bringing home with him. Lota was at the sœter, and
-with her were most of the young girls and, of course, their admirers.
-There had been hay-making at the Præstgaard during the past week, and,
-it being Saturday night, two-thirds of the remainder were dancing and
-drinking there, and thus the party at the homestead being a small one,
-the supper was none of the best. Good humour and real welcome, however,
-supplied all deficiencies, which after all, were more in Frue Kerstin’s
-imagination than in reality. The evening passed off admirably in songs
-and conversation; Torkel was an evident favourite,—and indeed his manly
-character, his ready stories and songs, his fine voice and constant and
-cheerful good humour well entitled him to the distinction, to say nothing
-of a broad strath in the higher Tellemark, and a lake, and a stream, and
-a saw-mill, and a “hammer” as it was called, that is to say, a smelting
-furnace for iron, to which, being the only son, he was undoubted heir, a
-qualification which prudent parents are not apt to overlook; but he had
-evidently risen in their esteem from the fact of his having brought such
-popular characters as English gentlemen to the homestead, and from the
-consideration with which those gentlemen treated him.
-
-Torgensen might have been better pleased had more justice been done to
-his brandy, which was real Cognac and admirable, and might have been a
-little scandalized at the admixture of water, but his broad, jolly face
-never lost that glow of good humour which made his guests feel they were
-doing him a pleasure by drinking his brandy and eating his good cheer. A
-lively conversation was kept up through Birger and Torkel till late at
-night, and when the fishermen, having duly thanked their hostess, after
-the customs of the country, retired to rest in the great square boxes of
-fragrant poplar leaves, they sank into such a mass of eider down, that
-told well for the _ci-devant_ attractions of the Lady Christina.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE CHURCH.
-
- “Mighty stands the cross of God,
- Smiling homeward to the soul.”
-
- _Almquist._
-
-
-One reason why the fishermen were so anxious to reach Soberud was, that
-the next day was Sunday, and they wanted a day of rest, and a church
-to go to; and that was not to be met with, on the Torjedahl, nearer
-than Christiansand itself. Hitherto their church had been a remarkably
-tall fir-tree, which had, somehow or other, been overlooked by the
-wood-cutters, and stood some little way within the forest. It had been
-chosen on account of its fancied resemblance to a church spire, as it
-towered above the rest of the foliage; and the lower branches having been
-cut away, and the space round its trunk enclosed and decorated with green
-boughs—as all Swedish churches used to be decorated on high days before a
-royal ordinance was passed which forbade it,—and the ground strewed with
-fresh juniper and marsh-marigolds—as church floors are to this day,—it
-did make a very fair forest church for fine weather; and as all the party
-could sing, more or less, the service was performed a good deal more
-ecclesiastically than it is in some of our English cathedrals.
-
-Norway is not in communion with England; indeed, strictly speaking,
-neither Norway nor Denmark are churches at all,—they are merely
-establishments. Sweden may, by some stretch of imagination and a little
-implicit faith in its history, be considered a church, and is so
-considered by the Bishop of London, who has authorised the Bishop of
-Gothenborg to confirm for him. But though neither the Englishmen, nor
-even the Swedes, considered themselves at liberty to communicate in the
-church of Soberud, there was no reason whatever against their joining in
-either the ottesång or the aftensång (morning or evening service), or
-even against their being present at the högmässe, or communion itself.
-The men, who had no very accurate ideas of theology, had joined in the
-English service very readily, and, indeed, had taken a good deal of
-pains in decorating the forest church, for both Tom and Torkel could
-read English as well as they could speak it; and Jacob pretended to do
-so. They were, however, all of them, extremely pleased at having the
-opportunity of going to a consecrated church.
-
-Perhaps one of the most remarkable features of the country is the respect
-and reverence which all classes pay to their churches, combined with the
-very little effect which religion has on their conduct. Norwegians will
-face all sorts of weather, in order to be present at the högmässe of
-Sunday. Large sums of money—that is to say, large in comparison with the
-wealth of the parishes—are spent upon their churches, which are always
-in perfect repair, and always most carefully swept, and trimmed with
-rushes or green sprigs. A man would lose his character at once, and would
-be shunned by his acquaintance as a hopeless reprobate, if he neglected
-confirmation, or the Lord’s supper. Nothing, indeed, is more common than
-to see, as an advertisement—“Wanted, a confirmed cook or housemaid;”
-which advertisement in no ways relates to the capacities of the servant,
-but simply to her age, it being taken for granted that a person of a
-certain age must have been confirmed. Indeed, the legislature interferes
-with this: few offices can be held by unconfirmed people, or by those
-who are not communicants; and the legislature is only the interpreter of
-public opinion. No man is at present molested for any religious opinions
-he may please to hold; he simply loses his civil rights by seceding from
-the national religion. In fact, Norway is the most complete illustration
-of the establishment principle which exists in the world.
-
-At the same time, education, as it is popularly called—that is to say,
-secular instruction—is almost universal. No one ever meets with a
-Norwegian unable to read and write. It may fairly be said that there is
-no country in the world in which the standard of popular education is
-so high, and the standard of popular morality so low,—where the respect
-for religion is so very great, and the ignorance of religion so very
-profound,—as it is in Norway. Sweden may be second in this paradox, but
-Norway is by far the first.
-
-It is not difficult to account for both these phenomena. Few countries
-suffered more extensive church spoliation in the good old Reformation
-times than Norway and Sweden; and when, after that convulsion, men began
-to gather up the fragments, they had to choose between an ill-paid
-clergy whose social position would be inferior to that of almost all
-their parishioners, and a sufficiently paid clergy with enormous and
-unmanageable parishes. They chose the latter, perhaps wisely, as more
-likely to preserve the character and influence of the church till better
-times should come. They, therefore, grouped the parishes into districts,
-few of which were under ten or twelve miles long, and wide in proportion,
-some very much larger, and one more than a hundred miles in length.
-These districts are a collected group of parishes, whose churches are
-still kept up under the name of Annexkyrker, and service is occasionally
-performed in them, as a sort of protest of their right.
-
-Over these districts they placed rectors (Pfarrherrer), whose revenue,
-though not what we should call large in our country, is, nevertheless,
-greater than that of most of their parishioners; they gave them good
-parsonage houses (præstgaards), and, in almost every case, provided
-a dowager house and farm for their widows. And, while they rendered
-their position an object of competition, they provided that it should
-be adequately filled, by establishing the most searching examinations
-and the most careful provisions. The consequence of this is, that the
-Norwegian clergy are almost invariably very superior people, and, in a
-country where the election is absolutely free, they are very generally
-chosen members of the Storthing; while, in Sweden, they form an integral
-estate of the realm, and possess their own independent house of
-parliament.
-
-In a country where there is so much ceremonial, so much that speaks
-to the understanding of the uneducated by speaking to their eye, it is
-impossible but that the externals of religion should be respected—the
-position of its ministers being such as is calculated to add to that
-respect, and not, as is too frequently the case in Roman Catholic
-countries, such as to diminish from it.
-
-But, from the enormous size of the parishes, the externals are all that
-can possibly come to the majority of the people. The Scandinavian Church,
-learned as its individual ministers may be, is not the teacher of the
-people, nor can it be—no man can teach over fifty miles of country.
-Education, on the other hand, there is plenty of, such as it is; for,
-not only do the frost-bound winters give plenty of opportunity, but the
-Church is the establishment, and the laws of the land are such as to make
-reading and writing necessary to all. At the same time, this education is
-absolutely secular, it has nothing to do with the doctrines of religion,
-and, consequently, nothing with the morals of the people, except to
-increase their power of doing anything. Knowledge with them, as with all
-others, is power: but, disjoined from religion, this is generally the
-power of doing wrong. Whether this be, or be not, a correct solution
-of the paradox, at all events, the fact remains, and it has never been
-accounted for: Norway is pre-eminent in the education of its people, and
-is also pre-eminent in the statistics of crime.
-
-But this is not the external view of the case: the mere visitor in Norway
-would speak of the very religious habits of the people. They certainly
-are a people of religious habits, and will continue to be so as long
-as the externals of religion are preserved with a magnificence and
-ceremonial sufficient to keep up their reverence. But they are, merely, a
-people of religious _habits_—they are not a people of religious feelings.
-The marriage between faith and works with them has been “dissolved by Act
-of Parliament, and neither their faith nor their works are the better for
-it.”
-
-Nothing of this, however, was visible on that Sunday morning, as the
-Parson, when the hospitable and substantial breakfast of the farm-house
-had at last come to an end, walked quietly and musingly along the broad
-natural terrace which led to the church, and commanded a beautiful view
-over the wide valley and its quiet lake.
-
-The church was a good-sized building, with nave, and aisles, and
-transepts, and chancel. It was handsome and striking, but very quaint
-and singular; every part of it was of wood—not planks, but great solid
-beams of absolute timber; centuries had passed over them, and there was
-no perceptible decay,—they were merely weather-stained, and harmonised
-in their colouring; and the whole edifice looked as if the day of
-judgment would find it as firm and as eternal as the Church it was
-built to represent. The whole was a confused collection of acute gables
-and high-pointed roofs, covered with diamond-shaped pine shingles. The
-windows were small, square-headed, and few in number, barely enough,
-indeed, to give light to the interior, and in no way contributing to the
-architectural beauty of the church. No Norwegian ever breathes more fresh
-air than he can help, or thinks of opening his church windows; it is not
-very often that he opens even the windows of his house.[31]
-
-The sharp roofs, which are almost universal in the Norwegian churches,
-though extremely ornamental, especially where, as in the present case,
-they are shingled, are erected not for ornament but for use. It is
-absolutely necessary, in a land where snow falls so abundantly, to have
-such a slope that will not permit it to lodge in any quantities in a
-building which is not inhabited and constantly cleared. Were the roof no
-steeper than those of most of our English churches, the weight of lodged
-snow would soon become sufficient to bear down any strength of timbers
-they could put into it.
-
-Although there was but little of ornament about the windows and
-doors—those more ordinary objects of ecclesiastical decoration—this
-evidently did not arise from want of respect or care for their church;
-for every gable—and there were thirty or forty of them, great and
-small—was decorated with elaborately-carved barge-boards, the ridge
-timber of every one of them projected three or four feet beyond the
-face of the building, and terminated in the head of some nondescript
-animal, particularly ugly, but still the record and evidence of infinite
-pains and labour. The chancel, the nave, and the belfry, constituted
-three separate pyramids, rising one above the other, consisting of from
-three to five stages each, and terminating in round towers, roofed with
-short shingled spires, like so many extinguishers. Each of these carried
-its huge cross, for neither Norwegian nor Swede is afraid of that holy
-emblem; and high on the top of all was the typical cock—and if it did
-not warn all sinners to repent, it certainly was not for want of being
-seen, for its size was colossal, and in its new gilding it glittered in
-the air for miles on every side. At the entrance of the churchyard, on
-the side facing the lake, was a lych-gate, also of solid timber, with a
-roof broad enough to shelter a whole funeral. The gate itself, which,
-when shut, formed a stile, was shod with iron spikes, to prevent the pigs
-from burrowing under. By the side of it was that satire upon Norway, the
-evidence of Karl Johann’s fruitless attempts to stem the tide of national
-habits—the stocks—of course unemployed—at least, so far as their legal
-purpose went;—they formed, however, a very comfortable seat, upon which
-Birger was balancing himself backwards and forwards, and trying to cross
-one foot over the other. The other fishermen, as decent as they could
-make themselves up for Sunday—which was rather dingy, after all, compared
-with the bright colours of the peasants’ dresses—lounged about, watching
-the assembling congregation.
-
-It wanted some time to service, but there were scattered here and there
-about the churchyard several parties, who had already been for some time
-on the ground. Sunday as it was, they had brought with them their garden
-tools, and their waterpots, and their baskets of plants, or papers of
-seeds, and had tucked up their smart embroidered petticoats, or turned
-back their shirt-sleeves, according to their sex, and were busily
-employed about the graves.
-
-These were not oblong mounds of turf, like the graves in our English
-churchyards, but raised borders with iron edging, and were, for the most
-part, pictures of neat and tidy gardening; wild flowers very often were
-all that grew there, little blue gentianellas, or lilies of the valley,
-such as might be met with anywhere in the open fjeld; more often than
-all, that innocent little white trailer, the anthemis cotula, which they
-call Balder’s eyebrow, and to which they attach a peculiar sanctity;
-but, even if they were wild, they always bore the traces of care and
-cultivation. Now and then a rose would be woven into the semblance of a
-cradle, or an edging of convolvolus major, twining round its supports,
-would form a pyramid or a canopy, with its fragile blue flowers already
-fading, though so early in the day, perhaps an apt type of those who lay
-below them.
-
-In no place does the Norwegian appear to so great advantage as when
-busied about the graves of his family; these are cared for by all who
-cherish the memory of the dead, as their occupants would be were they
-still on earth. Appointments are often made among distant members of
-a family, and little parties are arranged to meet at the grave of a
-common relative; the first object of all these is invariably to trim its
-flowers. These are not sad or solemn meetings; they are rather joyful
-reunions, much as if the families were visiting the house of their
-relation, instead of his grave. They are not even dressed in mourning,
-for their meetings are continued long after the time of mourning is
-passed: it is a sort of sober festivity. Much of the good that exists in
-the Norwegian character—their family affection, their patriotism, their
-attachment to their native country throughout all their wanderings,—may
-be traced to their graves.
-
-Suddenly, the bells struck up, and every man removed his hat, bowing to
-the church as if returning its salutation. Other people, besides the
-funeral parties, now began to collect from different quarters; here and
-there a stray cariole rattled up to the churchyard gate, and an old
-grandmother or two was brought along in one of the queer-looking little
-carts of the country; but the people of Norway are anything but vehicular
-in their habits; indeed, except the main roads—and these are very few
-indeed—the country is in no ways calculated for wheeled carriages.
-
-Boats were a much more fashionable mode of progression; several of these
-were already seen approaching from different quarters of the lake,
-pulled by two or four oars, and containing a cargo of many-coloured
-petticoats, which looked, in the distance, like bunches of variegated
-tulips. Every Norwegian, man or woman, learns to row almost as soon as he
-learns to walk, and every Norwegian knows something of the principles of
-boat-building; and very elegant little craft, of the whale-boat build,
-they frequently turn out.
-
-“Hallo!” said Birger; “we are in luck. I knew it was Communion Sunday,
-but we are to have a lot of christenings besides. Look at the little
-white bundles in their chrism-cloths, and the elegant white satin bows.
-I do believe they would none of them consider their children baptized
-without those white bows.”
-
-“Have you Christening Sundays, then?” said the Parson.
-
-“Not always: in many places the clergy set their faces against them. But
-the Norwegian is a gregarious animal: he dearly loves a set feast, and
-hospitably considers the more the merrier. In these country-places you
-will often find not only Communion Sundays, but Christening Sundays, and
-Wedding Sundays, and—”
-
-“And funeral Sundays?” suggested the Captain.
-
-“And funeral Sundays—you need not laugh, I mean what I say; in the winter
-we have a little frost here, hot as it is now,—and frost, compared to
-which your English frost is but a summer’s day. They cannot very well
-bury their dead in the winter, so they very frequently freeze them, and
-keep them till the frost breaks up. Whenever that happens it is of course
-necessary to bury immediately all that have died since the beginning
-of the winter, and thus—though I suspect you asked that question in
-pure joke—it really does happen, that besides gregarious communions,
-christenings, and weddings, they have gregarious funerals also.”
-
-The bells now began to “ring in,” and that portion of the congregation
-who were not related to any of the little white bundles in satin bows, or
-were not destined to be godfathers or godmothers to them, came stumbling
-into the church, and arranging themselves as best they could on the
-benches.
-
-To those coming in from the blaze of day outside, the interior appeared
-perfectly dark, so that the people were actually feeling for their
-places. The little square windows looked like dots of light against the
-black walls, but as the eye accustomed itself to the darkness, the scene
-came out by degrees: the tracery of the chancel screen—the great crucifix
-seen over it—the altar beyond, heavy with carving and gilding—the font
-just within the screen—the pulpit just without it—then the congregation
-themselves became visible—the men on one side of the nave, the women
-on the other. It was high mass; for though the Scandinavian Church be
-reformed, she still retains the ancient expressions.
-
-The short hymn which begins the service had closed, and the priest in his
-wide-sleeved surplice—mäss skjorta—was standing by the altar, while the
-Candidatus marshalled in the porch a little procession of the christening
-parties. When all was ready they entered the church, the congregation
-singing, as they advanced towards the chancel, one of the numerous hymns
-from the Bede Psalmer—to which little book, unpretending as it is, the
-people owe nearly all the very small acquaintance with the doctrines of
-their Church, which they possess.
-
-In our service we recognise but two parties, the priest and the
-people—the English choir being, theoretically, at all events, merely
-the leaders of the people’s responses; whereas, in Scandinavia there
-are three distinct divisions of the service—the prayers of the priest,
-the responses of the choir, and the hymns of the people; which last are
-collected and arranged for seasons and occasions, in their Bede Psalmer,
-a book which, as they all sing more or less, most of them have at their
-fingers’ ends.
-
-While this was proceeding, the Candidatus threw open the richly-carved
-doors of the chancel screen and admitted the christening party into the
-choir, arranging them round the font which stood at its entrance. The
-whole service was very like our own, except that, after the exhortation,
-the priest proclaimed his own commission to baptize, in the words of the
-three last verses in St. Matthew’s gospel, before reading the gospel from
-St. Mark which is used in the English Church; and afterwards announced
-the value of the Sacrament itself in the words of St. John—(chap. 3. v.
-5, 6). Before the act of baptism, the priest laid his hand on the head
-of each child, severally, and blessed it; then, after sprinkling it three
-several times as he pronounced the name of each of the three Persons in
-the Trinity, he stepped forward to the doors of the choir, and presented
-the new Christian to the congregation, saying, “In the name of the Holy
-Trinity, this child is now, through holy baptism, received as a member
-of the Christian Church, and hath right given him to all the privileges
-joined therewith: God give His grace, that he, all the days of his life,
-may fulfil this his baptismal covenant.”
-
-After a general thanksgiving for the new birth of the children, and a
-general exhortation to the sponsors on the subject of their duties, the
-congregation struck up another hymn from the Bede Psalmer, while the
-children were carried round the altar, which does not stand, as in our
-churches, close to the well, but has a passage left behind it, possibly
-for this purpose, the sponsors depositing on it their offerings as they
-passed.
-
-In the meanwhile the priest, kneeling on the altar steps, was invested
-by the Candidatus and Kyrke Sånger (precentor) with the mässe hacke,
-a crimson velvet chasuble, embroidered in front with a gold glory
-surrounding the Holy Name, and behind with a gold floriated cross. He
-remained kneeling, while the Candidatus, paper in hand, went down the
-nave, noting those who intended to present themselves at the communion,
-in order to be certain that none should partake of it who had not
-previously given their names to the priest for approbation, and attended
-the early service of confession—called communions-skrift. This was not
-so very difficult to do, though none of the congregation had left the
-church; for each intended communicant wore something black or grey about
-him, in memory of the Lord’s death. When this survey had been completed,
-the priest rose, and facing the people, intoned the general thanksgiving,
-and then turning again to the altar, made his confession alone, in the
-name of his flock, the congregation itself being silent, though the
-choir, at the occasional pauses, chanted the Kyrie Eleeson. He then
-placed on the altar the “Oblaten Schalten,” or wafer basket, the silver
-flagon, and lastly the chalice and patin, which were brought to him with
-great ceremony, the Candidatus and Kyrke Sånger, who carried them, being
-attended by the whole choir.
-
-The outer doors of the church were then shut, and the Candidatus in his
-black gown and cassock having taken his place on the lower step, the
-priest chanted the Gloria in Excelsis, the choir taking it up after the
-first sentence.
-
-After the consecration, the communicants were arranged in four divisions;
-the married men, and the married women, the single men and the single
-women; these knelt in the centre, while the non-communicants stood
-round them chanting softly the Agnus Dei, and bowing their heads as
-the elements were administered to each communicant, which was done
-individually, as with us.
-
-There was then a general thanksgiving and a Hallelujah by the choir;
-after which the priest dismissed the congregation with his benediction,
-making the sign of the cross towards them in the air. This form, which
-was universal throughout three kingdoms scarcely more than a hundred
-years ago, has almost entirely disappeared from the Swedish Church,
-disused rather than forbidden; but many of the old customs which in
-Sweden have become obsolete, in Norway are religiously kept up. And
-besides this, politics have something to do with the matter; there is
-always a great affectation of Danish peculiarities, such as dressing the
-church with green boughs on Whitsuntide, among those who are not over
-well affected to Sweden. These and many similar ceremonials retained
-in Norwegian churches are punishable by fine or deprivation; but the
-people will have it so, and the priests are very willing to indulge
-them,—members of Storthing and law-makers as many of them are.
-
-As for theology, the people are profoundly ignorant of that, while the
-priests themselves, who, nine out of ten, are learned divines,—thanks to
-the severe examination at Christiania which generally weeds out one half
-of the candidates every year,—are almost always politicians enough to
-borrow their churchmanship from Denmark, are just as much Grundtvigites,
-or Mynsterites, according as their bias is high or low, as if they lived
-in Copenhagen itself.
-
-After the conclusion of the service the fishermen were lounging
-homewards, taking their time, and enjoying the weather, and the views,
-and the sunshine, and the Sunday quiet, and upon the whole, though all
-of then ardent sportsmen, by no means sorry for a day of regular rest,
-when the Pfarrherr himself, accompanied by his Candidatus overtook them.
-The Candidatus was a long, tall youth, fresh from college, conceited and
-shy at the same time, who looked, as Birger afterwards observed, as if he
-smelt of the midnight oil; but the Pfarrherr was a gentleman-like man,
-with a broad, good-humoured, fresh-coloured face, looking more like an
-English old-fashioned squire than anything else. He had been priest of
-Soberud for many years, and being a regular anti-Swede, was very popular.
-He had represented the district in several Storthings, and was likely to
-do so in many more, though he did belong to the commercial party, which
-in Norway, as in America, is aristocratic and tory, in opposition to the
-country party, who in those nations are the radicals.
-
-In addition to this, he was the probst, or rural dean, which was a
-fortunate circumstance for him—for being an enthusiastic admirer of
-Grundtvig, he was a great deal too much of a ritualist and antiquarian
-for the continually receding Swedish Church, and, under other
-circumstances, could hardly have failed in being brought up before the
-Church Committee at Christiania, for his little peculiarities; though
-it is a fact that most of the ecclesiastical members of Storthing, who
-composed it, thought, felt, and, if they dared, would act, precisely as
-he did.
-
-He spoke English readily enough—indeed, English is to the educated
-Norwegians what French is to us,—and, as a matter of course, invited the
-fishermen to share the hospitalities of the præstgaard. This, however,
-would have been a mortal offence to poor Torgenson, who, though he could
-not speak to his guests one single word except through an interpreter,
-would have been deeply scandalized, and, indeed, would have felt lowered
-in the eyes of his countrymen, had they deserted him. The Parson,
-however, being a professional man, was an exception, and Pfarrherr
-Nordlingen carried him off in triumph, Torkel promising to bring over
-his knapsack to the præstgaard.
-
-The præstgaard was not so large and rambling a building as the hall,
-but was infinitely more comfortable; highly-polished birchen furniture,
-and well-stored bookcases, gave it an air of habitableness. The room
-into which they entered was the summer parlour, whose French windows,
-shaded by gauze curtains, were wide open, looking on a broad lawn and a
-sparkling little stream beyond it; a good sprinkling of juniper twigs
-took off, in a great measure, from the bare look of the carpetless floors
-which always strikes an English eye. It is a great absurdity, in a
-country which is not favourable for sheep, and whose woollen manufactures
-seldom go higher than the wadmaal, that the duty upon English woollens
-should be so absurdly high. But the fact is, the Storthing is so entirely
-in the hands of the democratic, or country party, that anything beyond a
-class legislation is hopeless. The idea is not that all the people should
-have warm blankets, but that the democratic and agricultural majorities
-should work up inferior wool. Weaving by hand is an agriculturist’s
-winter work.
-
-The Priestess Nordlingen, as she was called, a smiling, pretty-looking
-woman, much younger than her husband, was occupied in laying the cloth
-for aftonsmad, assisted by the dowager priestess, who lived now on the
-other side of the little stream, but being on excellent terms with her
-late husband’s successor, spent a good deal more of her time in her
-old home than she did in her new one.[32] Servants they had, both of
-them, in plenty, for the præster are among the richest in the land; but
-no Norwegian wife is above acting as butler and housekeeper, and no
-Norwegian damsel, fröken though she be, is above waiting at table. It
-does not seem quite the thing to an English gentleman, to have the ladies
-waiting upon him; but certainly in the Norwegian grammar, if they have
-one, the masculine is more worthy than the feminine.
-
-Forest life is pleasant, but a contrast is pleasant also, and the Parson,
-as he lay back in a peculiarly easy chair, sipping leisurely the dram
-which invariably precedes a Norwegian meal, and which, in the present
-case, was true cognac of unquestionable genuineness and undeniable
-antiquity, considered himself in very great luck indeed; in fact, much
-as he admired the rude abundance of the hall, he infinitely preferred
-the quiet elegances of the præstgaard. He made some such observation to
-Nordlingen.
-
-“Yes,” replied he, “the Reformation has injured the Church cruelly, as an
-endowment, and has cut off five-sixths of its clergy; but we individual
-præster have not much to complain of as regards ourselves.”
-
-“You must have pretty severe duties, though.”
-
-“Well, they are not severe, because they cannot be done. My parish was
-originally six; these have been thrown together under one. If I had
-half-a-dozen curates, the parish could not be visited, nor the annex
-kyrker properly served; for in former times it supported six priests and
-six deacons; so what one cannot do at all, one soon ceases to distress
-one’s self about. The work is not done, cannot be done, and no one
-expects it to be done. We have work enough—especially those who, like me,
-are elevated to the Storthing,—but it is not ecclesiastical work.”
-
-“Do you know,” said the Parson, “I wonder that, under such circumstances,
-you have no dissenters in Norway; our Wesleyans arose from precisely the
-same cause. The spoliation of our Church having diminished our number
-of priests, and very seriously impaired the discipline which might, in
-some measure, have kept the remainder to their work, the people in many
-districts became heathens, much like your own people, in fact; and when
-teachers rose up among them, men followed them not because they were
-orthodox, but because they were the only teachers to be had. But you have
-some sort of dissenters, too, have you not?”
-
-“O, the Haugerites. Yes—they are not dissenters, either. Hauger held a
-good many doctrines of that arch-heretic, Calvin: New Birth, as distinct
-from Baptism; Predestination, Election, and so forth; but neither he
-nor his followers separated from the Church. In truth, religion is at
-too low an ebb among us for dissent; we have no more strength to throw
-up dissenters, than an exhausted field has to throw up weeds. Hauger
-succeeded, because he was not only a pious, but a practical man; he was
-rich, too; he set up saw-mills and iron-works, and advanced the money;—it
-is no wonder he set up a religious party. But they are going down now.”
-
-“Ah, I understand—what we call in Ireland, soup Christians; and now
-Hauger is dead, the spring has run dry?”
-
-“No not at all—I do not mean to say that the practical turn of his mind
-was not a recommendation to his theology; but though he preached and did
-good, his good offices were not confined to his own followers; his sect
-is subsiding because it has no distinctive tenets, any more than that of
-your Wesleyans. You made a great blunder; by turning Wesley out of the
-Church, you forced him to set up a Church government of his own; it is
-that government, and not his doctrines, which keeps his followers in a
-state of antagonism to a Church with which they have no real doctrinal
-difference. We were not such fools with Hauger; he met with a little
-persecution himself—for we Norwegians are not tolerant,—but we were wise
-enough to leave his people alone, so they did not think it worth while to
-differ, and in fact never did.”
-
-“I think there may be another reason,” said the Parson: “with you a
-sectarian loses his rights of citizenship, by the fact of his being a
-sectarian.”
-
-“Well, and why should he not? by leaving the national Church he makes
-himself a foreigner; we do not persecute him any more than we persecute
-any other foreigners, but we do not allow foreigners to legislate for
-us, neither will we let him, or any man choose which of our national
-institutions he will adhere to and which he will not—and our Church is
-one of our national institutions;—we say to him, and to you alike—you
-are strangers, both of you, you are both very welcome to stay here, and
-to live under the protection of our laws; moreover, we are very ready to
-naturalize either of you, and to receive you as citizens of our country
-if you like, but choose for yourselves; you cannot be Norwegians and not
-Norwegians at the same time. These are the laws, religious and political,
-of Norway, take them or leave them, just as you like, but we cannot let
-you divide them. Now where is the injustice of this?”
-
-“I am sure I will not take upon myself to say,” said the Parson,
-laughing; “supposing always, the State meddles with Church affairs at
-all; and I, as an Englishman, have no right to find fault with you for
-that. But what does your Church itself say to all this; you called
-Calvin, just now, an arch-heretic, what do you say about his followers?
-Besides, it strikes me that there is a little difference of opinion
-between your friend Hauger and St. Paul, on the subject of female
-preachers, to say nothing of his unordained preachers, which all of his
-people were; but that I suppose does not greatly disturb you, as you
-attach so little value to Apostolical Succession.”
-
-This was a hard hit upon poor Nordlingen, who was a most patriotic
-Norwegian, but yet, as a Grundtvigite, was painfully aware of the want of
-divine commission in his Church. It was, however, a random shot of the
-Parson’s, who, speaking of the Norwegian Church as it then was, certainly
-was not aware that the reforms which Grundtvig and Mynster had effected
-in Denmark, had already penetrated to a Church politically divided from
-them. He took the opportunity of the bustle, caused by the servants
-bringing in the aftonsmad, to turn the conversation to less dangerous
-subjects, and occupied the rest of the evening, if not more profitably,
-at least more to the amusement of the ladies of the family, in drawing
-out the solemn Candidatus, who, fresh from his examinations, was brimful
-of theology, which, when once cheated out of his shyness, he was spilling
-over on every opportunity, and mixing, most absurdly, with the ordinary
-subjects of conversation.
-
- The Church of Norway—if Church it can be called—is in a very
- anomalous state. Intensely Erastian, it is dominated over by
- the Storthing, and swayed by the political feelings of the
- country. These, which are called Norwegian and patriotic, are
- really Danish. Norway has never been strong enough, or rich
- enough, since the times of barbarism, to form an independent
- nation of itself: feeling its weakness, it acquiesced readily
- in the dominant position assumed by Denmark, during the Union
- of Kalmar, which grated so much against the feeling of the
- Swedes only because Sweden was conscious of its own innate
- strength and real superiority. When that union was dissolved,
- it left very bitter animosities between the two principal
- nations, which was participated in by Norway, whose feeling was
- with Denmark. These the lapse of time has mitigated, so far as
- the Danes and Swedes are concerned. They have been renewed,
- however, in Norway, by the forcible annexation of that country
- to Sweden, by the Congress of Vienna, in compensation for the
- loss of Finland; and thus the Norwegian Church, politically
- allied to that of Sweden, is affected by that of Denmark.
-
- The original Reformation in Denmark, which involved that of
- Norway also, was exclusively a political movement; that of
- Sweden was political also, but grander interests were connected
- with it. Sweden was a country shaking off a foreign yoke, and
- the Reformation succeeded because the Reformers were patriots
- also. If reformation in religion is to be mixed with earthly
- motives at all, it could not have had a grander alliance; but
- the Reformation of Norway was a mere change of politics. It
- was forced on by the Court against the will of both clergy
- and people—the king, at that time, being nearly despotic. It
- was not resisted; there was too little religion—Romanist, or
- anything else—in the country for the people to feel any sort
- of excitement in the matter. After the fall of Christiern,
- a new religion was thought to be the most effectual mode of
- depressing the remains of his party. A certain German, of the
- name of Buggenhausen, was constituted the leading reformer;
- and, in fact, the Church of Denmark was not reformed, but
- destroyed, and Lutheranism imported in its place, and forced
- upon the nation by an arbitrary sovereign. The consequences
- were precisely similar to those which followed upon many of the
- Reformations in Germany. The Church remained in form, but the
- vital energy had gone from it. Many godly persons it had from
- time to time in its communion, but fewer and fewer as the time
- went on, and the traces it has still left of its vitality are
- few in number.
-
- “Towards the close of the last century,” says Hamilton, “the
- progress of stupor was complete, and vital Christianity seemed
- to have departed from the land; formalism was at its height,
- and, oddly enough, bigotry appeared to accompany it. An attempt
- at revival has been made during the present century, by Dr.
- Mynster, now Bishop of Copenhagen, and by Grundtvig, who
- may to a certain extent be considered as the leaders of the
- high and low Church parties; Mynster taking his stand on the
- doctrines connected with the Atonement; Grundtvig, on the faith
- once delivered to the saints. There does not appear to be any
- opposition between them, any more than there is opposition
- in the doctrines upon which they take their respective stand
- against Indifferentism and Rationalism; but this is the bent of
- their minds and the direction of their teaching.”
-
- Mynster says, in a letter to Oechlenschlager, “I design, God
- willing, to open my mouth, and that in divers ways, certainly
- first to try what echo will answer my voice; but it shall not
- be quite in vain, for I know that I am among the called, and I
- muse day and night in watching and praying that I may be also
- among the chosen.”
-
- “This object,” says Hamilton (_Sixteen Months in the Danish
- Isles_), “he speedily obtained; and from that time till the
- present, there has been no cessation of that gentle, but loud
- and solemn voice, persuading men everywhere to repent. In
- speaking and writing, Christ crucified has been the beginning
- and end, the first and the last.”
-
- Grundtvig, who, like our Keble, was a poet before he was a
- preacher, and who has taught by his poems, no less than by his
- sermons ever since he brought the great powers of his mind to
- bear against Rationalism, some few years after Dr. Mynster
- began to be celebrated. “It seemed to him a sin,” he said,
- “that he should be taken up with Mythology, while the pastors
- of God’s flock were neglecting their duty;” so he stepped
- forward, asserting the Faith against human might and reason.
- His leading text, upon which all his preaching hinges, is the
- Faith once delivered to the saints,—pure and complete from the
- beginning, and incapable of change. “Every change,” he argues,
- “is a corruption, and the office of the Church is simply to
- restore, either by supplying or by lopping off what has been
- superadded to the original Revelation, and to preserve the
- faith in its purity.” His style of teaching, therefore, is
- necessarily traditional. Grundtvig, himself a most powerful
- preacher, has naturally a somewhat exaggerated idea of the
- importance of preaching, as opposed to reading. Preaching, he
- calls the living word. There is a curious mixture of truth and
- fallacy in his idea of never putting the Bible into the hands
- of an unconverted person, because there is no hope that such a
- person can understand it. “It was written for the Church,” he
- says truly; and he infers from this, that it must be expounded
- orally by a Churchman, because “faith cometh by hearing:” and
- from this text he argues, that the Spirit of God does not
- instruct in the reading of the Word. Grundtvig, from the first,
- has been the most uncompromising opponent of Rationalism,
- and his line of argument much more telling and difficult
- to withstand than that of his fellow-worker, Mynster; and,
- accordingly, though now popular, he has not passed through his
- course without getting into difficulties of a personal nature,
- from the opposition of the Rationalist party. He resigned his
- living at one time, and for many years was not a pastor of the
- Danish National Church at all.
-
- These great leaders have their followers and their respective
- schools; but it is much to be feared that the revival which
- they have produced is merely the effect of their own personal
- influence and talent, for there is nothing in the system of
- the Danish Church which can perpetuate it,—that this Church,
- itself severed from the universal Church of Christ, has no
- inherent vitality,—and that, as the influence and name of even
- Calvin could not prevent even his own Geneva from becoming
- Unitarian when other teachers had arisen and his memory had
- faded from the recollections of his people, so the teaching of
- Grundtvig and Mynster is but a temporary revival of Evangelical
- teaching,—the produce of the individual, not of the Church.
-
- The Swedish Church, as distinguished from the Danish and
- Norwegian, has far more pretensions to Churchmanship than
- either of these, though it may have lost more of the externals
- and ceremonial. Its Apostolic Succession has been doubted, and
- certainly the question is not entirely clear. At the time of
- the Reformation, Matthias, Bishop of Strengnäs, and Vincent,
- Bishop of Skara, had been beheaded by Christiern; and on the
- other side, Canute, the Archbishop, and Peter, Bishop of
- Westeras, had been beheaded by his rival, Gustavus,—so that,
- at the final Diet of Westeras, at which the Reformation was
- determined upon, Sweden could muster but four bishops, of whom
- it is said that Bishop Brask only had been duly consecrated;
- two others, Haraldsen and Sommar, were only bishops elect.
- The results of that Diet caused Brask to go into voluntary
- exile, and as all communion with Rome was thereby broken
- off, the question of the Succession hinges on the fact, that
- Gustavus had previously sent the fourth Bishop, Magnussen,
- elect of Skara, to be consecrated at Rome. This fact, which is
- distinctly affirmed by Gejer, has been questioned, though on no
- very good grounds.
-
- The weakness of the Swedish Church, however, does not lie
- here, but in its peculiar connection with the State, which
- is perpetually involving it in secular politics, and as
- perpetually taking from its spiritual character. This defect
- existed before the Reformation just as it does now, and then,
- as now, formed its element of weakness: then, the bishops were
- treated with by contending sovereigns as the most influential
- barons—now, they are tampered with as the most influential
- politicians. Sweden is governed by a king and four houses
- of parliament—the Nobles, the Clergy, the Burghers, and the
- Peasants; and a bill passing any three of these houses becomes
- the law of the land. But, though the houses are of equal
- authority, the value of individual votes must vary inversely as
- the numbers of which those houses are composed: for instance,
- the house of the Nobles contains about 1500 members, and the
- house of the Clergy 80; the value of any single ecclesiastic’s
- vote is, therefore, eighteen times greater than that of any
- nobleman’s vote. The effect of this has been precisely the same
- as the more arbitrary nature of the Norwegian Reformation: the
- Church of Sweden has become—first political, then worldly,
- then Erastian; and, at the same time, the enormous size of
- the parishes operates precisely as it does in Norway,—the
- majority of the people are estranged from their Church through
- sheer ignorance of its doctrines,—the prescribed forms of
- Confirmation, Communion, and so forth, being gone through as
- essentials rather of civil promotion than of eternal Salvation.
-
- It is not a matter of surprise, therefore, that, year after
- year, the Swedish Church is losing some portion of her
- Churchmanship, and degenerating more and more every day into a
- mere establishment. At this point it would have arrived long
- ago, had it not been for Archbishop Wallin, who, not only a
- sound divine, which most of the educated clergy are, but by far
- the greatest poet modern Sweden has produced, has embodied the
- doctrines of the Church in a series of hymns, which now form
- part of the Church service, under the name of “Bede Psalmer.”
-
- Sweden is a musical nation, and these hymns are extremely
- popular. So far as the author can find out, they are the only
- means by which ninety-nine Swedes out of every hundred have any
- knowledge whatever of the Christian doctrine, or in any way
- differ from their Heathen ancestors—the worshippers of Odin and
- the mythology of Asgard.
-
- As a specimen of Wallin’s poetry, we will take his hymn on the
- Creation—a paraphrase of the 104th Psalm,—perhaps as fine a
- specimen of rhythmic illustration as any that exists. We give
- it from Howitt’s translation:—
-
- “Sing, my soul,
- The Eternal’s praise,—
- Infinite!
- Omnipotent!
- God of all worlds!
- In glorious light, all star-bestrewed,
- Thou dost Thy majesty invest,—
- The Heaven of heavens is Thine abode,
- And worlds revolve at Thy behest.
- Infinite!
- Omnipotent!
- God of all worlds!
- Thy chariot on the winds doth go;
- The thunder follows Thy career;
- Flowers are Thy ministers below,
- And storms Thy messengers of fear.
- Infinite!
- Omnipotent!
- O Thou, our God!
-
- “The earth sang not Thy peerless might
- Amid the heavenly hosts of old,—
- Thou spakest, and from empty night
- She issued forth, and on her flight
- Of countless ages proudly rolled,—
- Darkness wrapped her, and the ocean
- Wildly weltering on her lay;
- Thou spakest, and, with glad devotion,
- Up she rose with queenly motion,
- And pursued her radiant way.
-
- “High soared the mountains,
- Glittering and steep,—
- Forth burst the fountains,
- And through the air flashing—
- From rock to rock dashing—
- ’Mid the wild tempest crashing—
- Took their dread leap.
-
- “Then opened out the quiet dale,
- With all its grass and flowers;
- Then gushed the spring, so clear and pale,
- Beneath the forest bowers;
- Then ran the brooks from moorlands brown,
- Along the verdant lea,
- And the fleet fowls of heaven shot down
- Into a leafy sea;—
- ’Mid the wild herd’s rejoicing throng,
- The nightingales accord—
- All nature raised its matin song,
- And praised Thee—Nature’s Lord:
- O Thou, who wast, and art, and e’er shall be!
- Eternal One! all earth adoring stands,
- And through the works of Thy Almighty Hands
- Feels grace and wisdom infinite in Thee!
-
- “And answer gives the sea,—
- The fathomless ocean—
- The waste without end—
- Where, in ceaseless commotion,
- Winds and billows contend;—
- Where myriads that live without count, without name—
- Crawling or swimming in strange meander—
- Fill the deep as it were with a quivering flame;
- Where the heavy whale doth wander
- Through the dumb night’s hidden reign,
- And man unwearied with earth’s wide strife
- Still hunts around death’s grim domain—
- The over-flood of life.
-
- “To Thee! to Thee! Thou Sire of all,
- Our prayers in faith ascend,—
- All things that breathe, both great and small,
- On Thee alone depend.
- Thy bounteous hand Thou dost unclose,
- And happiness unstinted flows
- In streams that know no end.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-BREAKING UP THE ENCAMPMENT.
-
- “To-day shall be spent in drinking,—
- We need not spare the ale,—
- And we will set sail on the morrow,
- Nor will our good luck fail.”
-
- _Svenska Folk-visor._
-
-
-The whole party found their quarters in the Soberud valley so extremely
-comfortable, and the game so very abundant, that they were readily
-induced to prolong their stay; and the Parson struck up quite a
-friendship with the worthy Pfarrherr, and talked theology with the
-Candidatus. Torkel, who had had long, and, apparently, very interesting
-conversations with old Torgenson, the import of which did not transpire,
-had asked a temporary leave of absence, which was readily granted—the
-Parson having, no doubt, his own suspicions from what he saw at the
-sœter, but prudently holding his tongue about them. Indeed, he was no
-loser; for Torkel’s place, in every respect, except as an interpreter,
-was amply supplied by Karl Torgenson, who, having served his time of
-drill, had been just discharged from the corvette _Freya_, and had
-arrived, somewhat unexpectedly, on the Sunday evening. Karl spoke a
-little English, though not enough for conversation; but, on the other
-hand, he was as good a sportsman as Torkel himself, and much better
-acquainted with the localities of his own home.
-
-Under his guidance, the Parson’s flies lured many a trout from the blue
-waters of the lake; but the best fish—such fish, indeed, as he had never
-before seen—were caught by a discovery of his own.
-
-The lake lying in a broad valley, many of its shores were shelving
-and sandy, or slightly muddy, instead of plumping down in rocky
-sublacustrine precipices, and all these shallows were fringed with
-weeds. Coming home late in the evening, he saw a number of children in
-the water, ladling out, with tins and buckets, and vessels of every
-description, hundreds and thousands of little white glittering fish,
-which were feeding on the weed. These were the young of the fresh-water
-herring, which, whenever they can get them, which is not often, the
-Norwegians make into soup. The full-grown fish are not taken till later
-in the year, and this is never done except by nets, for they will rise at
-no bait of any kind big enough to put on a hook.
-
-The Parson was looking at the little glittering things as they sparkled
-in the moonlight,—and no fish is so brilliantly white as the fresh-water
-herring,—when, amid the shouts and screams of the children, a huge
-trout was tumbled on shore out of one of the buckets. “O! by George!”
-said the Parson to Karl Torgenson, who smiled as if he understood every
-word, “that is worth noting; that fellow came to make his supper off the
-herrings, and having ventured in too far, has got entangled in the weeds.
-There will be some of his great relations come to supper, also, for
-certain. Let us try.”
-
-A light fly-rod, such as the Parson carried, was not the weapon best
-adapted for the purpose; but he forthwith unlooped his casting-line, and
-taking a trace out of his fly-book—for he was never without trolling
-materials—fitted one of the little glittering gwineads on the litch; and
-wading quite as deep as was prudent, and a good deal deeper than was
-pleasant, considering the time of night and the coldness of Norwegian
-waters, he cast beyond the edge of the weeds; the bait had hardly began
-to spin, when a fish took him, such as required all his skill to master
-with his fly-rod, and long and arduous was the struggle before he
-succeeded in leading him captive through an opening in the weeds, and
-drawing him quietly into shoal water.
-
-The fact was, that the whole coast, like that of France during the
-late war, was in a state of strict blockade; the little gwineads, like
-the chasse-marées, were dodging about in-shore, while the great trout,
-unable, from their draught of water, to pursue them into the shallows,
-were grimly cruising about and snapping up any adventurous little
-youngster that showed his nose outside. The fly-rod was too feeble to
-do much execution that evening, for it took half an hour to master a
-fish with it; but the discovery was not lost on the Parson, and the next
-evening saw him with a twenty-two foot cane trolling-rod, commanding, at
-easy cast, the whole fishable water, and supplying the præstgaard, as
-well as the hall, with such trout as they had never dreamt of.
-
-The Captain and Birger were no less assiduous in their own particular
-calling, and from the quantity of game, including deer, which they
-brought in, might very fairly be said to have paid for their keep. The
-fjeld of Soberud was much more open, and better adapted for game, than
-the valley of the Torjedahl and its surrounding mountains, and also, as
-there were fewer thick trees, better adapted for getting at it.
-
-Pleasant as all this was, time wore on, and it became necessary for the
-party to resume their knapsacks and retrace their steps, Torgensen having
-first exacted a promise that they would visit Soberud once more before
-their departure. “Perhaps,” said he, mysteriously, “I may have occasion
-to muster all the friends of my house before the winter comes on, and
-whenever that occasion happens, I hope the present party will honour my
-roof-tree.”
-
-Tom, who interpreted this speech, could not conceive what it alluded
-to, though it seemed to make him very merry; but the mystery, if ever
-there was one, was soon explained by Lota’s blushes, when the Captain,
-on seeing her and the missing Torkel together, as the party arrived at
-the Aalfjer sœter that evening, shook his head at them with a knowing
-smile. In fact, Torkel had made such excellent use of his time, that
-while the party were occupied with the fish and game of the Soberud
-valley, he had contrived to settle, and definitely arrange, with the full
-approbation of Torgensen, that his marriage should take place in the
-autumn. No Norwegian ever thinks of marrying till the work-day summer is
-past; besides, Torkel was making a very good thing of it with his present
-employers, and if he were not, it is not altogether certain that even
-Lota’s attractions would have been sufficient to draw him away from the
-sports in which he was engaged. Apparently, he did not find those things
-which he had to settle with Lota herself, so easy of arrangement as those
-which had been the subject of his discussions with her father; for though
-the first Sunday evening was quite long enough to settle everything with
-him, it took him three or four whole days at the sœter to arrange matters
-with her; indeed, there the party found him when they encamped there on
-their return, and, notwithstanding this, he had so much more to say on
-the last morning, that the fishermen had arrived for some hours at their
-old encampment on the Torjedahl, and had had time entirely to change the
-whole plan of the campaign before they saw anything of him.
-
-During their absence the post had arrived, bringing letters for them
-all; these Ullitz had forwarded, and their first occupation, while their
-attendants were preparing the supper and exchanging news with those who
-had been left behind, was to read their respective letters. Birger had a
-whole heap—which he did not deserve—from a host of relations and friends,
-whom, in his ardour for sport, he had grievously neglected; all of
-these he postponed for a great, square, official looking document, with
-“Kongs ofwer Commandant’s Expedition” written in the corner: this he did
-deserve, for it contained, along with an acknowledgement for his valuable
-portfolio of military drawings, an extension of leave, which the dutiful
-lieutenant had asked for on the plea so well known in the British army,
-“family arrangements.”
-
-“Hurrah,” said the Captain, “here’s a letter from Moodie; he wants us
-to meet him at Gotheborg, where he is bringing down a cargo of elks and
-reindeer, and Northern wild beasts, for the Zoological Gardens; and then
-we are to go back with him, he says, to some place which I can neither
-spell nor pronounce, where, the chances are, we shall get a crack at a
-bear.”
-
-“You have always had a weakness that way,” said the Parson, “I believe
-getting a crack at a bear, as you call it, was your principal reason for
-coming here at all.”
-
-“Well, but Moodie says there is capital fishing on the Gotha; the salmo
-ferox, my boy! what do you think of that? and you know the fish are
-beginning to run small here, there was not a full-mouthed salmon caught
-the last day we fished here, nothing but miserable grauls.”
-
-“Grauls give very pretty sport, though, and as for the salmo ferox, it is
-nothing but an ill-conditioned, over-grown trout, that has got a cross of
-the pike in it, and consequently will take nothing but the spinning bait.
-But I must say I should like to see old Moodie again.”
-
-“Will you go then?”
-
-“Ask Birger.”
-
-“Hey! what?” said Birger, looking up from his letters, which, after all,
-seemed to be more interesting than he had expected. “Moodie? ah! yes!
-that’s the fellow my friend Bjornstjerna mentions; a terrible fellow
-he says, a very Hercules against the wild beasts—there is never a skal
-without him; Bjornstjerna says he had rather have him than a hundred men,
-any day.”
-
-“And who is Bjornstjerna?”
-
-“One of the Ofwer Jagmästerer, the officers, that is, whose business it
-is to call out the peasantry to keep down the wild beasts; he is very
-good authority on such matters, and I vote we accept your friend Moodie’s
-invitation, it is much the best chance we have of seeing sport.”
-
-The Captain looked a little puzzled; he was anxious enough to go, but the
-invitation had been to him and the Parson, and of course had not included
-Birger, whose existence was necessarily unknown to Moodie; in fact, the
-Captain had not thought of that difficulty. Birger, who had spent a
-good part of his leave in England, where he had some friends, burst out
-laughing.
-
-“Ah, that is just your English way, you think you cannot take me, because
-your friend has not sent me a written invitation in due form—that is
-not the way we go on here; my friend’s friend is my friend, and if
-your countryman has not learnt that in the four years during which,
-Bjornstjerna tells me, he has been living in the country, it is high time
-he should learn. When does he drive his flocks and herds to Gotheborg?”
-
-“Why, if we would meet him, we must start directly, for he comes next
-week.”
-
-“Well, why not start directly? come Parson! one river is as good as
-another.”
-
-“Scarcely that,” said the Parson, laughing; “but I do want to see how
-Moodie carries on the war in your barbarous country; so let us go—Tom,”
-raising his voice so as to be heard from below, “when does the next
-steamer sail for Valö?”
-
-“The day after to-morrow, at day-break,” said Tom, whose head was a
-perfect register of naval events.
-
-“That will never do,” said the Parson, who contemplated a farewell visit
-to the Torjedahl salmon.
-
-“Not do!” said Birger, “why it is the very thing. Strike the tents
-to-morrow, early,—down the river without stopping at Christiansand
-Bridge,—run alongside the steamer, take our berths,—stow our goods,—and
-then we shall have half the day to land and visit our stores at Ullitz’s,
-kiss Marie, and make what changes we want in the baggage department. I
-must take my uniform for Gotheborg; we are not ashamed of our uniform in
-our country,” he added, significantly nodding at the Captain, who, like
-most English soldiers, was rather addicted to mufti; “and you too will
-want more baggage, now that you are going into a civilized country.”
-
-“Do not let Torkel hear you say that. He considers Christiansand the
-emporium of fashion and the centre of civilization. By-the-bye, what are
-we to do with our men? I will not leave Torkel behind,—I have quite an
-affection for the fellow.”
-
-“Leave Torkel behind!” said Birger; “why should you? you do not think
-the Swedes will eat him, do you? I mean to take Piersen myself; these
-Norwegians, rascals as they are, all of them, are a great deal smarter
-and handier in forest work than our Swedes; their education fits them for
-Jacks-of-all-trades; they get kicked out of doors, with a pack on their
-back, at ten years of age, to earn their livelihood, and learn smartness
-and knowledge of the world,—and they do learn it, and precious scoundrels
-they grow up:—however, they answer our purpose, for they can turn their
-hands to anything.”
-
-At that moment Torkel came up, looking a little confused and ashamed of
-himself, and not the less so that the Parson asked significantly for the
-latest news from the sœter of Aalfjer.
-
-His love, however, did not prevent him from being wild to go, as soon
-as he heard of the change of plans—a sentiment in which the rest fully
-participated; indeed there was not a dissentient voice in the camp,
-except that of the boatmen, who were to be discharged at Christiansand,
-and whose fun was thus prematurely cut short. A small pecuniary
-gratification set matters right in that quarter also, and when the
-evening closed on the last day of the encampment, the hopes and eager
-anticipations of a brilliant future had already effaced all regrets for a
-happy past.
-
-The sun was hardly above the horizon, when the whole camp was astir,
-and active preparations for departure were begun. These did not occupy
-any very great deal of time; they had not come up the river in very
-heavy marching order, and there were a good many hands at the work. The
-principal part of it was securing the smoked salmon, of which they had
-now a very fair cargo. This is a very acceptable present everywhere;
-for though salmon are plenty in Norway, the means of catching them are
-very imperfectly understood. There was also a goodly array of forest
-preserves, which, being too heavy for transport, and subject to a heavy
-duty into the bargain from jealous Sweden, were destined to swell the
-ample stores of Madame Ullitz.
-
-While all this was going on, the Parson, rod in hand, took a melancholy
-farewell of his favourite throws, in the course of which he caught two
-fish—both grauls, though, as the Captain took care to remark. By ten
-o’clock everything was ready, and the boats shoved off on their downward
-voyage.
-
-“Well, certainly it is much pleasanter to go with the stream than against
-it, in all the affairs of this life,” said the Captain, as the boats
-closed again, after racing down the upper rapids which had cost them so
-much time and so much trouble to ascend. “Here we have undone in half an
-hour and at our ease, what it took us half a day to do, and with harder
-work than I wish to meet with very often.”
-
-“Not an uncommon thing in this wicked world of ours,” said the Parson.
-“_Facilis descensus_;—you know the rest. However, that which is pleasant
-is not always safe,—so look out. Here we are, at the head of the Oxea
-rapid, and a touch of these rocks, going down stream, you will find a
-very different thing from a touch going up. Give way, boys! let me have
-good steerage-way through the water.”
-
-And he dashed into the very midst of the racing current—rocks, trees, and
-banks flying past him, till, before they seemed to be well in it, the
-three boats were floating side by side in the broad flat below, at the
-lower end of which the encampment had been made on the first night of the
-expedition. A short halt here, which they made, more for the pot than for
-sport, secured them a good catch of trout and a graul or two; and their
-rapid course down the deep, full-flowing stream was resumed, leisurely
-indeed—but so swift was the current under the deceitful show of its calm
-and quiet surface, that notwithstanding a little difficulty at the lower
-rapids, where there was not water enough in the boat canal to float them,
-the sun was still high when they rounded the dockyard point, and opened
-the harbour of Christiansand.
-
-“Hullo, Tom, where is the steamer?”
-
-Tom rubbed his eyes, for he could not believe them, but no amount of
-rubbing will produce a vision of that which is not, and the fact became
-indisputable as they pulled on—there was no steamer in the harbour.
-The Parson, who after all, had left very unwillingly, and rather in
-compliance with the wishes of his companions than in accordance with his
-own fancy or judgment, began to feel sulky; the Captain, who had proposed
-the change, began to feel anxious, and to labour under the weight of his
-responsibility; and even Birger, who had nothing to reproach himself for,
-was not entirely at his ease.
-
-Things however, were not so bad as they had anticipated; there was no
-steamer certainly, but Ullitz, who was lounging on the quay—where indeed
-the good man spent the greater part of his summer hours, looking out for
-travellers and seeking whom he might entertain, and who certainly did
-not approve of a change of plans which deprived him of a very profitable
-commissariat,—informed them that the day had been changed, and that the
-steamer would not arrive till the following evening, nor sail till the
-day after.
-
-“Never mind,” said Birger, “let us have one good supper, and one
-comfortable night’s rest more than we expected; I will be bound we strike
-out something for to-morrow, and after all we shall lose nothing, we may
-as well be at Christiansand as at Gotheborg.”
-
-Ullitz did not say, but looked as if he thought they had much better.
-
-“The sea is as calm as glass,” said Torkel to Tom. “Would not this do for
-eider duck-hunting.”
-
-“It is a great pity that Fröken Lota has to make up her stores of eider
-down now,” said Tom, “and she to be married in the autumn.”
-
-Torkel could afford to laugh, for he knew very well—indeed, none had
-cause to know it better, he having supplied a good half of them—the
-extent of Miss Lota’s eider stores. All this was an aside, and Tom
-resumed aloud, “To be sure, there could not be better weather, we shall
-not have ripple out in the haaf[33] any more than in the fjord; and
-besides, we can take some cod-lines, and when we have killed or driven
-off the ducks we can fill our boats with rock cod.”
-
-“What is all that?” said the Captain.
-
-Tom explained.
-
-“Upon my word I think it will do very well; what say you, Birger?”
-
-“Nothing better, I have never been duck-hunting myself, but they say it
-is capital fun; there are three or four fellows of ‘ours’ who always get
-leave in the duck season, and pass a month or two on the islands of the
-Baltic; they say it is first-rate sport—I vote we go.”
-
-And so it was settled, and the details of the expedition were arranged as
-they walked up those sandy deserts of streets which they had traversed on
-the first night of their landing.
-
-Marie received them with smiles, and when she learnt the object of their
-sport, so worked on the Captain’s susceptible heart, that he vowed she
-should have every feather that fell to his gun. The Parson was rather
-affected to Lota, but Torkel, who had been a little stung by Tom’s joke,
-magnanimously transferred the offer to Marie, who, “poor thing, might
-perhaps want the down, and Lota would not know what to do with it, she
-had a great deal more than she could make up already;” which, considering
-his own fame as a hunter, as well as that of young Svensen, between whom
-Miss Lota had been coquetting (so Tom averred) till she ought to have
-been ashamed of herself, was not unlikely to be literally true.
-
- It must be remarked that this is the sporting way of collecting
- eider down. The business way is robbing the nests, which is
- done in spring, and is very slow work—though sufficiently
- dangerous.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-EIDER DUCK HUNTING.
-
- “For now in our trim boats of Norroway deal
- We must dance on the waves with the porpoise and seal;—
- The breeze it shall pipe, so it pipe not too high,
- And the gull be our songstress whene’er she flits by;—
- We’ll sing while we bait, and we’ll sing while we haul,
- For the deeps of the Haaf have enough for us all.”
-
- _Norway Fishing Song._
-
-
-The dawn was yet grey upon the mountains, and the light steaming mist
-was still resting on the glassy surface of the harbour, when the three
-boats slipped off noiselessly from the dockyard point. The fishing rods,
-now useless, had been landed, and the guns and rifles had taken their
-places, while the after-lockers were stored with cod lines and their
-gear, to say nothing of the långref that had done such good service at
-Mosse Eurd, and which was now converted into a spillet. The boats were
-well provisioned—that is almost an invariable rule in Norway, so far as
-quantity goes, but on this occasion, they were provisioned with all the
-delicacies the fair Marie could lay her hands upon; nay, so interested
-was she in the subject, that she came down with the party, in the grey
-of the morning, to superintend the packing herself; and, after carrying
-on a lively conversation with Birger, on the road, endeavoured, in vain,
-to make the Captain understand something or other; her anxiety to convey
-her meaning brought her cheek very much closer to his lips than perhaps
-she intended—how close it was impossible to say, for the morning light
-was still very faint,—in all probability, Birger might have come in for a
-share of the secret, whatever it was, but he was rude enough to burst out
-laughing, and to add something in Swedish, about bribery and corruption,
-which put the young lady to immediate flight.
-
-“You need not look so conceited,” said he, (possibly the grapes were
-sour); “it was not you, it was the eider down she was thinking of.”
-
-No one knows what silence is, who has not been in the North—what we
-call silence, is a perpetual recurrence of a thousand familiar sounds,
-so familiar that the ear does not notice them; the chirp of hundreds of
-birds, and millions of insects go to make up English silence;—perhaps
-within the Arctic circle it may be deeper than that which, at that early
-hour, brooded over the harbour of Christiansand; but even that was a
-silence which made itself to be felt; and the regular and steady roll of
-the oars in the rowlocks, as the boats shot out into the fjord, fairly
-echoed among the cliffs like grumbling thunder. Nothing could be more
-calm and unbroken than the water, which seemed to be hot, for a slight
-steam kept slowly rising from the whole surface, and hung upon it like a
-veil which now began to whiten in the increasing light; every here and
-there a seal would put up his head, like a black oily bead, take a steady
-view of the boats, and then dip under, without a ripple to show where the
-surface had been broken.
-
-“Oars!” said the Captain, in a whisper, as one of these sheep of Proteus
-evinced a little more indiscreet curiosity than his neighbours, and as
-his boat, which had been leading, lost her way, he rose quietly, and his
-rifle thundered through the still air of the morning, as if it had been
-a six-pounder, while its echoes were caught and repeated, crack after
-crack, by a dozen sharp cliffs and wooded islands.
-
-The surface was sufficiently disturbed this time—for the Captain’s rifle
-seldom spoke in vain,—and the seal was struggling in the agonies of
-death; the men stretched out on their oars as if they were racing, but
-before the boat could reach the spot, all was quiet again, and a slight
-red stain in the water was all that remained to tell of the Captain’s
-accuracy of aim. The Captain gazed on the deep blue below.
-
-“It is of no use,” said the Parson, “they always sink, and it is a great
-shame to be firing at that which you cannot get when you have killed it.”
-
-“You used to shoot them, yourself, in Sligo Bay.”
-
-“Yes, I did, but there was a tide there, and we shot them at high water,
-and picked them up when the sands were bare—even then, though, we lost
-a good many, but here there is not a chance; that fellow is food for
-lobsters.”
-
-“Well, I hope the cockneys will profit by it when the next batch goes to
-the London market,” said the Captain, loading his rifle, “but have we no
-tide here?”
-
-“We have no sands that we can make available; but a tide there is, though
-a faint one. Did you ever hear how there came to be a tide in Norway—for
-originally there certainly was nothing of the kind? Thor was on a visit
-to Loki Uttgard, who, in all love, challenged him to drink his great horn
-out, and to turn it over to show there were no heeltaps, as is the custom
-in Norway. Thor had never been conquered yet in drinking, or in anything
-else; in fact, he had the hardest head, inside and out, of any god in
-Norway. He drank, and he drank, but there was no bottom to be found to
-the horn, and Thor put it down with shame, and acknowledged himself
-at last vanquished; but the Uttgarders, who were all giants of a very
-ferocious stamp, stood round, in speechless admiration. Loki had made a
-communication between the bottom of the horn and the sea itself, and what
-Thor had drunk was the ebb.”
-
-“H’m! Hence the fine of a glass of salt and water,” said the Captain, “I
-have often inflicted it, but I never knew the high authority I had for so
-doing. Come, boys, give way for the Haaf.”
-
-But before so doing they had to stop at a shoal, well known to Tom,
-who now began to take the command, while Torkel sank into comparative
-insignificance. It was necessary to lay in a supply of cod-bait, which
-was not to be had in deep water. This was a species of large limpet, that
-clung to the rocks by thousands, and was dislodged by the boat-hooks,
-and stowed away in the balers. At length the swell of the open sea made
-itself to be felt, for ever heaving and setting and rolling along in vast
-mountains, and flashing in spray against the black rocks, though the
-surface was as glassy and unbroken as that of the harbour. The whole
-swell of the North Sea, and of the Atlantic beyond it heaves against
-these coasts, and is never quiet in the calmest weather. The sun, which
-had now risen, gleamed against the white tower of the light-house, and
-flashed back in blinding rays from its lantern, as the boats pulled past
-it into the Haaf.
-
-They had now formed line abreast, at five or six hundred yards distance,
-and were pulling leisurely along, keeping a bright look out on every
-side. Calm as it was, the swells were quite heavy enough to conceal the
-boats entirely from each other as, from time to time, the huge mountains
-rolled between them.
-
-They had proceeded in this manner for about half an hour, without seeing
-anything, except gulls and cormorants—which latter, sitting in the
-water, and rising and falling on the swells, had more than once deceived
-them,—when, suddenly, Birger, who was on the extreme right, pointed with
-his hand to the westward of their course: all eyes were turned in that
-direction, and the line wheeled on Birger, as a pivot, when a dozen
-or so, of black spots were seen on the side of the swell, in the rare
-intervals when the boats and they were both rising.
-
-The centre boat, which was the Parson’s, pulled right on the objects,
-while the flankers having increased their distance to half a mile, pulled
-on some hundred yards in advance of her.
-
-Onward as they came, the black spots grew larger and larger, and the
-distinct outlines of the ducks began to be distinguishable; still they
-sat on the water, rising and falling to the swell as unconcernedly as
-ever.
-
-The flanking boats were already ahead of them, and the Parson, with his
-long gun in his hand, had begun to calculate his distance—which, out
-at sea, is particularly deceptive,—when, with one accord, the dozen
-tails began to wriggle, and at once the whole flock were under water,
-disappearing simultaneously, and as if by signal.
-
-[Illustration: EIDER DUCK SHOOTING.]
-
-The men, who, much to the Parson’s impatience, had been pulling very
-leisurely indeed, now stretched out with all their might, and as they
-shot across the spot lately occupied by the ducks, marked the chain
-of air-bubbles, which tended out to seaward. A signal conveyed this
-information to the Captain’s boat, which pulled into the line to
-intercept them; Birger, who was thus thrown out, closing in with all his
-might, and the Parson following up the track—each stood up as well as
-he could in the roll of the sea, and looked out with all his eyes. Six,
-eight, ten minutes elapsed, and nothing to be seen: it was impossible
-that the birds could be under so long. At last, far to the rear of even
-Birger’s boat, twelve black spots were seen rising and falling on the
-swell as unconcernedly as they were at first. The ducks had headed back
-under water, and the boats had pulled over them.
-
-The same manœuvre was repeated, and with the same result; the centre boat
-approached almost within firing distance, when the twelve tails again
-wriggled simultaneously, and the twelve bodies went under at once. This
-time, however, they rose within shot of Birger’s boat, but before he
-could get his gun to bear on them, they were under again.
-
-This was precisely what was wanted; the only chance of getting a shot,
-at this season of the year, is to make the birds dive till they are
-exhausted: they are said not to duck the flash like the divers—perhaps
-they do not, but, at all events, they are generally under water long
-before the quickest gunner can get a shot at them, and that, practically,
-comes to the same thing.
-
-The dive this time was a short one, though it carried them out of shot,
-for the Captain, catching the line of their chain, had pulled on their
-track, and headed them back to his friends. This time they rose among
-the boats, and one or two attempted a heavy lumbering flight, which was
-speedily put a stop to by the fowling-pieces. The rest dispersed, diving
-each his own way, and pursued by the boats independently.
-
-The object of approaching in a crescent, is to prevent the birds from
-doing this before they are too much exhausted to dive far. A separated
-flock can seldom be marked, inasmuch as it is more difficult to
-catch sight of one black spot than a dozen; and besides, under such
-circumstances, the boats can no longer act in concert. If a flock
-disperses early in the chase, the chances are that not above one or two
-birds will be secured; if kept pretty well together, not above as many
-will escape.
-
-It is a singular thing that eider ducks should be so unwilling to take
-the wing in summer, for, though they rise heavily, they are by no means
-bad flyers; but so long as they have breath to dive, nothing will get
-them into the air; and this peculiarity, which in ordinary weather is
-their preservation, during the calms is their destruction.
-
-The chase was now an ordinary affair, very like rat hunting: the
-birds, confused and dispersed, kept poking their heads up in all sorts
-of unexpected directions, and, as their dives were now short, one or
-other of the quick and experienced eyes was sure to detect them. As for
-missing, when they were once within shot, it was impossible to miss a
-bird nearly as big as a goose, and almost as heavy on the wing. Ten
-out of the twelve were bagged, and two only were unaccounted for, they
-having slipped away during the heat of the chase. The boats then formed
-line-of-battle again, and cruised on in search of other adventures.
-
-Various little episodes occurred, in which one or two rare sea-gulls and
-other birds were brought down, as they hovered round the boats or crossed
-their course. Most gulls, indeed, evince a great deal of curiosity in
-their disposition, and a very dangerous quality this sometimes proves;
-but in this case the murders were committed exclusively for the sake
-of Science (who, by the way, must be a very cruel goddess), for the
-fishermen were a great deal too much of sportsmen to indulge in the
-vulgar gull-murder without object, which is called sport by maritime
-cockneys. Three or four other flocks of eider duck were sighted, and
-chased with various success; some, taking the alarm in time, contrived
-to dive and swim ahead of the boats, so as to elude them altogether;
-some, startled by too rapid approach, dived before they had time to draw
-together, and, breaking their order, appeared so many scattered black
-spots in different directions, most of which were necessarily lost while
-pursuing the others. But these mishaps were not of frequent occurrence,
-and a good heap of great ugly birds had already been collected, when,
-about noon, a light cat’s-paw ruffled the surface, frosting it over with
-little wavelets. At the time when this occurred it was quite unexpected;
-the boats were following a chain of bubbles, and all available eyes being
-fixed on them, no one was looking out into the offing.
-
-In a moment the trace was lost; the birds might have risen, but the eye
-could no longer mark the clear, well-defined, black dot. Ten minutes
-afterwards all was calm again, but the flock were already safe.
-
-“It is all over for to-day,” said Tom, looking anxiously into the offing,
-where a narrow line of darker blue had already begun to mark the hitherto
-undistinguishable boundary of sea and sky; “here comes the breeze
-already.”
-
-And slowly but surely the line crept down, first widening, then throwing
-out ramifications before it; and then the sleepy surface of the sea
-seemed to shudder, as if touched by a cold breath; little wavelets
-began to ripple on the backs of the long swells,—then light airs fanned
-the boats uncertainly, and, at last, a steady breeze set in from the
-southward and westward.
-
-“Up stick, for the cod ground!” said Tom; “we are only wasting time
-here.” And in a couple of minutes the three boats were running away to
-the eastward, under their English lugs, which, having hitherto served as
-tents, were now for the first time applied to their legitimate use.
-
-The end of the chase had left them five or six miles to westward of
-the fjord’s mouth, and as far to seaward, while the fishing-ground was
-a sunken island or shoal, a couple of miles or so from the lighthouse
-near the outer range of islands;—it is called a shoal, and possibly, for
-Norway, it is a shoal; but there is not less than twenty fathoms on any
-part of it.
-
-The boats were slipping along through the smooth water, as if they were
-going up and down the hills of an undulating road; the breeze, though
-very light, was steady, and already the features of the outer islands
-were growing distinct; and Tom was looking out for the bearings of the
-shoal.
-
-“This is all very well,” said the Captain, steering his boat close to
-that of the Parson, “but I have had no breakfast.”
-
-“Then why don’t you set about it; I am sure Marie has not forgotten you.”
-
-“Oh! I will not stand that; why should we make a toil of pleasure? I mean
-to have a regular breakfast, and a pot of hot coffee—why not? we have the
-whole day before us.”
-
-“Well, I do not mind; hail Birger—there is a dissolute island, as Jacob
-calls it, before us; we will boil your pot there.”
-
-Birger was always ready for his grub, or, indeed, for anything else that
-was proposed; and the boats were made fast to some rocky prominences on
-the lea of the island, with a boat-keeper in each, to prevent them from
-grinding one another to pieces.
-
-Strange to say, many of these islets, which are mere rocks, contain fresh
-water, some of them in pools in the rocks, but many in regular springs,
-and in this particular case a very respectable little streamlet trickled
-down a crevice of the rock.
-
-Every beach, rock, and islet on the Norwegian coast is fringed with
-a layer of drift-wood, in pieces of every size, from the great baulk
-which in England would be worth five or six pounds down to the smallest
-splinters. The reason of this is, that each river is continually
-floating down its yearly freight of pines to the sea; these are caught
-by a boom at the mouth,—that is to say, by a floating chain of squared
-pine-stems,—but many dip under this and escape, many escape when it is
-opened to let boats pass, and occasionally a freshet breaks a link or
-draws a staple, in which case the whole boom-full of timber floats out to
-sea at once. All this is irrecoverably lost, for it is illegal to pick
-up timber floating; and a very necessary law this is, or the booms would
-find themselves broken much oftener than they are. Nevertheless, the
-quantity of timber lost annually in that way would pretty nearly supply
-all the wants of all the English dockyards put together. But “it is an
-ill wind that blows nobody any good;”—the wanderer on the sea coast need
-never be without a fire to warm himself by.
-
-“I like this,” said the Captain, as he lay on his back looking up to
-the sky, watching the blue smoke as it came in wreaths above his head.
-“I should like to be a Robinson Crusoe now, with a desolate island of my
-own, like this, where the foot of man has never trod, and—Holloa! What
-the devil have we got now?” he said, jumping up;—“how came these little
-animals here?”
-
-The little animals referred to were half a dozen children, with rakes and
-hay-forks in their hands, who, attracted by the smoke and possibly by the
-smell of the fried ham, were peering over the edge of the cliff like so
-many sea-gulls.
-
-“These are the savages, Mr. Crusoe,” said the Parson, quietly; “but it
-really is a curious thing, so let us climb up the cliff and see what they
-are about.”
-
-The cliff was not difficult to scale, for the edges of the rocks were
-like steps; and at the top a very unexpected scene met their eye: a
-regular hay-field, with the hay in cocks, and five or six men and women
-at work at it; they were carrying their cocks on a sort of handbier down
-to their boats,—great, broad, heavy affairs these were, borrowed from the
-horse-ferry,—and upon these they were building hay-stacks, intending to
-take them in tow of their whale-boats, during the calm, and to bring them
-to the main land.
-
-The form of the island was a sort of cup, of which the cliffs round the
-edge were the highest parts, and the centre, from having no drain, had
-formed a fresh-water lake with a spongy, mossy border,—and this it was
-which supplied the streamlet. The outer rim was bare rock, but between
-these two extremes there was a boggy, black ring of vegetable mould,
-which produced in great abundance a coarse, rank, wiry grass, which the
-people were storing up for the winter, in order to deceive the poor
-beasts into the idea that they were eating hay. Poor as it was, they had
-come out a dozen miles to sea to get it: their boats, four in number,
-including the floating hay-stack, lay snugly in a little bay or inlet,
-on the shoreward side, where the water was comparatively quiet. They
-had evidently taken up their quarters on the island, and established a
-regular bivouac till the work should be finished, for there was a cooking
-place built up with stones, and two or three of the girls were spreading
-out to dry, in the hot sun, the clothes they had been washing in the lake.
-
-“Who would have expected such a marine pastoral,” said Birger.
-
- “Här Necken sin harssa in glasborgen slaar,
- Och Haafsfruar kamma sitt grönskende haar,
- Och bleka den skinande drägten.”[34]
-
-“Heaven forefend,” said the Parson, hastily, “we are mad enough, some of
-us already; and Torkel is in love, which is worse; we do not want to see
-Haafsfruer. Remember Duke Magnus.”
-
-“It was not the Haafsfru that took away the senses of Duke Magnus,” said
-Torkel, “it was the curse of good Bishop Brask, that rested on the family
-of Gustavus from the day when he killed the two bishops and deceived our
-Bishop of Trondhjem, who had given them sanctuary; the whole royal family
-of Sweden have been crazy, more or less ever since, till they turned them
-all out and put our good father Karl Johann in their place.”
-
-Birger shook his head sadly; he was too highly born himself, and too
-aristocratic, not to feel a little shame at the idea of a French common
-soldier superseding the old family of Vasa, sprung, like himself, from
-Jarl Birger; but, for all that, he could not help admiring the worthy old
-king who, by his downright honesty and sincerity and his strict sense of
-duty, had painfully worked his way against all prejudices of rank and
-nationality, and had wound himself into the affections of the people who
-had chosen him. Still he had a kindly feeling for the old and glorious
-race, and though he could neither deny the fact of the sacrilege and
-breach of faith of Gustavus Vasa,—to which all the Norwegians, and many
-of the Swedes also, attribute the hereditary madness of his family,—nor
-indeed, the fact of the insanity itself, which was notorious in Eric his
-successor, in Charles XII., and Gustavus IV., as well as the present
-exiled representative of the family, yet he did not above half like
-Torkel’s allusion to it. The Duke Magnus, whom they were speaking of, was
-the youngest son of Gustavus Vasa, and was the first in whom the symptoms
-of that disease about to be hereditary, had manifested themselves.
-
-The Parson, rather sympathising in his discomfiture, gave a turn to the
-subject by quoting the Swedish version of the Duke’s madness, to which he
-had himself alluded; for the Swedes ascribe it to the love of a mermaid,
-the sight of whom is invariably unlucky and is generally supposed to
-produce insanity.
-
- “Duke Magnus! Duke Magnus! bethink thee well,—
- Answer me not so haughtily;
- For if thou wilt not plight thee to me,
- Thou shalt ever crazy be.
- Duke Magnus! Duke Magnus! plight thee to me,
- I pray you still so freely,—
- Say me not nay, but yes, yes!”
-
-“There is no harm in _these_ mermaids,” said Tom, “for they are as good
-and hard-working a set of girls as any in Christiansand, but I trust we
-shall never meet with the real ones; at least, not just before a voyage.”
-
-“Why not,” said the Captain, “my principal reason for coming here was the
-chance of seeing a mermaid in the only country in which they are still to
-be met with. Have you never seen one yourself, Tom?”
-
-“No, and God grant I never may; they are not seen so often now-a-days as
-they used to be, that is truth. If they are to be seen at all,” he said,
-after a pause, “I must say this is just the time and the weather for
-them; a calm, still, sunny day, with a mist on the water; through this
-they used often and often to be seen in old times, combing their hair,
-or driving their milk-white cattle to feed on the rock weed; sometimes,
-though not so often, they are seen at night, coming and shivering round
-the fishermen’s fires, and trying to entice away the young men and to get
-them to go with them to their deep sea-caves; and those that they carry
-off are never seen again in the upper world.[35] But mermaids are never
-seen except in a still that comes before a storm, and no one ever catches
-a fish for the first voyage after they have seen them.”
-
-“It is just the same with the Skogsfrue,” (the Lady of the Forest,) said
-Torkel; “she is just as unlucky for us hunters, and when she can get any
-young men to go with her, she never lets them come back again. I have
-fancied more than once that I have seen her through the smoke of my fire
-in the wild fjeld, but she was not likely to catch me.”[36]
-
-“Ah! there spoke the bridegroom elect,” said Tom, “but I am not so sure
-of that either: I think, Torkel, I could tell Fröken Lota more than you
-would like her to hear.”
-
-“If you do, Tom, you deserve to be ducked,” said the Captain, “and I will
-help to duck you with my own hands.”
-
-“He may tell what he likes, and what he can,” said Torkel; “but it is
-quite true about the ill-luck in hunting and fishing, which follow the
-sight of the Skogsfruer and Haafsfruer both.”
-
-“Well, we will prove that, after Middagsmad, and there, in good time,
-goes Jacob’s shot, to let us know that all is ready.”
-
-The afternoon was spent in a lazy, lounging way; the shoal, if shoal it
-can be called, where the bottom was evidently jagged rock and the depth
-never less than twenty fathoms, lay just off the island where they were,
-and the boats had but to pull out a cable’s length to be in the very best
-of the ground; but it is not a very exciting amusement to be continually
-hauling in little fish about the size of whiting, as fast as the lines
-could run down. It did not take long to half fill the boats with that
-staple of Norwegian life, rock cod: the hands of the fishermen, hardened
-with forest work as they were, and tanned with the sun, were scarcely
-calculated to stand the salt water and the constant friction; the
-pleasure soon became a toil, and one by one the boats sought the shore of
-the island.
-
-The mermaids were soon characteristically employed in splitting and
-laying out in the hot sun the baby cod, which proved a very acceptable
-present; for this little fish, which swarms in every Norwegian fjord, is
-among the poorer families, the principal winter store, and in nine cases
-out of ten the only sea stock besides rö kovringer (or rye biscuits)
-which a vessel carries. A present, in the strict sense of the word,
-it could hardly be called, for Tom fairly sold his fish, and gravely
-bargained for them with the young ladies, at so many kisses the hundred,
-excluding Torkel from all competition, much to his disgust, by explaining
-to them that as an engaged man he was entirely shut out from the market.
-
-The Parson and Birger were in the meanwhile seated in a niche of the
-rock which formed a natural chaise-longue, sedately smoking their pipes
-and watching the picturesque-looking galliasses, which had endeavoured
-to work out against the mid-day’s spurt of breeze that had by this time
-entirely died away, and which now, with their great sails hanging idly,
-like so many curtains from their yards and gaffs, seemed, as well as the
-fishermen, to be basking and enjoying themselves in the evening sun.
-
-There was no sort of hurry to return. Christiansand had few attractions,
-and excepting Marie (and no one besides Birger could profit by that),
-Ullitz’s house had still fewer. The luggage was all packed, and probably
-by this time on board, their places taken, and their passage paid. Their
-intention was, not to land again but to go along side at once. In the
-meanwhile, a little tired with their morning’s work, they watched with
-half-closed eyes the beautiful and peaceful sunset and the glorious
-rising of the round full moon that threw a path of light across the
-glassy waters.
-
-“How beautiful!” said the Parson, who had just opened his eyes.
-
-“Yes, that is the work of the Ljus Alfar—Lys Alfir they call them
-here,—the Elves of Light. All elves work in metals, and these make a
-silver filagree so fine that it can only be seen by moonlight on a
-background of water. It is the floor of their ball-room, and if we were
-either of us good enough, which it seems we are not, we should see
-the little fairy beings dancing on it. When they are tired, they will
-go to sleep under the leaves of the limes, which tree belongs to them
-especially; the little spots of light which you see in its foliage on a
-moonshiny night are their bright eyes, which they have not yet closed in
-sleep.”
-
-“Really,” said the Parson, “Prospero’s Isle ought to have been placed
-on the coasts of Norway; it would seem that the more scarce the visible
-inhabitants, the more numerous the invisible.”
-
-“O, yes, nature, nature abhors a vacuum, and these Alfar are by far the
-most numerous of all the supernatural beings. The White Elves, or Elves
-of Light, are seldom found out of Norway and Sweden, but the Brown Elf
-you have in Scotland as well. He works in metals of all sorts, though he
-delights most in silver and gold. It is the Brown Elf that is the fitful
-capricious being, which gives their meaning to the words elf and elvish:
-these are the creatures which pinch untidy maids, and drink up the milk,
-and light up their evening candles as Wills’-o’-the-Wisp, and lead men
-into bogs and marshes. When seen, they are dressed in brown jackets with
-crimson binding, and wear brown caps on their heads, whereas the Ljus
-Alfar wear always the helmet of the foxglove, and are dressed in white.
-It is the Black Elves that are malicious, though they often do good
-service to men; they, too, work in metals, but it is generally in iron
-and copper; they make arms and armour too, and sometimes filagree work,
-like the Ljus Alfar, but theirs is always black.”
-
-“Berlin iron?” suggested the Parson.
-
-“Perhaps so; at all events the chain armour that they make is a most
-valuable present, for, though no heavier than filagree-work, or, as you
-say, Berlin iron, it will turn a sword or a shot.”
-
-“The disposition of the elf, then, varies with its colour.”
-
-“Yes, but one characteristic runs through all—all are capricious. All
-may benefit you, some may hurt you, but none can be reckoned upon, and
-that peculiarity, together with their universal horror of daylight,
-gives a key to their allegorical origin.[37] These elves, or dwarfs, are
-the incarnation of mining speculations, a very general form of gambling
-both in Norway and Sweden. Mines are proverbially capricious; it is
-impossible to tell how they may turn out. Occasionally these spirits are
-beneficent in the highest degree, and their _protégés_ become suddenly
-rich, but this is never to be relied on; the best are capricious, and the
-greater number are tricksy; while some—though even these are now and then
-capricious benefactors—are positively wicked and malicious. There, now
-you have my theory of the alfs and alfheim.
-
-“And there is another allegory about them, with a good Christian moral
-to it,” continued Birger, after a pause spent in cherishing the fading
-embers of his pipe; “these alfs are not baptised and have no part in
-salvation, but they are capable of baptism under certain circumstances;
-they are always anxious for it for themselves in their good moments,
-but invariably so for their children, though those instances in which
-they succeed are rare. The Icelandic family of Gudmund are cursed
-with a disease peculiar to their race, which originated—so the family
-tradition goes—in the curse of an alf frue, whom one of their ancestors
-had deceived in this particular. Andreas Gudmund had a child by an alf
-frue: at her earnest request, he promised that it should be taken in the
-church; and when the child was old enough, she duly brought it to the
-churchyard wall, which was as far as she might go herself, for no alf
-may enter consecrated ground. The sound of the bells was torture to her,
-but she bore it, and laid her child on the wall, with a golden cup as
-an offering. But Gudmund, fearing the censures of the Church and the
-reproaches of his friends, would not fulfil his promise. The alf frue
-waited and waited, but the service was over, and the parting bells began
-to ring again. So she snatched up the child and vanished into her hill,
-and neither she nor it were ever seen again under the light of day. But
-from that time forward, the right hand of every Gudmund is leprous, in
-token that their ancestor was forsworn.
-
-“Now all this must be allegory; what should you say was the meaning
-of the spirits of the mine being capable of salvation, and being
-occasionally, though rarely, seen admitted into the Church?”
-
-“I suppose,” said the Parson, “it must be that wealth, though a
-temptation to evil, may be used in God’s service, and that it
-occasionally, though rarely, is so used. ‘Make to yourselves friends of
-the mammon of unrighteousness, that when ye fail they may receive you
-into everlasting habitations.’”
-
-“I think we may as well top our booms,” said the Captain, whose cigar
-was finished; “the people will be all asleep on board the steamer, and,
-besides—”
-
-“Besides what?”
-
-“Why we promised to let Marie have the eider down, and Ullitz’s people
-will be in bed, too. You know we sail at daybreak?”
-
-“O-ho, that’s the business is it? Well, then, call the men together, and
-see that they leave nothing behind them.”
-
-That was soon done, for nothing had been landed beyond the cooking and
-dining apparatus, and the boats dashed along the still fjord, leaving
-behind them three rippling lines of sparkling light, as if the Ljus Alfar
-were dancing in their wakes.
-
-In little more than an hour they were alongside the steamer, where their
-whole travelling paraphernalia had been stowed in their respective
-berths. Of these, the Parson and Birger, tired with their long day’s
-work, were very shortly the occupants; the Captain, more energetic,
-collected the ducks, and, accompanied by Tom and Torkel, landed at the
-wharf; but what Marie said, on receiving so large an accession to her
-stores, and what the Captain said to her, and how he contrived to say
-it, are points upon which history is silent. Certain it is, that when the
-Parson awoke from his first sleep, which was not till the steamer began
-to tumble about on the swell outside, the Captain was snoring loudly in
-the next berth, while the three attendants were equally fast asleep on
-the cabin deck.
-
- While this book was in the press, the author met with “Lloyd’s
- Scandinavian Adventures,” in which there is not only a
- description, but a print of eider duck shooting _under sail_.
- It would be presumptuous in him to go against the experience of
- a sportsman who has resided in these countries for more years
- than the author has months. Possibly in the north, where the
- birds are less hunted, they may be less cautious, and may allow
- a boat to approach them in a breeze. The author can, however,
- write only from personal experience. The foregoing chapter, so
- far as the facts are concerned, is merely a transcript from
- his journal; and as far as his own experience goes, he would
- say, that the setting in of a breeze sufficient to enable the
- lightest boat to carry sail, would utterly preclude all chance
- of success in eider duck hunting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE COASTING VOYAGE.
-
- “Now launched once more, the inland sea
- They furrow with fair augury.
-
- “So brilliant was the landward view,
- The ocean so serene;
- Each puny wave in diamonds rolled
- O’er the calm deep, where hues of gold
- With azure strove, and green.
- The hill, the vale, the tree, the tower,
- Glowed with the tints of evening hour,
- The beach was silver sheen.
-
- “The wind breathed soft as lover’s sigh,
- And, oft renewed, seemed oft to die,
- With breathless pause between.
-
- “O, who with speech of war and woes
- Would wish to break the soft repose
- Of such enchanting scene.”
-
- _Lord of the Isles._
-
-
-If an Englishman can ever enter into the feelings of a Neapolitan, and
-in any way connect the ideas of the _dolce far niente_ with those of
-enjoyment, if he can ever bend that active, energetic mind of his, and
-that restless and industrious Anglo-Saxon body, to realize the faintest
-conception of the “paradise of rest,” in which the Buddhist places the
-sum of his felicity, it will be on board ship, after breakfast, on a
-calm, warm forenoon, and beyond the influence of the Post Office.
-
-[Illustration: SCENE ON THE SOUTH COAST OF NORWAY.
-
-p. 220.]
-
-That these words actually passed through the lips of the Captain, and
-escaped, what Homer calls, the protection of his teeth, we will not take
-upon ourselves to affirm—as indolently he reclined on the paddle-box of
-the _Gefjon_ steamer, with his eyes shut, his muscles relaxed, his arms
-and legs sprawling about in all directions, while the indolent smoke of
-his cigar, that from time to time floated out lazily from between his
-lips, afforded the only sign of life about him; he seemed as if he was
-totally incapable of making any such exertion—but certainly, these ideas
-passed through his mind, and pictured themselves on the light grey clouds
-that proceeded from his mouth.
-
-Breakfast, so far as the English portion of the guests was concerned, had
-long been over, and though some hardy Norseman or persevering Swede was
-still lingering over the scenes of his departed joys, and dallying with
-tempting morsels of raw smoked salmon, or appetizing _caviare_, the first
-great act of Northern daily life might be looked upon as completed.
-
-“You an artist,” said Birger, whose sketching tablet was already slung
-round his neck, and who was looking round him from the bridge, unable to
-choose, in such a panorama of beauty, which of all the lovely views he
-should attempt to transfer to his paper—“You an artist, and asleep among
-scenes like these? you are not worthy of them; as if you could not smoke
-your cigar while the rain was falling, and sleep in the night-time.”
-
-“I was not asleep,” said the Captain, lazily, “I was thinking.”
-
-“Thinking,” said Birger, “look round you, and you may think that you are
-in fairy land, if fairy land, itself, has anything half so lovely. Look
-at that beautiful lake, which we are just opening, on the north—see how
-those wooded capes partly intercept the view, with their soft outline of
-birch, and that long reach of blue water dancing in the sunlight, and
-that little island, a single spot of shade, with its three picturesque
-fir trees, and that dark red rock that overhangs it, with its iron stains
-of brown and yellow starting up from among the bright green foliage; and
-look how the ash fringes the edge of that precipice: get up, and if you
-are too lazy to work, at least admire.”
-
-Really, the scene was a scene of fairy land, such as, in our most
-poetical of moments, we picture fairy land to be. The steamer’s course
-lay among the groups of islands that fringe the southern shore of Norway,
-and these, in that portion of the chain, at least, which lies between
-Hellesund and Lyngör, are, for the most part, bold rocks, clothed with
-every variety of foliage which Norway produces, and, being sheltered
-from the sweep of the sea breezes by the outer chain exhibit that
-foliage in its fullest perfection. The idea usually connected in our
-minds with Norwegian scenery, is that of wild and desolate grandeur; and
-fully is that idea realized in the mountains of the Hardanger and the
-Alpine deserts of the Fille Fjeld—wild, rugged, treeless scenes of utter
-desolation, almost beyond the limits of vegetable life. But it is far
-otherwise with the coasts—nowhere is seen a colouring half so vivid as
-among the sheltered islets of the southern shores; the turf with which
-their glades are clothed is more brilliantly green than anything that we
-have in England, where the grass is invariably interspersed with weeds.
-Take a square yard of any English turf whatever, and you will find in it,
-from ten to twenty different sorts of plants, all of which are, more or
-less, glaucous in their colouring, and these, though at a little distance
-undistinguishable in their forms, yet, blend their hues with the emerald
-green of the grass, and present what, side by side with Norwegian turf,
-would be but a soiled and faded picture. The foliage, too, is far more
-bright and luxuriant than anything in England, even in the interior of
-the country, but as different from our wind-worn and frost-nipt sea-side
-greenery as can well be conceived.
-
-There is no such thing as early spring in those latitudes, or those warm,
-sunny, deceitful days, which tempt forth the young bud and leaflet, only
-to be pinched and shrivelled by the April frosts. Week after week does
-stern winter bind up all nature in its iron fetters; all is still, and
-cold, and dead; and though the sun rises higher and higher, he seems to
-shine without power; and though the days lengthen, and the empire of
-night be invaded, winter still holds on, and the snows look even whiter
-in the stronger light—the Norway of April, is but the Norway of December:
-more bright and more chilly—When all at once, and without preparation,
-the scene is changed—the snows are gone, the ice is broken, the leaves
-are already green, and the country is in the garb of full-blown summer.
-Spring is a season unknown in Norway.
-
-The consequence of this is, that the leaf, which has not begun to spring
-at all till the frost is thoroughly out of the ground and the air free
-from chill, is never blackened, or nipped, or dwarfed in its proportions,
-as it is in England, and therefore preserves, through the short summer, a
-greenness and depth of colouring which with us is unknown.
-
-“There is a beautiful legend about this,” said Birger, as he pointed out
-this peculiarity, “I do not believe in it myself, altogether,” added he,
-smiling, as the recollection of the Tellemarken legends and the sacrifice
-to Nyssen came across his mind; “I will not vouch, myself, for more than
-the allegory, but if we may trust to the fires of Walpurgis Night, my
-countrymen believe it implicitly: ‘Iduna, the goddess of youth, is among
-the Æsir, the guardian of the apples of immortality—gods, like men,
-are subject to decay; but whenever they feel any symptoms of it, they
-renovate their existence by the apples of Iduna. The possession of these
-apples was, as might be supposed, earnestly coveted by the Hrimthursar,
-or Frost Giants, whose territories, called Uttgard, surrounded on every
-side the sea that encompasses the earth. Time was when the earth enjoyed
-a perpetual spring, but Loki, who had not then forfeited his place
-among the gods, attacking, one day, the giant Thjassi, the chief of the
-Hrimthursar, whom he had taken for an eagle, found his hands frozen to
-his plumage.
-
-“‘Thjassi demanded as the price of his liberty that Iduna should be
-betrayed into his hands: this Loki agreed to do, and notwithstanding some
-secret misgivings, contrived to perform his promise; and thus it was that
-the goddess of youth, seduced beyond the influence of Asgard, was seized
-upon by the eagle giant and imprisoned in his castle among the rocks of
-eternal frost.
-
-“‘The gods, who had lost their renovating principle, were growing grey
-and wrinkled; the might of the Thunderer was paralysed, and the wisdom of
-Odin himself, the father of gods and men, was waning; the whole world was
-pining for want of that principle of life which continually restored the
-inevitable decay of nature; Loki himself felt the universal loss which
-the world had sustained, and being as yet not entirely lost to shame or
-callous to rebuke, set himself in earnest to effect the deliverance of
-Iduna.
-
-“‘This—having borrowed from Freya her falcon plumage—he managed to
-effect, and was bringing back the goddess to Asgard, under the guise
-of a swallow, the bird of spring, when the eagle wings of Thjassi, who
-was rushing in pursuit, darkened the air and blotted out half the sky.
-The gods lighted fires round all the walls of Asgard to scare away the
-pursuer, who fell exhausted in the flames and perished under their
-vengeance.
-
-“‘But Skadi, his daughter, determined to revenge her father’s death,
-declared war on Asgard, and carried it on with such success that the gods
-were fain to come to a compromise with her, and she consented to peace on
-condition that she should take for her husband any one of the gods she
-should choose, and should be admitted into Asgard as an equal. From that
-time forward the earth has felt the influence of the Hrimthursar for a
-portion of the year; but their power is at an end[38] on the anniversary
-of that day, when Iduna is delivered from her captivity; and men kindle
-their fires on Walpurgis Night, the 30th of April, in memory of those
-which, kindled on the walls of Asgard, had baffled and destroyed the
-chief of the Hrimthursar.’”[39]
-
-“Ah! by the way, I saw them building up a great bonfire as we rounded
-that point of land, coming out of Hellesund,” said the Captain; “there
-was a heap a dozen feet high, and they had put a whole boat upon the top
-of it.”
-
-“Well, but this is not Walpurgis Night,” said the Parson; “this is St.
-John’s Eve.”
-
-“We do not know much about St. John’s Eve in these parts,” said
-Birger, laughing. “I am afraid our legends are a good deal more Pagan
-than Christian. That which you saw was the ‘Bale-Fire,’ by which our
-people commemorate the death of Baldur, and the boat was his ship, the
-_Hringhorn_. You will see plenty more of them when the night draws
-on;—every town and every village, and almost every hut will have its
-bale-fire, and many of them its boat too. It is a singular thing that
-Pagan legends should have so much more hold on the minds of the people
-than anything derived from their Christian history, but so it is.”
-
-“Not at all singular,” said the Parson; “properly speaking, Norway was
-never converted; it was conquered by a Christian faction, and again
-it was conquered by a court party. The people succumbed to force; but
-in their thoughts and feelings—and therefore in their manners and
-customs—they were what they had been in the days of the sea-kings; and
-now their minds naturally revert to the time when their country was most
-powerful.”
-
-“I will give you a Christian legend, then,” said Captain Hjelmar, the
-Swedish commander of the steamer, who had been for some time talking with
-Birger on the bridge, and now came forward with his hat in his hand,
-after the manner of his country, and told his tale, very fluently, in
-a queer sort of French. This was also after the manner of his country,
-for, though that language is abominated in Norway, in Sweden it is
-much affected by those who would wish it to be supposed that they are
-_habitués_ of the court; and thus it was that though—as it afterwards
-turned out—Captain Hjelmar could speak remarkably good English, he
-preferred addressing Englishmen in remarkably bad French, in order to
-show his court breeding.
-
-“You see that tall rock,” said he, “that looks so black and distant, in
-front of that green island?—that rock really is one of the Hrimthursar of
-whom Lieutenant Birger has been telling you; and when St. Olaf came to
-convert the Norwegians, the giant, who had been bribed by Hakon the Jarl,
-at the price of his young son Erling, whom he sacrificed to him, waded
-into the sea, and put forth his hand to stay the ship, that the saint
-should not approach the shore: but the saint served a higher Power than
-the gods of Asgard, and even as he stood, the giant froze into stone; and
-there he stands to this day, as you see him, with one arm advanced,—and
-there he will stand till the day of Ragnarök, except that once in a
-hundred years, on Christmas Eve, he is restored to life, in order to
-declare to the Hrimthursar that on that day their power was broken for
-ever.”
-
-“Well done, St. Olaf,” said the Captain; “I thought that all his
-conversions were effected by the weight of his battle-axe.”
-
-“Why, you Englishmen acknowledge him as a saint as well as we,” said
-Captain Hjelmar. “Have you not, in your great City of London, a church
-dedicated to him? and is there not also a place called Cripplegate?”
-
-“There certainly are such places,” said the Parson, “but what they have
-to do with one another, or with Norway, is more than I can see.”
-
-“There was a man in Walland, so great a cripple that he was obliged to
-go on his hands and knees, and it was revealed to him that if he should
-go to St. Olaf’s Church, in London, he should be healed. How he got
-there, I cannot tell you; but he did, and he was crawling along, and the
-boys were laughing at him, as he asked them which was St. Olaf’s Church,
-when a man, dressed in blue and carrying an axe on his shoulder, said,
-‘Come with me, for I have become a countryman of yours.’ So he took up
-the cripple and carried him through the streets, and placed him on the
-steps of the church. Much difficulty had the poor man to crawl up the
-steps; but when he arrived at the top he rose up straight and whole, and
-walked to the altar to give thanks; but the man with the battle-axe had
-vanished, and was never seen more; and the people thought it was the
-blessed St. Olaf himself, and they called the place where the cripple was
-found ‘Cripplegate,’ and so they tell me it is called to this day.”[40]
-
-“Faith! I can answer for that part of the story myself,” said the
-Captain; “the place is called Cripplegate, sure enough, but I am afraid
-St. Olaf has long since ceased to frequent it, for we have not heard of
-any miracles done lately in those parts. But what is your story about the
-‘bale-fires,’ Birger, for I see another in process of erection on that
-cape?—that looks like a remarkably good boat they are going to burn in
-it.”
-
-“That legend, like most of those from the Eddas, is purely allegorical,
-and, unlike most of them, is very intelligible. Baldur, among the Æsir,
-is the Principle of Good, and everything that is bright, or beautiful,
-or innocent, is dedicated to him, and among other things, that part of
-the year which begins at Walpurgis Night, when the reign of the frost
-ceases, and ends at this day, the summer’s solstice—that is to say, the
-whole of that time in which light and warmth are getting the mastery over
-cold and darkness. These commemorate the happy days of Asgard, before
-the Principle of Evil had crept in; and had they only continued, the
-whole world would have been by this time glowing in perpetual light, and
-spring, and happiness.
-
-“But Loki himself, one of the twelve of the principal Æsir, became
-envious of this, and was jealous that all the good in the world should be
-ascribed to Baldur; so he resolved to kill him. This the Nornir revealed
-to Baldur in a vision, and the goddess Freya took an oath of everything
-that walked on the earth, or swam the waters, or flew in the air, or
-grew from the ground, or was under it, that they would not hurt Baldur;
-and then the gods would laugh at the revelation of the Nornir, and would
-shoot at Baldur with stones, and masses of iron, and thrust at him with
-their spears, and cut at him with their swords and axes; but they all
-passed him by for the oath’s sake, which all nature had given.
-
-“So Loki said to the mistletoe, ‘Thou dost neither run, nor fly, nor
-swim, nor grow from the ground, nor lie under it; there is no oath for
-thee.’ So he gathered the stem of the mistletoe, and placed it in the
-hand of Hodur, the god of Blindness, and said, ‘shoot, like the other
-gods, and I will direct thy hand:’ and he shot, and Baldur fell dead in
-the midst of the gods, and innocence departed from the earth; and then
-the days which had hitherto been getting brighter and brighter, so that
-darkness had began to fly from the face of the earth, now began to close
-in again, and darkness began to increase.
-
-“In vain did Hermod, the brother of Baldur,[41] undertake the journey
-to the realms of Hela. So much was accorded, that if all nature would
-agree to mourn for the death of Baldur, he should be restored to earth;
-but though everything did so, as the Edda has it, ‘Men and animals, and
-earth, and stones, and trees, and all metals, even as thou hast seen
-everything weep when it comes forth from the frost into the warm air, yet
-the giantess, Thaukt, who it is said was but Loki in disguise, refused to
-weep.’
-
- “‘Neither in life, nor yet in death,
- Gave he me gladness.
- Let Hell keep her prey!’
-
-and Hell will keep her prey, as the Norna revealed to Odin, till the day
-of restitution of all things; and then, when the new sun shall enlighten
-the new earth, Baldur, restored from Hell, and Hodur, no longer blind,
-shall reign for ever and ever.[42]
-
-“But in the mean time it was necessary to prepare the funeral pyre of
-the god: his body was placed in his ship, the _Hringhorn_, and the pile
-was built round it, and his wife, Nanna, and his dwarf, Litur, and his
-father’s magic ring, Dropsnir, and his horse, and all his accoutrements,
-were placed on it, and amid a weeping concourse of gods and men, and
-Hrimthursar, and dwarfs, and witches, the fire was placed to it, and all
-nature mourned the departure of innocence.
-
-“And in memory of this, so soon as the days cease to lengthen, and nature
-feels the loss of its original innocence, and darkness begins to threaten
-the earth, men kindle their fires in memory of the death of Baldur.”[43]
-
-“Hallo! the Thousand take you! look where you are steering,” shouted out
-Hjelmar, in Swedish, to the helmsman, “are you going to run down the
-island?” And in truth it did seem something like it, for the branches of
-the overhanging trees rattled against the fore-topsail-yard, bringing
-down a shower of leaves and twigs; and a projecting ash so nearly brushed
-the paddle-box on which they were sitting, that the Parson broke off a
-branch as they passed.
-
-“Confound those fellows! they know the water is deep here, and think they
-cannot shave the point too closely, I suspect they wanted to astonish
-the passengers, and did not see me among them.”
-
-The point which they had rounded was just to the east, from off Osterisö,
-at which place they had just touched; and immediately afterwards they
-plunged into a deep, dark chasm of a passage between the two islands,
-which looked as if they had been split asunder by some sudden convulsion
-of nature, so evidently the projections and indentations of the opposite
-walls of rock seemed to fit into each other; while far overhead the trees
-looked as if they were overarching the chasm, and shutting out the light
-of day from its recesses. The churning sound of the paddles, and the
-hissing of the sea beneath their stroke sounded unnaturally loud, and
-the two little pop-guns which the _Gefjon_ carried on her forecastle and
-took that opportunity for discharging, rolled and echoed like a peal of
-thunder.
-
-“There!” said Captain Hjelmar, as the steamer pushed her way into
-daylight, and opened out a wide expanse no less beautiful than those
-they had been passing through all the morning; “there lies the strength
-of our coast; the Norwegian navy consists principally of gun-boats, and
-these dodge in and out among these islets, just as difficult to catch as
-rabbits in a warren; the great lumbering cruiser of the enemy watches
-in vain on the outside, like a terrier at the rabbit’s hole, while the
-rabbit, meanwhile, has passed out by a back door, and is taking his
-pleasure elsewhere.[44]
-
-“In the days of the last war, I was a cadet on board the _Najaden_
-frigate, the commodore on these coasts: I used to be lent to the
-gun-boats, and capital fun we had with your merchantmen; pretty
-profitable fun too, for we brought them in by dozens. There were your big
-cruisers, every now and then getting a crack at us, and picking off here
-and there a clumsy fellow who let himself get caught outside, but never
-doing us much harm. It was glorious fun, certainly,—at first, I must say,
-I did not like firing at the old English flag, that so many of our people
-had sailed under, but after exchanging a few shots, and seeing a few of
-one’s people knocked over, one soon learns to forget all that; and I
-blazed away at the old red rag after a bit, just as readily as I would at
-a rascally Russ.
-
-“Your Captain Stuart put an end to all that, though, for one while; and
-before we had recovered from the drubbing he gave us, there was peace
-again, and no revenge to be had for it. I was not sorry for the peace,
-though; it is not natural to be fighting the English.”
-
-“Aye,” said the Parson, “I have heard something about Captain Stuart, of
-the _Dictator_; he got some credit for his services in these waters.”
-
-“And well he deserved it,” said Hjelmar; “he was a thorough sailor, he
-knew what his ship could do, and he made her do it. As for fighting,
-anybody will fight; but to run such a chase as he did, requiring skill,
-and science, and nerve, and firmness, as well as brute courage, which
-every man has, and most beasts besides, is what very few men would have
-moral courage to attempt, or seamanship enough to bring to a successful
-termination.
-
-“We used to laugh at the old _Dictator_; if a corvette could not catch
-our gun-boats, it was not very likely a line-of-battle ship would do
-the trick; for this water, for all it is so deep and looks so open, is
-studded all over with pointed rocks at a fathom or so under the surface;
-and some of these, not a yard square at the top, any one of which would
-bring up a gun brig, let alone a liner. Well, there was the _Dictator_
-cruising about and doing nothing, as we thought; we did not know that
-he was improving his charts, and getting bearings and soundings; still
-less did we suspect that one of his quartermasters had been the mate of
-a coasting jagt, and knew the coast as well as we did. I have met the
-fellow since; he got a boatswain’s rating for his services, and I think
-he should have got something better.
-
-“At that time I was on board the frigate. Old Hulm, our commodore,
-said I was too wild to be trusted with a separate command, and one
-morning we were dodging about where we are now, with a steady breeze
-from the westward that looked as if it would stand. There were the old
-_Dictator’s_ mast-heads, just where we had seen them twenty times before,
-over the trees of Laxö,—that is, the island we are just opening, where
-those salmon nets are hanging up to dry.
-
-“‘By the keel of _Skidbladner_, that sailed over dry land,’ says Hulm,
-‘what is the fellow at now?’ as we opened the point of the island, and
-the line-of-battle ship, that had been lying with her main-topsail
-aback, squared away her yards and dashed in after us. ‘O, by Thor and by
-Mjölner! if that is your fun I will see what Norwegian rocks are made of.
-Keep her away a couple of points, quartermaster; and Mr. Sinklar (to the
-first lieutenant), turn the hands up.’ By this time we were running away
-dead before it; the enemy, who was all ready, had her studding-sails set
-on both sides,—it was beautiful to see how smartly they went up, it was
-like a bird unfolding her wings. ‘That’s a fine fellow,’ said Hulm; ‘it’s
-a pity, too, to sink him, but we must, so here goes.’
-
-“Old Hulm, who was full of fight, all this time dodged along under plain
-sail, just as if he did not care for _that_ the big fellow, and it is my
-opinion he would not have set his studding-sails had the distance been
-less. You see that green point just on the port bow, that one with the
-black stone lying off it:—by the way, I do not see why we should not run
-the very course ourselves. I have a passenger to Lyngör, and we may just
-as well go that course as any other. Starboard your helm, my man! that
-will do! meet her! keep her as she goes.
-
-“There, now, you begin to see that there is an opening to the eastward
-and northward of that point. As soon as we brought it abeam, down went
-our helm, and everything was braced as sharp up as it would draw; for the
-channel winds, as you see, to the southward of east. We thought to bother
-her, but those fifties on two decks are so short, they come round like
-tops. We were running free again to the eastward, outside the channel.
-When she came abreast of the opening, in came her studding-sails all at
-once, and there were her sails standing like boards, and her yards braced
-up as sharp as ours had been, and so much had he gained upon us, that
-as her port broadside came to bear, three or four shots, just to try
-the distance, came across the end of the island after us, skipping and
-dancing over the seas.
-
-“‘We must get Mjölner to speak to them,’ said old Hulm, rubbing his
-hands and looking delighted. ‘I think she will pitch her shot home now.’
-Mjölner was a long French eighteen, a very handsome brass gun, ornamented
-with _fleurs-de-lis_, and all sorts of jigmarees; the private property
-of the captain. Where he had picked it up, no one knew;—people said it
-had been the Long Tom of a French pirate. Old Hulm had called it Mjölner,
-which I suppose you know is the name of Thor’s hammer; he was as fond of
-it as he was of his wife, and always kept it on the quarter-deck, under a
-tarpaulin, which he never took off except on Sundays.
-
-“It took some time to train the gun aft, and by this time the
-line-of-battle ship had cleared the channel, and was putting up her helm
-to follow us. The old skipper laid his pet gun himself, and squinted, and
-squinted over her breech, and elevated, and depressed, and trained to the
-right, and trained to the left, till we thought he never meant to twitch
-the lanyard at all. Crack went Mjölner. By this time we had pretty nearly
-got the line-of-battle ship’s three masts in one, and the shot striking
-just under the fore top-mast cross-trees, cut the topsail tie and the jib
-halyards at once; down rattled the yard, snapping the fore top gallant
-sheets, out flew the top gallant sail, and away went the jib dragging
-under her fore-foot; and up flew the ship herself into the wind again,
-letting drive her broadside at us, as if she had done it on purpose.
-
-“The old skipper sent his steward for some bottles of true Cognac, and
-gave the men a tot all round, to drink Mjölner’s health.
-
-“The enemy had brailed up her driver, and braced by her after-sails, and
-got before the wind again in no time; and was not much longer in bending
-on a new tie and splicing her halyards; but we had got pretty well out of
-range now, and were bobbing in and out among a cluster of rocks as thick
-as porpoises. We had a man at the flying jib-boom as a look-out, and a
-couple more on the spritsail yardarms (for our ships had not whiskers in
-those days), and it was nothing but ‘Breakers ahead!’ ‘Rock on the port
-bow!’ ‘A reef to starboard!’ for the next quarter of an hour or twenty
-minutes, enough to make one’s hair stand on end. A-ha! thought I, when
-the last of them showed clear on the quarter, this is the skipper’s trap;
-here’s where the old _Dictator_ is going to lay her bones! But she did
-not. She dodged through every one of them every bit as well as we had
-done, and there certainly was no doubt but that the distance between us
-was a good deal decreased. These tubs of fifties sail like a haystack on
-a wind, but before it they go like _Skidbladner_ herself.
-
-“Old Hulm began to look grave; he had never dreamt of her following him
-within the islands like that, and he began to ‘smell a rat.’ The frigate
-had been caught on her very worst point of sailing. We might easily have
-worked to windward at first, but now she had got us fairly under her lee,
-and if we tried to tack under her guns, she would have stripped us of
-every rag of canvas we could show. Mjölner came into play again, as well
-as the stern chasers on the main deck, and to good purpose, too; but, on
-the other hand, the English shot were flying like peas about us—and they
-did not always fall short, either. Now and then there was a rope shot
-away, or a man knocked over, or a gun capsized,—for, at that distance,
-every shot that hit us pitched in upon the deck and trundled forwards,
-hopping here and there off the bulwarks without going through them, like
-so many billiard balls.
-
-“‘I will tell you what,’ says Hulm, ‘I will shove her through the Lyngör
-Channel, there is a rock in the middle that it will be as much as we can
-do to shave ourselves, and if we do get past it, the chances are, that it
-will bring up the liner; it is a desperate chance, but we must try it,
-and if the Englishman does get through after us (which she will not), we
-will reach out into the offing as close to the wind as we can lie. Port
-your helm at once, Mr. Sinklar—drop your main course, and haul out the
-driver.’
-
-“Up she came to the wind again, but the main-sail, which had been clewed
-up while we were running, had got a shot through it, exactly where the
-bunt-line gathered it into a bundle. The shot had gone through fold after
-fold of the canvas, cutting the foot-rope also, and before the tack
-was well hauled down, the sail had split from top to bottom; and then,
-just as she drew in under cover of the land, the mizen top-mast came
-clattering about our ears.
-
-“It was all up for beating to windward, unless we could shift our
-top-mast in time, and this the enemy was too close upon us to allow us
-do; everything lay on the rock bringing her up, and as I looked over the
-side as we passed, the rugged points looked so close to our own bends,
-that I thought they must have gone through; and the liner drew more water
-than we did.
-
-“All eyes were turned on the English ship, at least, on her sails, for a
-point of land concealed her hull, and prevented our firing; every moment
-we expected to see her sheets let fly;—not a bit of it,—on she came as
-steadily as ever.
-
-“Just at the village of Lyngör the channel turns at right angles, and
-the islands that form it, being high, took the wind out of our courses;
-while we had been running it had drawn a little to the southward of
-west,—which, as we had been off the wind all day, we had not taken notice
-of—as we turned the angle it headed us. Whether, under any circumstances,
-we could have fetched clear of the northern cape is doubtful; without
-our mizen top-sail it was impossible, for as the courses were becalmed,
-we really carried nothing but head sail that would draw; and in fact, we
-could scarcely look up for the cape, much less weather it.
-
-“Down with the anchor! out boats, to lay out a warp to spring her! we
-will fight it out here!’ said old Hulm. But the Englishman had seen us
-over the land from his mast-heads, and anchored by the stern, clewing up
-or letting fly everything, and passing out his cable from his stern-port,
-so as to check her way by degrees; when she came into sight round the
-point, at not a cable’s length from us, she had a cluster of men on her
-bowsprit with a hawser. On she came, as if she was going to leap over
-the town, and dropped her men on the houses, who, sliding down by the
-dolphin-striker, leaped on shore and made fast with her hawser forward,
-while her anchor brought her up abaft. And there she lay, as steady as
-a land battery, and opened her fire. The first broadside, loaded with
-grape, came rattling among the boats that were laying out the warp; what
-became of them I never heard; but the warp lay slack, and the current
-drifted us end-on to the line-of-battle ship’s broadside, and I felt our
-decks crumbling and splintering under me as her shot tore them up.
-
-“The next thing after that that I recollect, is a great rough hand
-pulling me out of the water by my collar, and a kindly English voice
-asking me if I was hurt. The smoke was still lying on the water, and
-hanging in little clouds upon the trees; but all that was to be seen of
-the old _Najaden_, was the main and fore-top gallant and royal masts,
-which, with their sails set, were still above water, and the blue and
-yellow pennant over all. We had gone down with our colours flying,
-and Captain Stuart would not have the pennant struck,—‘we had fought
-gallantly for it,’ he said, ‘and we should keep it still.’
-
-“Poor old Hulm, he was a fine fellow: there now! that is the very spot of
-the action,” for by this time they had opened the point of Lyngör, and
-had come in sight of the beautiful little village. “Do you see that iron
-pillar on the point? that is Captain Hulm’s monument.”
-
-“He went down with his ship, then?”
-
-“No, he did not; how he was saved I do not remember, but he was saved,
-and rewarded too for his standing up to the line-of-battle ship; for
-Father Karl is an old soldier, and knows that a man often deserves as
-much praise for being beat as for beating. The old fellow lived to a
-good old age; that was his house, that white fronted one on the hill, for
-Lyngör was his native place. It is not two years ago that he was capsized
-in his little schooner and drowned. There’s his monument, any how; and
-I always salute it, whenever I pass this way:” and as they came abreast
-of the point, the _Gefjon’s_ swallow-tailed ensign dipped from her peak,
-and her little pop-guns again testified their respect to the old sailor’s
-memory.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-GOTHEBORG.
-
- “A cautious guest,
- When he comes to his hostel,
- Speaketh but little;
- With his ears he listeneth,
- With his eyes he looketh,—
- Thus the wise learneth.
-
- “No better burthen
- Bears a man on his journey
- Than observation:—
- No worse provision
- Bears a man on his journey
- Than frequent drunkenness.”
-
- _High Song of Odin the Old._
-
-
-Early rising is not pleasant at sea. Captain Basil Hall may talk of the
-joyous morning watch if he likes,—but there is nothing joyous in washing
-decks, and that is what most ships are occupied with at that hour. The
-Parson did not make his appearance on deck till after breakfast, and he
-was the first of the party.
-
-The steamer was now approaching the end of her voyage, for the land,
-closing on both sides, showed the estuary of the Gotha. Most of the
-party were not sorry for the conclusion of the voyage, enjoyable as the
-earlier part of it had been; for the steamer,—after coasting all the way
-to Christiania, where the party had supplied themselves with carioles
-for their land journey, which, with their wheels unshipped, were stowed
-away snugly forward,—had taken her course, southward, over the tumbling
-Skagarack—a part of the world notorious for sea-sickness.
-
-All the morning long, preparations had been going forward for making a
-creditable appearance on arriving in port, and the discomforts of the
-early-risers had been considerably increased by a very liberal use of
-the holy-stone,—an amusement which, as the men were still employed in
-blacking the rigging, gave promise of an early repetition.
-
-Slung from a block at the mainmast head was a small triangular stage,
-made of three battens, on which sat a very dirty individual with a pot
-of slush before him and a tarring-brush in his hand, with which he was
-polishing off his morning’s work on the shining mast.
-
-Seated on the bitts below was a sturdy Norwegian, who, as if disdaining
-the compromise usually adopted by the coasting inhabitants, appeared in
-the caricature of a full-dressed Tellemarker, with a strip of jacket like
-a child’s spencer, of orange tawny wadmaal, great loose blue trousers
-with a waistband over his shoulder blades, crimson braces, and two
-strings of silver bullets dependent from the collars of a very dirty
-shirt. He was caressing a particularly ugly dog, which he called Garm,—an
-appellation which proved him to be what in England would be called a
-fast man; it is much as if an English young gentleman were to call his
-dog Satan. He was haranguing, of course, on the vast superiority of
-Norway to Sweden, and the infinite degradation which the former country
-had received from the union of the crowns,—that being not only the most
-favourite topic of Norwegian declamation, but, in the present instance,
-at all events, the most injudicious and unsuitable subject in which to
-exhibit before so mixed an audience.
-
-They behaved, however, exceedingly well, and rather trotted him out, much
-to the disgust of Torkel, who had sense enough to perceive what was going
-on, and would have infinitely preferred their beating him: after vainly
-endeavouring to draw his countrymen away, he had walked forward, and was
-looking moodily over the bows.
-
-“As for the Swedes,” said our judicious friend, “they are nothing better
-than swindlers. I have, for my sins, to go to Gotheborg every year, to
-lay in stores for the winter, and I am sure to be cheated. We don’t let
-Jews land on our shores, and I must go to Gotheborg to find them.”
-
-“Well, but we have no Jews either.” said a bye-stander; “they do not come
-to us, they go to the Free Towns.”
-
-“You are all Jews; the real Jews don’t go to you, that is very true, but
-it is because they know that the Gotheborgers are hogs, and their law
-does not allow them to have anything to do with unclean animals. Yes, you
-are all swine together. Why, I tell you a Norwegian dog would not touch
-anything Swedish. Come here, Garm!”—and he pulled out of his pocket a bit
-of ham, evidently filched from the breakfast table.
-
-Here the Parson thought he detected a glance of intelligence between
-Captain Hjelmar and the man at the mast-head, who, much amused, had left
-off his work to listen.
-
-“Come here, Garm!”—placing the tempting morsel on the deck.
-
-The dog wagged his tail, evidently preparing to seize it.
-
-“Svenske!” said the man. The dog, who had been well trained in this
-common trick, turned up his nose with apparent disgust, and refused the
-meat.
-
-“There!” said he, “I defy any Swede among you all to make a true
-Norwegian dog eat a bit of it. Garm knows what you all are, don’t you,
-Garm?”
-
-Just then, by the merest accident in the world, the slush-kettle got
-unhitched from the stage above his head, and came tumbling over on the
-deck, and in its descent, taking the unfortunate Norwegian on the nape of
-his neck as he was leaning forward to caress his dog, pitched the whole
-of its contents between his jacket collar and his back.
-
-Captain Hjelmar rated the man severely for his carelessness in spoiling
-his decks, and, ordering him off the stage, directed the boatswain to put
-his name into the black list. The man, however, did not seem much cast
-down about it, but slid down the greasy mast with a broad grin on his
-countenance, while the Norwegians carried their discomfited companion
-forward to purify him; and Garm, profiting by the confusion, proved a
-traitor to his country, by not only swallowing down the Swedish ham, but
-also by licking up as much as he could of the Swedish slush that had
-poured from the head and shoulders of his master on the Swedish deck.
-
-The coast of Sweden and the banks of the Gotha below the town, offer a
-striking contrast to the lovely scenery they had left. There are the
-rocks and the fringing islets, as in Norway, but here they are all flat,
-and most of them absolutely bare. The coasts, too, where they could be
-seen, exhibited ledges of rock and wastes of sand, with just enough
-cultivation to make the desolateness painful, by connecting it with the
-idea of people living there. Eider ducks would dive before them, and
-wild-fowl in little knots would cross their course, and hoopers would go
-trumpeting over their heads, with their white wings reflecting the sun
-like silver, and dippers of all sorts would play at hide-and-seek with
-the waves, and seals would put up their bullet-heads to gaze at them as
-they passed. The water is always beautiful when the sun shines directly
-upon it; but the eye must not range so far as the shore, for no sunshine
-could gild that.
-
-There was a good deal of life, and traffic too, upon the waters, for
-Gotheborg, the nearest port to the Free Towns and to all foreign
-trade whatever, as well as the outlet of the river navigation, may be
-considered the Liverpool of Sweden.
-
-As they proceeded the scenery slightly improved: the right bank began to
-be dotted with houses and small villages, wretched enough compared with
-the picturesque places on the other end of the Skaggerack, but at all
-events showing signs of life. At length they became continuous, and at a
-couple of miles distance, the three churches of Gotheborg, with the close
-cluster of houses, came into view. The anchor was dropped opposite to the
-fishing suburb of Gammle Hafvet, and a shore-going steamer came alongside
-to receive the passengers; which steamer, much to the fishermen’s
-delight, contained their old friend Moodie, who, on hearing that the
-Norway packet had been signalized, had gone to meet her on the chance of
-seeing them.
-
-Moodie was a singular character,—a cadet of good family, and brought
-up to no profession; he had been from his childhood passionately fond
-of field sports, in all of which he excelled. At an early age he had
-become his own master, with a good education, some usage of the world, a
-handsome person, a peculiarly active frame and sound constitution, and
-two hundred a year, _pour tout potage_. Rightly judging that England
-afforded no fitting scope for his peculiar talents, without the imminent
-danger of a committal for poaching, he had expatriated himself to
-Ireland; which country, he had, in a sporting point of view, thoroughly
-studied, and made himself completely master of its resources; he knew
-when every river in the whole island came into season and went out, and
-the best and cheapest way of transferring self and encumbrances from
-one point to another. He knew the times at which the woodcocks and the
-snipes would arrive, and the out-of-the-way places at which they may be
-safely shot; he could give a catalogue _raisonnée_ of all the wayside
-public-houses in sporting localities, and was hand-in-glove with half
-the disreputable squireens of Ireland. Certainly, he bagged more grouse
-annually than many a man who pays a rent of five or six hundred a year
-for the privilege of supplying the London markets.
-
-It was on the Erne that the fishermen had met him, and Moodie being an
-extremely well-informed and gentleman-like man, besides being a thorough
-sportsman, they had struck up with him what might be called an intimate
-acquaintance, which, now that they met as Englishmen on a foreign land,
-might be considered an intimate friendship.
-
-It was the railroads, and the consequent invasion of the cockneys,
-which had expatriated Moodie from his adopted country; people began
-to preserve, too, and to let their fishing and shooting-grounds; even
-the Erne was not what it had been, and Moodie, whose whole belongings,
-besides his live stock in the shape of dogs, were contained in two
-portmanteaus and as many gun-cases, packed them, and one morning found
-himself standing on the quay of Gotheborg.
-
-If, instead of the coast of Sweden, it had been the coast of the Cannibal
-Islands, Moodie would soon have found himself at home; but here he had
-letters of introduction, and Karl Johann, who had a high opinion of the
-English, was very anxious to get an infusion of English blood among
-his Swedes. Moodie’s peculiar talents, too, which in England might have
-consigned him to the county jail, in Sweden found their legitimate
-outlet; he soon found a beautiful little country house on the banks of
-the Gotha; had no difficulty in renting the exclusive right of fishing
-for some miles above and below it; paid the rent and all expenses of
-boats and boatmen, and put a handsome sum into his pocket besides, by
-supplying Gotheborg with lake salmon (salmo ferox). He then got the
-rangership of a royal forest, by which he kept his numerous hangers-on in
-what he called butcher’s meat, and traded with the Zoological Gardens and
-private collections in the wild beasts and birds of the country, by means
-of which traffic, he had furnished himself with the choicest collection
-of sporting fire-arms and fishing tackle to be found in the north.
-Besides which, Moodie had become a public character. Sweden has its wild
-beasts as well as its ordinary game,—he who destroys a wolf or a bear is
-a public benefactor, and Moodie had a peculiar talent for tracking them.
-Every farmer within a hundred miles of Gäddebäck would pull off his hat
-to him; but that is not saying much, for a Swede is always pulling off
-his hat, and if he had nothing else to pull it off to he would be making
-his salaams to the cows and sheep.
-
-It was not a great deal of Gotheborg the fishermen saw that evening;
-their experience of the country was confined to a march by the shortest
-road from the landing place to Todd’s Hotel, and their subsequent view
-to a sort of Dutch interior, of which pipes, tobacco, bottles, glasses,
-juniper beer of native manufacture, and thin vinous importations from
-Bordeaux, made up the accessories; but the fishermen had much to inquire
-after, and Moodie had much to tell.
-
-Breakfast, always a luxurious meal in the north, at least, in summer
-time, on account of the quantities of berries and the abundant supply of
-cream, brought a visitor,—a young artillery officer, a friend of Birger,
-by name Dahlgren, and by rank Count, who had his quarters in the inn,—for
-the Swedish officers have no mess like ours, but lodge permanently in the
-hotels, paying a fixed sum per week, and dining at the _table d’hôte_.
-Like Birger, he was a painter, but whereas the guardsman exercised his
-art simply as an amateur, or at most, in the public service of his
-country, his friend, Count as he was, exercised his as a profession, and
-as a means of eking out his scanty pay.
-
-There would be a grand review that afternoon, he said, and it would
-be well worth seeing, for Gotheborg is the great artillery station of
-Sweden, and the Commander-in-Chief, with his staff, who were on a tour
-of inspection, had arrived by the canal steamer from the new fortress of
-Wanås, on the Wetter.
-
-This piece of information, which the artilleryman detailed with great
-glee, was received by Birger with a wry countenance, as certain to detain
-him within doors as long as the General remained at Gotheborg,—for it
-will be remembered he was at that very time unable to join his regiment
-on account of _pressing family affairs_.
-
-This did not affect the others, so, leaving their friend to amuse himself
-as best he might, by improving his sketches or watching the magpies from
-the window, they started, under the pilotage of their new ally, for a
-tour of observation.
-
-Whatever else Gotheborg is famous for, certainly the most remarkable
-thing in it is its flocks of magpies,—birds which, in our country, are
-extremely wild, and by no means fond of town life. Gregarious, in the
-proper sense of the term, they are not, but they are as numerous as
-sparrows in London, very nearly as tame, and much more impudent. This
-by no means arises from any affection which the inhabitants have for
-the bird—for magpies are ugly and mischievous all the world over, and
-quite as mischievous in Gotheborg as anywhere else,—but from a popular
-superstition they are under the especial protection of the devil—and
-truly the devil cares for his own: they build their nests and bring up
-their young under the very noses of the schoolboys; they feed them with
-stolen goods, filched from every kitchen,—and often and often, among the
-delicacies of the season, they regale them with spring chicken of their
-own killing. But no one molests a magpie; Heaven only knows what would
-be the consequences of killing one; and, though Government has set a
-price on their heads, they sleep in safety, under the protection of their
-great master.
-
-The town ought to be handsome, but it is not; the description would look
-well on paper. A great broad canal through the centre, with quays all the
-way on both sides, as at Dublin, only twice as broad, forming a very wide
-street; and from this five or six similar canals, similarly furnished
-with quays and streets, branch off at right angles. The banks of all
-these canals are planted with trees, and arranged as shaded footways. All
-this sounds as if the place ought to be pretty, but, though every word of
-this is true, the reality falls far short of the ideas it conveys. The
-houses are mean and low, and, the windows being flush with the sides, the
-whole appearance is pasteboard-like and unsubstantial, which the reality
-is not. The Swedes build their wooden houses in very good taste, and they
-harmonise very well with the scenery, but they should stick to that—_ne
-sutor ultra crepidam_: let not the carpenter aspire to be a mason. Every
-house, large or small, in town or in country, has very large panes of
-glass,—the very cabins have them; the glass is as bad as bad can be,
-full of flaws and waves, and very thin besides; even this produces a bad
-effect; besides, it is impossible to admire the finest of towns, when
-walking over streets so roughly paved that eyes and thoughts must be
-continually directed towards the footing.
-
-There is a capital market, and the canals bring the hay, and the fuel,
-and all other heavy articles from the interior, to the very doors of the
-houses. It was singular to see floating haystacks and faggot piles—for
-so they looked, the hulls of the boats being completely hidden by their
-freight,—towed up in strings by the little steam-tugs, and moored to the
-quays. If Gotheborg is not a prosperous town, Sweden will not support
-one at all, for it is impossible for any situation to be more favourable
-for trade. The river itself forms a secure harbour, its only fault being
-that vessels of heavy draught cannot anchor within a mile of the town.
-The interior water communications comprehend all the midland provinces,
-and the landing and shipping of goods is as easy as art can make it;
-besides, it is the outermost port of the whole country.
-
-The markets, certainly, are well supplied, especially that of fish, both
-salt and fresh-water. Beef and mutton are among its articles of export
-to the southern coasts of Norway, and there is not a bad display of
-vegetables for so northern a country. The quantities of spinach which
-are seen everywhere, and which mingle with every dish, rather surprise
-the traveller, till he finds out that the sandhills which he has seen
-on each side of him all the way up the river, are covered with it,
-growing wild—wild as it is, English garden spinach is not at all better
-flavoured. Singularly enough, melons are plentiful; one would almost as
-soon expect to meet with pines in these latitudes,—but the short summer
-of Sweden is peculiarly favourable for them.
-
-The trade of the place does not look very lively, and the bustle in the
-streets is nothing at all like that of Bristol or Liverpool. What little
-stir there was just then, seemed to be rather military than mercantile.
-Dirty, slovenly-looking artillerymen, with ugly blue and yellow uniforms,
-putting one disagreeably in mind of the _Edinburgh Review_; overalls
-patched extensively with leather that terribly wanted the blacking-brush;
-and dingy steel scabbards, that did not know what emery-stone was, were
-clanking about the streets, followed by little crowds; and groups of
-officers were standing at the doors of the hotels and lodging-houses.
-Evidently a review was not an everyday business.
-
-The Parson and Captain were soon deserted by their military cicerone,
-who left them, to prepare for his part in the military display, having
-directed them into the street that leads to the scene of action. This
-was a large meadow, or small park, to the east of the town, rather a
-pretty promenade, enclosed with trees, which was now crowded with people.
-Towns, especially trading towns, are not remarkable for costume. The
-people, seeing such a variety of foreigners, get to be citizens of the
-world themselves, and so lose their nationalities. But there were a few
-fancy dresses, too, from the country round; short round corduroy jackets,
-sometimes a sort of tartan, too, but which invariably had rows of
-buttons sewed as thick together as they could stand. Among the women, a
-handkerchief was frequently tied round the head instead of a bonnet; but
-every one, almost, carried his or her bunch of flowers, an article which
-abounded in the markets; these were very often carried in the hats, or
-stuck through the knots of the kerchiefs.
-
-And now the bugles of the artillery were heard, and the rumbling of
-wheels, and the trampling of horses, as battery after battery rolled
-into the park. The Swedes call them horse artillery, but they are, in
-reality, only field batteries; for of horse artillery, properly so
-called, that most beautiful of military toys, they have none. Their guns,
-twelve pounders, are drawn by six horses, each of which carries a man. In
-bringing the guns into action, the off-man of each pair dismounted, and
-these were joined by three others, whose seat was on the limbers. These
-are hardly men enough to work so heavy a gun, allowing for the casualties
-of action, but on emergencies the driver of the middle pair also lends
-his services.
-
-There was nothing showy in the review, the manœuvres of which were
-confined to advancing and retreating in line, and forming column, and
-deploying into line again; but all at a foot’s pace, or at a very slow
-trot. They had no idea of changing front, or retreating in echéllon, or
-any of those showy manœuvres in which the prolong is used. In fact, so
-far as display went, it was a very slow affair indeed; the men, however,
-seemed to know their work pretty well, and though individually dirty
-and slovenly and without the well set up carriage of our own soldiers,
-they bore, as a body, rather a soldier-like appearance. They ride very
-forward, absolutely on the horse’s withers—this is said to give the horse
-greater facility of draught; and it may, but at all events, it gives a
-most awkward and unsoldier-like appearance to the men, which is in no
-way improved by the manner in which they carry their swords—the elbows
-sticking out at right angles to the body, and their knuckles thrust into
-their sides, as if they had a pain in their ribs.
-
-The guns seemed to be very much under-horsed, but perhaps this is more
-apparent than real; for the Swedish horses, though small, are strong and
-wiry, and their enclosed country is not only not calculated for horse
-artillery manœuvres, but does not admit of them. The chances are, that
-a whole campaign might be fought in Sweden without the artillery being
-required to move faster than at a foot-pace. So far as numbers went, they
-mustered at least three times as many guns as can be got together at
-Woolwich for love or money at the best of times.
-
-The army of Sweden is very curiously constituted, and it is not easy to
-reckon up its effective strength. The regular army does not consist of
-above 10,000 men; the guards—than which no finer body of men is to be
-seen in Europe,—the artillery, and three or four garrison regiments, who
-are stationed at Wanås, in the interior, and Carlscrona, and one or two
-other fortresses on the coast.
-
-The militia, which is called Beväring, consists of every man in the
-country between the ages of twenty and twenty-five; these have regular
-days of exercise, generally Sunday evenings in the summer, which is with
-them by no means a popular arrangement, for those are the hours which the
-ingenuous youths of Sweden devote to dancing, an amusement of which they
-are passionately fond. This really is a much more effective force than
-it seems, for the Swedes are natural soldiers; besides which, it gives
-them all a habit of drill, which might be rendered serviceable in case of
-invasion; for, as every man in the country has been drilled in his youth,
-they are all capable of immediately taking their places in the ranks of
-the regular regiments. It would be a very great improvement if they were
-drilled to ball practice, like the Swiss and Tyrolese, for a Swede is
-terribly clumsy with fire-arms, and on a skal, is just as likely to shoot
-himself or his comrade, as a bear or a wolf.
-
-But the strength of the Swedish army lies in its Indelta, a description
-of force peculiar to that country—unless the military colonies of Russia
-be considered a parallel case.
-
-The crown possesses large estates, and these are leased out, like the
-knight’s fees in old times, on man service, and for that purpose are
-divided into hemmans, each hemman furnishing a man, who has a portion of
-it by way of pay—the hemman is not a measure of size, but of produce.
-Fertile hemmans are small, waste or barren hemmans are large; and thus
-it often happens, when a crown estate has been cleared and brought
-into cultivation, though quite as productive as some other estate, it
-furnishes a much smaller quota.
-
-The holder of such a property, is then bound to serve himself, if
-capable, and to furnish a certain number of efficient soldiers, horse or
-foot, according to the size of his estate. The whole country is divided
-into military provinces, under colonels; these are subdivided into
-districts, under captains, with their proper complement of subaltern and
-non-commissioned officers, who are paid by the tenure of certain reserved
-farms, which they hold in virtue of their commissions.
-
-Whenever the Indelta is called out—and a third of them assemble in camp
-every summer,—the crown tenants of the estates that furnished it are
-bound, at their own expense, to cultivate the farms which the soldiers
-hold, and to return to them their lands, when they are dismissed from
-active service, in the same condition in which they took charge of them,
-accounting for any sale of produce which they may have made.
-
-The service of the Indelta is very popular, and for every vacancy there
-are at least half a dozen candidates. No application is ever received
-without written testimonials from the clergyman of the applicant’s
-parish, and no man is ever admitted who has been convicted of any crime.
-Many of these crown holdings have been purchased and re-purchased, and
-transferred from hand to hand so often, that they are regarded as a sort
-of private property, and their tenants very often complain of being
-burthened to a greater extent than their countrymen. This, however, is as
-unreasonable as that a tenant should complain that in paying rent he is
-not on an equality with the proprietor in fee. The sale of crown lands is
-merely the transference of a beneficial lease.
-
-So far as the morals of the people are concerned, the patronage of the
-Indelta, and the reward it holds to good conduct, act very beneficially;
-as to the efficacy of the force, the wars of Gustavus Adolphus and of
-Charles XII., may form a pretty fair criterion. The strength of this
-contingent to the Swedish army, may be reckoned at 20,000 infantry, and
-5,000 cavalry, and has the advantage of being always available.
-
-“You may come out of your hole now, Birger,” said his friend, the
-artilleryman, who, arriving hot and dusty from the barracks, was lounging
-down the streets, with his jacket open and his stiff military stock in
-his hand, a free and easy style of dress, in which an English officer
-would think it just impossible to put his nose beyond the barrack gates.
-“The General and all his staff are gone in a body to Arfwedsen’s Villa,
-so you are safe for to-day.”
-
-“And for to-morrow, too,” said Birger, “for the steamer starts for
-Stockholm to-morrow morning early; while you were amusing yourselves, I
-have been doing business. As soon as I heard from the sound of your guns
-that the General was safe, I stepped down to the quay, went on board the
-_Daniel Thunberg_, and engaged two cabins—we will toss up who is to have
-the cabin to himself.”
-
-“Why, where’s Moodie?”
-
-“Moodie!” said Birger, taking out his watch, “why, by this time Moodie is
-at Agnesberg.”
-
-“And where is Agnesberg?”
-
-“The first stage to Trollhättan. He had transacted his business, and
-transferred his herd of deer to the Zoological men before we came, so
-he said he would start at once for Gäddebäck, and prepare to receive
-us. I rather think there is some bear hunting afoot, for the Stockholm
-post came in while you were at the review, and I am sure I recognised
-Bjornstjerna’s great splash of a seal, and his scratchy hand. At all
-events, off started Moodie.”
-
-“Why! is it not necessary to lay a forebud.”
-
-“Not on the main road; there is traffic enough between this and
-Wenersburg to keep holl-horses (retained horses) always at the stations.
-He will be at Gäddebäck, I will venture to say, before daybreak.”
-
-“And when do we sail?”
-
-“At ten to-morrow; we can see the falls and the canal before nightfall,
-and sleep at Trollhättan to-morrow night; and on the following morning
-Moodie is to send his boat for us. And now for dinner, I have ordered it
-at the Prinds Karl; Todd’s is a very good house to sleep at, and not bad
-for breakfast, but I want to shew you what Swedish cookery is, as far as
-you can get any worth eating in the provinces.”
-
-[Illustration: p. 251.]
-
-“Ah! there spoke the guardsman.”
-
-“Well, it is very true, as you will confess, if ever I get you to
-Stockholm; is it not, Count Dahlgren?” addressing the artillery officer.
-“You dine with us, of course; in with you, and wash off the stains of
-war, which are pretty visible at present. You have not more time than you
-know what to do with. If we do sail to-morrow, we will make a night of it
-to-night.”
-
-“Like our first night at Mosse Eurd?”
-
-“No, hang it, no; not so bad as that;—that was all very well for the men,
-but we do not make such beasts of ourselves in this country. I have told
-them, though, to put plenty of champagne in ice, and to provide the best
-claret they have got; we will be merry—and wise, if possible.”
-
-“And if not possible?”
-
-“Why, then, the merry without the wise.”
-
-Whether mirth, or wisdom, or a judicious mixture of the two prevailed
-that evening at the Prinds Karl, need not be related; but the next
-morning saw the party on the clean white deck of the elegant little river
-steamer _Daniel Thunberg_, dashing along its broad, still stream, between
-rows of feathering rushes, sometimes so tall as to eclipse the still
-flat and uninteresting country beyond them. Ducks there were, in such
-numbers, that the fishermen half repented their engagement with Moodie;
-and Jacob, to whom every spot was familiar, kept up an incessant chorus
-of regrets, pointing out here a spot where he had made a fortune with the
-långref, having hauled up a three-pound eel on every hook,—there a corner
-where he had caught a pike so big he could not lift it into the boat, but
-was obliged to tow it astern all the way to Gotheborg,—and there a bay
-in the rushes in which he had bagged five swans, eight geese, and more
-ducks than he could count, at a single shot,—with as many more stories,
-equally veracious, as he could get people to listen to; and in fact,
-could be stopped by nothing short of that grand event in a Swedish day,
-dinner, which, announced by the steamer’s bell, was served with great
-magnificence in the saloon.
-
-These little steamers form as luxurious a conveyance as can be imagined;
-they are galley-built, that is to say, the quarter deck is two or three
-feet higher than the waist; the after part is divided into ten or twelve
-little private cabins, each possessing its own port, and each furnished
-with its two sofas and its table; the fore part contains the saloon, or
-common cabin. They do not carry very powerful engines, but they burn
-wood, and are as clean and as free from disagreeable smells as if they
-were sailing vessels.
-
-At the locks of Lilla Edet, where a reef comes across the river, forming
-a low but very picturesque fall, the fine scenery commences. The fall
-itself is singular. The water of the Gotha, fresh from the great lake of
-Wenern, which acts as an enormous cesspool, is as clear and bright as
-that of the Torjedahl, but with ten times its volume; it slips off the
-smooth ledge of rocks as if it were falling over a step; the ledge off
-which it slips is seen through it as distinctly as if it were enclosed
-in a glass case, for the water preserves its unbroken transparency till
-it reaches the bottom, and then spreads out into a broad border of foam,
-like a fan with swansdown fringe.
-
-From this point, a very perceptible difference was remarkable in the
-run of the current, which retarded considerably the way of the steamer
-through the belt of highlands which separates the low tract bordering the
-sea-coast from the higher level of Wenersborglan; and it was not till
-past five, that the low rumbling, earth-shaking sound of the great falls
-began to tremble on the ear.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-TROLLHÄTTAN.
-
- “Gefjon drew from Gylfi
- Rich stored-up treasure,—
- The land she joined to Denmark.
- Four heads and eight eyes bearing,
- While hot sweat trickled down them,
- The oxen dragged the reft mass
- Which forms this winsome island.”
-
- _Skald Bragi the Old._
-
- “It was a wondrous sight to see
- Topmast and pennon glitter free,
- High raised above the greenwood tree—
- As on dry land the galley moves,
- By cliff and copse and alder groves.”
-
- _Lord of the Isles._
-
-
-“Birger, what is the Swedish for ‘Go to the devil?’ I cannot make these
-little brutes of boys understand me,” shouted the Captain, who was not
-in the best of humours, having already made half a dozen slips on very
-dangerous ground. In all Sweden, there is not a more slippery bit of
-turf than that which clothes the cliffs and highlands of Trollhättan.
-The bank along which he was scrambling to get a good view of the falls
-rounded itself off gradually, getting more and more out of the horizontal
-and into the vertical at every step, till at last it plunged sheer into
-the foaming turn-hole of the middle fall, in which the very best of
-swimmers would have had no more advantage over the very worst than that
-of keeping his head above water till he went down the third leap, and
-got knocked to pieces on the rocks below. There was not a root to hold
-on by stronger than those of the dwarf cranberries, whose smooth leaves
-only aided the natural slipperiness. Heather is not common anywhere in
-Sweden; but here there was quite enough not only to give a purple brown
-hue to the scenery, but also to add to the difficulty of keeping one’s
-feet, in a way which any one who has walked the side of a highland
-hill in very dry weather will fully be able to appreciate. It was very
-irritating when one at last had attained a point of view—after traversing
-what to a leather-shod stranger was really a dangerous path—to have the
-current of one’s thoughts interrupted by a parcel of bare-footed urchins,
-who came frolicking over the very same ground, and insisting that the
-visitor should see everything, from the orthodox point of view set down
-by Murray, and from no other whatever, and moreover should pay for being
-tormented and unpoeticised, the regulated number of skillings.
-
-The rush of waters was certainly very grand and very magnificent. Much
-has been written about it in books of travels, and much more in the
-album kept at the inn for the purpose of enshrining and transmitting to
-posterity the extasies of successive generations of travellers; but the
-Parson, who ought to have been lost in admiration—to his shame be it
-spoken—appeared chiefly solicitous to procure bait, which he and Torkel
-had been diligently hunting for in the shallows. It was not without
-considerable difficulty that a trout sufficiently small to fit the
-snap-hooks of the trolling-litch could be found, and when it was found,
-we are happy to say, it met with no more success than it deserved; for
-though at very considerable personal risk he tried as much of the rushing
-water as his longest trolling-rod would command, he was not rewarded with
-a single run.
-
-But for all that, there certainly are fish in all the pools about these
-tremendous falls, and that he had the opportunity of satisfying himself
-about before he left off; for just as he was giving it up for a bad job,
-Torkel, who had an eye for a fish like that of a sea-eagle, caught sight
-of something alive that had poked itself into one of the runs from the
-saw-mills, a place not three feet across; and unscrewing the gaff which
-he was carrying, and substituting for it the five-pronged spear, he
-plunged it into the water and brought out a black trout (_salmo ferox_)
-of ten pounds weight at the end of it. From the nature of the water it
-is impossible that trout can abound at Trollhättan in any great numbers.
-The river has scarcely any tributaries below the falls; and as it is
-absolutely impossible for a fish to surmount them, the breeding ground
-is very limited; but, on the other hand, the clearness of the water is
-precisely that which best suits the constitution of a trout; bleak and
-gwinead, which form their principal food, are very plentiful, and from
-the depth of the water, there is scarcely any limit to the growth of
-the fish; a man, who is satisfied to catch now and then a monster, will
-do very well at Trollhättan, and in the course of the season will have
-a few stories to tell, which in England will be set down as altogether
-fabulous,—but it does not answer for a day’s fishing. The traveller may
-as well make up his mind to admire the scenery at his leisure,—it will
-not answer his purpose to wet a line there.
-
-The Parson having convinced himself of this, and, moreover, having had
-one or two very narrow escapes, reeled up his line and contentedly sought
-out his friends, who, by this time, had succeeded in explaining to the
-swarms of guides that their services were not required, and were sitting
-on a heathery bank feathered with birch, exactly in front of the middle
-falls, comfortably eating gooseberries, which grow there in such plenty
-that, though the place swarms with children—a whole regiment of soldiers
-with their wives and families being hutted in the vicinity,—the bushes
-were still full of them.
-
-“That is a curious cave,” said the Captain, pointing to a hole which
-seemed to enter the face of the precipitous rock by the side of the
-great fall, and to penetrate it for some distance; at least, the depth
-was sufficiently great to be lost in darkness; the bottom of it was on a
-level with the water, and was not accessible without a boat.
-
-“That!” said Birger, “that is Polheim’s grave.”
-
-“Do you mean to say that any man was buried there?”
-
-“Not the man himself, only the best part of a man—his reputation.
-Polheim was an engineer, and when the first idea of making a practicable
-communication between the Wener and the sea was entertained, he
-attempted to carry it into effect by burrowing out that hole. If he had
-succeeded in boring through the rock, he would have accomplished the
-largest _jet d’eau_ in the world. However, Government were wise enough to
-put a stop to it, and to employ a cleverer man. Polheim died—it is said
-of grief,—his body buried at Wenersborg; what became of his soul, I will
-not take upon me to say; but as for his reputation, there is no doubt
-about that—that lies buried there.”
-
-“That canal certainly is a wonderful work for a country like yours, where
-the extent of land is so great, and the produce from it so small.”
-
-“It would have been more wonderful still,” said Birger, “for it would
-have been done when the country was still poorer, had it not been for the
-Reformation.”
-
-“The Reformation!” said the Captain. “What, in the name of Tenterden
-Steeple and the Goodwin Sands, has the Reformation to do with the Gotha
-Canal?”
-
-“Not much with the canal, but a good deal with Bishop Brask who planned
-it—the man whom Geijer calls, and very deservedly, ‘the friend of
-liberty, and the upright friend of his country.’ The present canal,
-nearly as you see it now, was sketched out in a letter still preserved,
-which was written in the year 1526, by the Bishop, to stout old Thurè
-Jensen, whom men called King of East Gothland—that gallant old fellow,
-who, when he saw how the Diet of Westeras was going, struck up his
-drums and marched forth, swearing that no man in Sweden should make
-him heathen, Lutheran, or heretic. Before the Bishop’s scheme could be
-converted into a reality, stout old Thurè was a headless corpse, and
-Brask a voluntary exile. But the good which men do, lives after them.
-Gustavus, who had always respected Brask, and would fain have retained
-him in his See of Linköping, carried out many of his plans—and in the
-course of time this, as you see, was carried out too, though it was not
-for a hundred years or more after the successful king and the deprived
-bishop had gone to their respective accounts.”
-
-“Jacob has just been giving us another version of the story,” said the
-Captain, “something about Gefjon and Gylfi.”
-
-“O, the Gylfa-Ginning. Stupid old fool!—that did not happen here, but
-down in the south, between Sweden and Denmark. So far, however, he is
-quite right,—at least, if you believe the Prose Edda; the Goddess Gefjon
-was the first canal maker in Sweden, and the event happened in the reign
-of King Gylfi.
-
-“Thus it was:—
-
-“King Gylfi ruled over the land of Svithiod (Sweden), and at that
-uncertain date which is generally known as ‘once upon a time,’ he
-recompensed a strange woman, for some service she had done him, with as
-much land as she could plough round with four oxen in a day and a night;
-but he did not know, till the share struck deep into the earth and tore
-asunder hills and rocks, that it was the Goddess Gefjon that he was
-dealing with. So deep were the furrows, that the place where the land had
-been became water, for the oxen, which had come from Jötenheim (the land
-of the Goths), were really her sons, whom she had yoked to her plough.”
-
-“Phew-w-w,” whistled the Parson.
-
-“What is the matter?” said Birger.
-
-“Only that as Gefjon is the northern Diana, I thought you might have made
-a mistake; her nephews, possibly, not her sons?”
-
-“O, that goes for nothing in Sweden,” said the Captain, laughing; “there
-are plenty of cases in point. I have no doubt Birger is quite right.”
-
-“Well, if you come to scandalising national divinities,” retorted
-Birger, “I am sure that story about Endymion was never cleared up very
-satisfactorily.”
-
-“Clear up your own story, at all events, and place the oxen in any
-relationship to the maiden goddess which you may think best suited to her
-fair fame.”
-
-“Then I will call them what the Edda calls them,” said Birger, gallantly,
-“her sons, and never sully the fair fame of the maiden Gefjon either. The
-whole is an allegory. Sweden achieved the sea-path, or inland navigation
-by the labour of her own sons, and that is what the old Skald Bragi
-means when he likens them to oxen, and says—
-
- “‘Four heads and eight eyes bearing,
- While hot sweat trickled down them,
- The oxen dragged the reft mass
- That formed this winsome island.’
-
-And now Gefjon and her sturdy sons have been at work again. The whole
-south of Sweden is an island now, and it is this canal from the Cattegat
-to the Baltic that makes it so.”
-
-“Well, so it is; and though it is a long while since the days of the
-Goddess Gefjon, or even of good Bishop Brask, the work is complete at
-last, and a very creditable work it is. I think, by-the-way, that we
-English had something to do with it.”
-
-“England had a hand, and a very considerable one, in the other end of
-it,” said Birger, “but these locks are home manufacture, and the thing
-really has answered very well. See what a trade it has opened with the
-Wener only, which was the original plan; the communication with the
-Baltic being a sort of after-thought of the Ostergöthlanders, carried
-out by Count Platen. This part of the canal, which was opened in 1800,
-has made four of our inland counties, Wenersborglan, Mariestadslan,
-Carlstadslan, and Orebrö, into so many maritime states; and now the other
-end has done the same for Jonköping and Linköping. In national wealth,
-it has paid a dozen times over. There is no one who has ever lived,
-since the days of Oxenstjerna, to whom we owe so much as we do to Count
-Platen. In the very heat of the war—that is to say, in 1808—he conceived
-the idea of prolonging the water communication to the Baltic. He went
-over to England to inspect, with his own eyes, the Caledonian canal. He
-engaged Telford, returned to Sweden, and, within two months, sent in
-his plans, with their specification and estimates, which, strange to
-say, have not been exceeded in the execution. It is this old part of the
-canal, however, which is, at all events, the most showy job; here are
-two miles of solid rock cut through, and, as you see, these falls are
-pretty high—not less than a hundred and twenty feet of them, besides the
-rapids,—they require, therefore, a good many locks; in fact, as you see,
-it looks more like a staircase than anything else.”
-
-“It certainly was a singular sight,” said the Captain, “to see our
-steamer high above our heads, and the masts of the brigs sticking out
-from the tops of the rocks, and far above the highest trees.”
-
-“This part of the canal is the most showy,” said Birger; “no doubt
-but Platen’s work was not altogether so easy as it looks. Any one can
-appreciate the skill of an engineer, who sees a great body of water
-surmounting a steep wall of rock; but a still greater amount of skill
-is evidenced in laying out a plan; so as to render such tedious and
-expensive works unnecessary. When I was a youngster, I was sent by the
-Kongs-Ofwer-Commandant’s Expedition, to survey, by way of practice, the
-two lines from our fortress of Wanås-on-Wettern to the two seas, and I
-really do not know which is the most wonderful conception. The original
-plan was only eight feet deep, but they are deepening it two feet more,
-and making the width of the locks twenty-two feet throughout. We shall
-see the Linköping battalion at work on this to-morrow. I must go and pay
-them a visit while we are staying at Gäddebäck. I know a good many of the
-officers.”
-
-“It is a military work, then?”
-
-“Not exactly, though, like most other large undertakings, it is done by
-soldiers. It is a speculation, something like those in your own country,
-which is taken in hand by shareholders, with a board of directors, though
-I believe Government gives them a lift of some sort or other; but in
-this country, in time of peace, you can always get as many soldiers as
-you want for labourers, from a corporal’s party up to a battalion, or
-a brigade, for matter of that. You lodge so much money in the hands of
-the Government officer appointed for that purpose, and a regiment, or a
-company, or a detachment, receives orders to march and hut themselves
-in such a place. Your engineer, or foreman, or bailiff, as the case may
-be, gives his orders to the officer in command, who sees them carried
-into effect. It costs more in hard money—and, what is a worse thing for
-us Swedes, _ready_ money—than any other sort of labour, but it answers
-exceedingly well for those who can afford the first outlay, for the men
-are under military discipline, and Government are responsible, not only
-that you shall have so many men to work, but so many _sober_ men, _fit_
-to work, which, in this country, as you know, is not exactly the same
-thing.”
-
-“And how do the soldiers like it?” said the Captain, who, though he
-did not say so, certainly was thinking that it was not precisely the
-situation of an officer and a gentleman, to do duty as foreman of the
-works for some speculating farmer, or builder, or engineer.
-
-The idea never seemed to strike Birger, who, by-the-way, belonging to
-the Royal Guards, was himself exempt from such service. “It is rather
-popular,” said he, “with all classes; the men like it because they have
-a considerable increase of pay, and as for the officers, except one
-or two who are on duty for the day, they have but a short morning and
-evening parade, just to see that their men are all right, and then they
-may do what they please. They lose nothing, either, for all places are
-equally dull in the summer, when everybody is at work; there can be no
-festivities going on anywhere, and so they shoot, or fish, or lounge, or
-make love, at their leisure. But here we are at the parade-ground,” he
-continued, as they came upon a cleared space in the forest, surrounded
-by very neat and compactly-built huts, some of considerable pretensions,
-framed with trunks of pines, and walled and roofed with outsides from
-the saw-mills, arranged as weather-boards; others, more humble, were
-constructed of pine-branches and heather; but all alike compact, neat,
-firm, tidy-looking, and arranged in military order, in straight lines,
-with their officers’ huts in front.
-
-The sun was not far from its setting, and the soldiers having put aside
-their tools, were throwing on their belts in a way that certainly would
-not have satisfied an English adjutant, and were hurrying, with their
-muskets in their hands, to their respective posts. There was a short
-private inspection by the non-commissioned officers, while the band, a
-pretty good one, were tuning their instruments; after which the companies
-formed into line, faced to the west, and as the lower limb of the sun
-touched the horizon, the officers saluted with their swords, the men
-presented arms, and accompanied by the band, sang in chorus, every man of
-them joining in and taking his part in it, the beginning of Grundtvig’s
-glorious hymn to the Trinity.
-
- “O mighty God! we Thee adore,
- From our hearts’ depths, for evermore;—
- None is in glory like to Thee
- Through time and through eternity.
- Thy Name is blessed by Cherubim—
- Thy Name is blessed by Seraphim—
- And songs of praise from earth ascend,
- With thine angelic choirs to blend.
- Holy art Thou, our God!
- Holy art Thou, our God!
- Holy art Thou, our God!
- Lord of Sabaoth.”
-
-The air was simple enough, though beautifully harmonized; but there is
-nothing in the whole compass of music so magnificent as the combination
-of some hundreds of human voices trained to sing in harmony; the band
-would have injured the effect, but in truth it was hardly heard,
-overwhelmed as it was by that volume of sound,—except, indeed, the roll
-of drums which accompanied the final “Amen,” swelling and prolonging
-the notes, and then dying away like a receding peal of thunder. The men
-recovered arms, were dismissed, and in ten minutes were dispersed over
-the parade ground, playing leap-frog, fencing, wrestling, foot-ball;
-while not a few were lighting fires, and boiling water for their evening
-gröd.
-
-Birger stepped on, to see if he could meet with his friend, while the
-other two, thinking that they should most likely be in the way among
-people who, if they spoke English or French at all, spoke it with
-difficulty; turned into the well-beaten track that led to the inn and
-landing place of Trollhättan.
-
-Before they arrived there the night had already closed in; that is to
-say, it had faded into twilight, for that is the nearest approach which
-a northern summer’s night makes to darkness. All that the travellers
-then saw of the inn was the light which, glancing from every window,
-beamed forth a welcome which it had evidently been beaming forth to
-others before them; judging from the din which arose from the evening
-relaxations of a dozen or so of jolly subalterns. These, who had money
-enough, or who fancied they had money enough to spend in luxury, had
-fixed their quarters at the inn, instead of the pretty looking green huts
-which their less wealthy or more prudent comrades had run up in the camp.
-
-In fact, the sitting rooms of the inn offered at that time fewer
-temptations than the very clean, bare bed-rooms, with their very white
-sheets, and very warm down coverlets. Winter and summer alike, the
-feather bed is uppermost, and here it was still; though the only reason
-why the windows were not left wide open all night, was the clouds of
-musquitos which, entering by them, menaced the repose of the sleepers.
-
-Jacob, whom the party had somewhat inconsiderately left in charge of
-the baggage, had, much to their surprise, deceived them all in making
-no mistake, and leaving nothing behind; the carioles had been landed,
-and were ready packed for their journey on the morrow, as duly as if the
-fishermen had seen to them themselves; but in his own country Jacob had
-become quite a different character, and piqued himself in showing to the
-Norwegians in his own person how vast was the superiority of the Swedes.
-
-Birger was not seen again till the party was collected at a sufficiently
-early hour of the morning round a magnificent breakfast of fruit and
-fish, which had been laid out under the verandah of the inn,—a narrow
-esplanade which looked out upon the yet quiet waters of the brimming
-Gotha, at the very point where they were gathering their strength for
-their first furious plunge.
-
-Most cataracts commence with a rapid: so still and calm was the Gotha
-at this point, that the esplanade in question was the general landing
-place from Wenersborg, and was furnished with iron rings for the purpose
-of mooring the boats, several of which, very fair specimens of Swedish
-boat-building, were hanging on to them, scarcely stretching out their
-respective painters, so gentle was the current. Among them lay a very
-handsome gig with bright sides, well scraped oars, and a white English
-ensign fluttering in the morning breeze; from which Moodie, who had come
-in state with four rowers, had just landed, and by means of which, the
-travellers were to complete their journey.
-
-In truth, Gäddebäck was not very accessible in any other way; it had been
-originally built as a pic-nic house by the Mayor of Wenersborg, who, when
-he had been half-ruined by the great fire that had taken place there the
-year before, was glad enough to contract his expenses, and to find a
-person to take it off his hands. It suited Moodie well enough, and its
-low rent suited him also, but there were not many men whom it would suit
-at all. It had been built exclusively for pleasure parties, and these
-were expected to arrive there either by boat or by sledge, according as
-the surface of the river was, water or ice. No one had ever troubled
-themselves with any other entrance, and it was no sort of drawback to the
-place in its original state, that communication with the main land was
-entirely cut off. The still, deep brook which gave to the place its name
-(pike brook), had spread out behind the house into a broad reedy morass,
-which in spring, during the floods, was a broad reedy lake, but in summer
-a sort of neutral ground, between land and water, through which was led
-a precarious track, which might be passed on wheel, or indeed on foot,
-provided the traveller did not object to very clear water, not much above
-his knees. The actual spot on which the house was situated in the middle
-of all this, was a patch of parky ground, abounding in beautiful timber,
-which was five or six feet above the general level; that part of it which
-lay next the river was firm, and hard, and covered with short green turf,
-but this subsided to landward, first into wet sponge, secondly into
-bog, and lastly into reedy water, in proportion as it receded from the
-river. The brook, divided by this patch of dry land, soaked into the main
-stream, on either end of it, completely insulating the domain.
-
-This suited Moodie exactly, for the little park was full of all sorts of
-grouse and other birds, which looked as if they were at perfect liberty,
-as indeed they were, only that having had their pinions cut, and not
-being able to swim, they could not pass the girdle of water—herons, and
-cranes, and bitterns, were stalking about, or watching for fish in the
-shallows, like their wild brethren, for though excellent waders, and
-quite in their element on the soppy shores to landward, they could not
-swim any more than the grouse. There were some deer, also, of various
-kinds, but as these had no sort of objection to take the water, they were
-confined in little paddocks, those being classed together who would keep
-the peace.
-
-On the esplanade, between the house and the river, lay a dozen dogs,
-mostly English, on excellent terms with the great brown bear, who, though
-perfectly tame, was secured from paying any inquisitive visits to the
-deer paddocks by a collar and chain, with which he was made fast to a
-substantial post at the door.
-
-The whole front of the house had been occupied by a ball-room, with
-windows opening into a verandah. This verandah had become a general
-marine store—oars, boat-hooks, masts, sails, were arranged along it on
-hooks; but so tidily and regularly were they disposed, that they looked
-as if they had been placed there for ornament;—fishing rods of all
-lengths were there, and a large assortment of eel-lines and night-lines,
-and trimmers, and gaffs, and pike-wires, and spears, and other poaching
-implements, together with a goodly assortment of drags and flues in the
-back ground; while a full-sized casting net, hung up to dry, displayed
-its leaded semi-circle to the sun: for be it remembered, Moodie made
-a profit of his pleasure, and not only kept his own establishment in
-fish, but very seldom allowed the Gotheborg steamer to pass without
-dispatching in her a heavy birchen basket, consigned to Jacob Lindegren,
-the fishmonger.
-
-Neither was the interior at all out of character: the ball-room had been
-divided by wooden partitions into three very tolerable apartments—an
-ante-room or broad passage in the middle, and on either side his dining
-room and what he called his study, that is to say, the place where he
-made his flies. The passage, which was sufficiently littered, contained
-little other furniture than a turning-lathe and a carpenter’s bench, with
-shelves and pigeon-holes round the sides for the necessary tools; but
-both rooms were pictures of tidiness; the furniture was plain enough,
-certainly, but the walls were covered with sketches, of Moodie’s own
-drawing, and with sporting trophies of every kind: huge bear skins and
-wolf skins occupied whole panels, surmounted, perhaps, by the grinning
-skull of a lynx, or a huge antlered head with the skin on; between these
-were cases containing most of the wild birds found in the country, all
-stuffed by his own hands; together with specimens of eggs, hung up in
-a pattern, but each labelled with the name of the bird it belonged to.
-Between the windows was a formidable armoury, while over one door was
-a stuffed otter, and over the other a wild cat, and the rug itself was
-formed of badgers’ skins bordered with fox; for Moodie had imported an
-English grate and had built a fire-place, besides the invariable stove.
-
-Such was the sportsman’s paradise, into which Moodie welcomed his guests.
-There was accommodation, such as it was, for an unlimited number of
-them; for there were several empty rooms of one sort or another; and a
-rough box, hastily run up with planks from the saw mills, filled with
-dry poplar leaves and covered with a bear skin, was a bed much better
-than any of them had been accustomed to. As for washing, their toilet
-apparatus was laid out every morning on the stage to which the boats
-were moored, and a dive into the river was the very best way of washing
-the face after shaving,—at least, so Moodie seemed to think, for though
-his room was pretty well fitted up, inasmuch as such toilet would be
-difficult in the winter, when the river was as hard as a stone, in summer
-he always chose the boat stage for his own dressing room, as well as for
-that of his guests.
-
-No one was sorry for a rest; journals had to be written up, notes had to
-be compared; there was something, too, in lounging lazily in the sun, or
-smoking a peaceful cigar under the shade of the awning, or teasing the
-bear, or feeding the grouse, and knowing all the while that there was no
-duty neglected, and no opportunity lost. Not but that excursions in a
-quiet way were made—now upon the water with the trolling tackle, now on
-the high grounds of the royal forest, now on neither land nor water, but
-on the marshy debateable land, astonishing the ducks that swarmed among
-the reed beds which divide the left bank of the river from the sound
-land; but nothing very particular was done, beyond existing in a very
-high state of quiet enjoyment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-GÄDDEBÄCK.
-
- “I hung fine garments
- On two wooden men
- Who stand on the wall;
- Heroes they seemed to be
- When they were clothed;
- The unclad are despisèd.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-The day had been oppressively hot, more actual heat, perhaps—reckoning
-by the degrees of Reaumur or Farenheit—than had been experienced on the
-fjeld of the Tellemark;—but that was dry, bracing, exhilarating heat,
-such as is felt on the mountain side; this was the moist, feverish
-warmth, caused by the sun’s rays acting on the wide expanse of the Wener
-Sjön and its marshy shores, and secretly and imperceptibly drawing up
-vapours, which would eventually fall in rain,—not, perhaps, on the spot
-from which they had been raised, but on the cold distant mountains of
-Fille Fjeld, which at once attracted and condensed them. There was not a
-cloud in the sky, but the sun would not shine brightly or cheerily either.
-
-The long summer’s day was, however, drawing to a close, and the party
-were sitting at the extreme end of a little jetty which Moodie had built
-out into the river on piles of solid fir. This was covered with an awning
-of striped duck,—of little use as an awning so late in the day, for the
-sun was low enough to peep under it, but still kept up, partly to tempt
-the air of wind, which every now and then fluttered its vandyked border,
-and partly as a preservative against the dews, which would be sure to
-fall as soon as the sun dipped below the horizon.
-
-From a flag-staff, stepped on the outermost pile, hung a huge red English
-ensign, every now and then stirring in the breeze, half unrolling its
-lazy folds and then dropping motionless against its staff. Moodie was
-very particular about this flag, and hoisted it every morning with his
-own hands,—for ever since he had fairly turned his back upon his native
-land, he had become intensely national.
-
-In the front and beneath them the broad, clear, deep, still, brimming
-river, full four hundred yards from bank to bank, glided quietly along
-with a calm unbroken surface, and a motion hardly sufficient to bring
-a strain upon the chain cable of the little cutter that was moored
-some twenty yards off the head of the pier, with her triangular burgee
-fluttering out in the breeze that was not strong enough to move the
-heavier ensign, and displaying the red cross and the golden R.Y.S. so
-well known in every port in Europe. It was a singular thing to see it
-here though, a hundred miles in the heart of Sweden, with the tremendous
-Falls of Trollhättan between it and the sea.
-
-Made fast to the rails of the jetty were half a dozen boats, of all
-shapes and sizes—from the long narrow galley with its four well-scraped
-ashen oars, to the little white flat-bottomed duck-punt,—for Gäddebäck,
-though not, strictly speaking, an island, except during the freshets of
-early summer, was so perfectly insulated by the sluggish brook and the
-marshy ground through which it flowed, as to make all communication with
-the main land, except by boat, extremely precarious.
-
-Dinner had been over for some time, and the party had adjourned to the
-jetty, as the coolest place they could find. They were sitting with their
-wine glasses before them, while two or three bottles of light claret were
-towing overboard, suspended in the cool water of the river by as many
-night-lines.
-
-“Upon my word,” said the Captain, throwing open his waistcoat, “the
-West Indies is a fool to this; and it is not unlike a tropical climate
-either,—moist, damp, and hot,—stewing rather than broiling.”
-
-“To tell you the truth,” said the Parson, “I am surprised at your
-selecting this spot for your residence, beautiful as it certainly is;
-with all this marsh land about it, it cannot fail to be unhealthy.”
-
-“Well, I do not know,” said Moodie, “they do talk of agues, certainly,
-but these things never hurt me, and the place suits me well enough; there
-is plenty of shooting—ducks and snipes without end; and on the other side
-of that range of heights, not three miles from us, is a royal forest,
-well preserved, in which I have full permission to kill anything I like,
-except stags, elks, and perhaps peasants, though they do not make much
-fuss about a man or two either; and, besides, the Ofwer Jagmästere is
-a particular friend of mine. And as for fishing, it is not altogether
-such as I should choose, no doubt, for it is mostly trolling,—but there
-is some capital fishing, such as it is. I will show you what we can
-do to-morrow at the upper rapids,—we have not been there yet. It is a
-singular sort of sport, certainly; but if you are half the poacher you
-used to be, you will like it for its novelty. However, the greatest
-attraction that the place has in my eyes, lies in its situation: this
-river is the high road from Gotheborg to Stockholm, and steamers pass it
-every day. Living on this Robinson Crusoe island of mine, I can command
-the best market in the country, and in fact, I do realize a very fair
-income by my fish and my game. Look at my yacht, too, where else could I
-put it to so great use. A short canal and a single lock passes me into
-the great lake Wener, where I command some of the best rivers and some
-of the best bear-country in Sweden. If I want to smell salt water again,
-I have but to put my cutter in tow of the market-tug, and to steam away
-to Gotheborg; and when I want to be sulky, here I am, looking after my
-menagerie of Scandinavian birds and beasts, and adding odds and ends
-to my museum. I dare say people wonder at the old flag ‘that braved a
-thousand years, the battle and the breeze,’ as they pass backward and
-forward in the steamers; but no one stops here, and you may be sure no
-one would find me out by land. This is just the place for me; besides, it
-is not always so hot as it is now,—I have driven my cariole across this
-river, many a time.”
-
-“By the way, what do you do with yourself in the winter?” said the
-Captain; “you were never very much given to reading, and your shooting
-and fishing must fail you then.”
-
-“Fishing, yes; shooting, no,” said Moodie; “the finest bear shooting is
-in the winter.”
-
-“What! do you meet with bears in the forest?”
-
-“Pooh, nonsense! you Englishmen are always fancying that we kick bears
-out of every bush in Sweden.”
-
-“You Englishmen!” said Birger, glancing at the flag.
-
-“Well, well,—you Johnny Raws, I should say,—you freshmen—you griffins. I
-was just as bad myself, though: I remember the day I landed at Gotheborg,
-marching off with my gun over my shoulder to a little wooded valley at
-the back of the town where the Gotheborg cockneys have their villas, and
-attacking a Swede, dictionary in hand, with ‘Hvar er Bjornerne’—how the
-scoundrel laughed.”
-
-“Well, but what do you mean by bear shooting then,—where do you meet with
-it?”
-
-“Why, you travel a hundred miles to get a shot at a bear, and think
-little of it too. The bear hunter must keep up a correspondence with
-the Ofwer Jagmästerer of the different provinces, and get information
-whenever the peasants have ringed a bear as they call it—that is to say,
-ascertained that he is within a certain circle, and then out with the
-sledge and the dogs, and the rifles, and away up the river, or across the
-lake, as it may be. You do not meet with a bear at every turning, I can
-assure you. I have killed a pretty many though, one way or other, since I
-have been here.”
-
-“That you have,” said the Captain,—“at least, if all those trophies that
-ornament your walls are honestly come by; but by your own showing, you
-cannot be hunting every day in the week; what do you do on the off-days?”
-
-“Well, to tell you the truth, I was dull enough the first winter; you
-will hardly believe it, but I took to reading—I did indeed; you may
-laugh, but it is quite true. I got up the natural history of the country
-thoroughly, and crammed Linnæus. But I soon found something better to
-do, when I began to get acquainted with the people, worthy souls that
-they are. I had invitations without end, and got on capitally with
-them,—quite a popular character I am.”
-
-“The English are popular,” said the Parson, certainly; “high and low
-we have found that, wherever we have been. What we English have done
-to deserve it is more than I can say; but Norway and Sweden, agreeing
-in nothing else, agree at all events in doing honour to the English
-traveller.”
-
-“Do not be taking the conceit out of Moodie”, said Birger; “it is evident
-that he would have you to understand that it is he, the individual,—not
-he, the Englishman, who is thus honoured and caressed.”
-
-“You need not be afraid of doing that,” said the Captain; “ever since I
-have known him, Moodie has been a very great man,—in his own eyes, at all
-events.”
-
-“Why, you must know I am a great man here,” said Moodie, “whatever I was
-in my own country. I am a kammerjunker—no less.”
-
-“A what?” said the Captain.
-
-“A kammerjunker; and, in virtue of it, I have a right to go before every
-one of you.”
-
-“Well, but how came you to be a what-do-you-call-him? ‘Who gave you that
-name?’ as the Catechism says.”
-
-“Not ‘my godfathers and godmothers,’ certainly,” said Moodie, “and I
-hadn’t it ‘in my baptism;’ but I will tell you how it was. Sweden, in
-the winter, is as different from the same country in the summer as
-Connaught from Paradise. In the winter, they are fiddling, and dancing,
-and singing, from night to morn, and from morn to snowy eve. There is
-not much else to do, as you say, that is the truth of it, unless one
-happens to hear of a bear; so when I came to understand a little of
-their lingo, I was very glad to go to their jollifications. The people
-were always very civil in asking me, wherever I was—that I must say for
-them. Now we, in England, don’t care much about precedence, as you know.
-Most of us do not know who is first and who is last, and the rest do not
-care; and those who feel most secure of their rank, are generally too
-proud to take the trouble of asserting it. But it is not so here; they
-all know their places, like schoolboys, and fight for them like dogs
-at a feeding-trough if you happen to make a mistake about them—a thing
-which the natives never do. I did not care much about this at first, no
-Englishman would,—in fact, I did not understand it; but after a bit it
-got to be very unpleasant—it made me a marked man. Here was I, an English
-gentleman, as noble as the king—and a little more so than that Brummagem
-article of theirs,—shoved down, not only by counts and barons, which I
-did not like over and above; for half the people you meet with here are
-counts and barons,—and precious queer ones, some of them; but, besides
-this, there were their confounded orders of knighthood: there are knights
-of the Cherubim and Seraphim[45], and knights of the Elephant and Castle,
-and knights of the Goose and Gridiron, and Heaven knows what besides.
-Then came the officials, from the prime minister down to the post-master,
-and their sons and grandsons. Why, there was not a tradesman I dealt
-with, hardly a beggar I gave a shilling to, who had not a clear right to
-go before me—aye, and showed every disposition to exercise it, too!
-
-“One day I was ass enough to be vexed because my tailor, who was knight
-of the Shears and Cabbage, or something of the sort, elbowed his way
-before me; and one of my friends, I think it was this very Bjornstjerna,
-the Ofwer Jagmästere, offered to get me a settled precedence. ‘Yours
-is not a new family,’ says he.—Of course it was not, everybody knew
-the Moodies, of Hampshire.—Well, that was all right; I had only to
-get my sixteen quarters blazoned, and he would see that I was made a
-kammerjunker. Sixteen quarters! thought I. I had had a great grandfather,
-that is certain, for there he lies in Havant Church, with a ton of marble
-over him, and his arms on the top of that, a chevron ermine between three
-mermaids ppr. to cheer him up on his road to Paradise. He was a great
-man, too, and looked as if he was the son of somebody, as the Spaniards
-say, to judge by the picture of his coach-and-six, and outriders with
-French-horns, which is hanging up in our hall, at Havant Manor. But he
-had played ‘ducks and drakes’ with his guineas, and as for his quarters,
-you know we don’t greatly trouble ourselves with such matters.
-
-“Well, I told my difficulty to one of my friends in Stockholm—an idle
-young scamp of an _attaché_. ‘Why the devil don’t you write to the
-Herald’s College,’ said he, ‘they will trace your descent from the
-Preadamite Grants,[46] if you pay for it. Tell them to make you up a
-pedigree for Sweden, and, my life for it, they will get it up well.’
-
-“I could not lose by it, you know, so I wrote, and, sure enough, they
-found out that the old family had come over with Duke Rollo, and had
-a hand in that conquest of ‘Normandie,’ which your fellow Torkel is
-continually dinning into our ears. They found out, too, that our name
-originally was spelt ‘Modige,’ which, in old Swedish, means ‘dashing,’
-and that it was a title of honour, given to us for our gallantry in the
-said conquest. And, what was pat to the present purpose, Duke Rollo
-had conferred on us the honour of hereditary chamberlains, as soon as
-ever he had a court to appoint us to. How we came to England I forget—I
-suppose, though, it was with Duke William,—and what we did there I do
-not know, unless it was plundering the Saxons, like the rest; but, at
-all events, I got a string of shields, fit to roof Valhalla, and a
-beautiful tree—rather an expensive plant it was, though, for I paid
-sixty pounds for it. However, Bjornstjerna and my friend the _attaché_
-marched off with the chevron ermine and the three mermaids to the
-Hof-Ofwer-Something-or-other, and brought me back a sheet of parchment
-with a big seal hanging from it, giving me the privilege of pulling off
-the inexpressibles of the third prince of the blood royal—whenever it
-should please Providence to bless his Majesty with one,—and in virtue of
-that office to style myself kammerjunker.”
-
-“So you are a greater man than your tailor, now?”
-
-“O yes,” said Moodie, “I take precedence of all manner of people, and
-moreover wear, whenever I please—which is not very often, you may be
-sure,—a concern in my button-hole, something like what I used to wear
-when I was Noble Grand of the Julius Cæsar Lodge of Oddfellows, at South
-Marden. You may depend upon it I am something very great indeed, though I
-must admit I do not know exactly what.”
-
-“Very great indeed!” said Birger, who, as may be supposed, did not
-feel his country particularly flattered by Moodie’s absurd—not to say
-ungrateful—description of his honours, and retorted with a bit of Swedish
-slang: “I am sure you are something ending in ‘ral,’ as the Karing’s wife
-said to her husband; it certainly is not admiral—perhaps it is corporal?”
-
-“Upon my word, Birger, I beg your pardon,” said Moodie, in some
-confusion. “You speak English so perfectly, and look so like an
-Englishman, that I forgot we are not all countrymen together.”
-
-“Well, well,” said Birger, good humouredly, “I must confess there is a
-great deal too much of truth in your satire, and that is what makes the
-sting of it.”
-
-“Never mind him, Birger,” said the Parson; “you Swedes are uncommon fine
-fellows, and carry your honours in your history; I should like to know
-what Europe would have done in the thirty years war, if it had not been
-for Gustaf Adolph and Oxenstjerna? Why, it was you who thrashed Czar
-Peter and all the Russias into something like civilization, and were the
-making of his armies by licking them. Gallantly, too, did you hold your
-own, under the other Gustaf, against the giant you had made; and I have
-no doubt but that you would have thrashed the French giant Nap., as well
-as the Russian giant Peter, if you had only made up your minds in time
-which side you meant to fight on. But for all that, it is a fact, as
-Moodie says, that, like the girls, you are a little too fond of ribbons.”
-
-“It is very true,” said Birger; “we depreciate our own honours by our
-over-lavish distribution of them. That which is plentiful, is cheap—that
-which is little, valued. It is the law of nature, and as true of stars
-and ribbons as it is of green peas and early potatoes.”
-
-“To be sure it is,” said the Captain; “what regiment in our service cares
-a button for the distinction of ‘Royal,’ which it shares with the Royal
-African condemned corps? Who prizes the Waterloo medal, which places in
-the same category the Englishman who fought and the Belgian who ran?”
-
-“Yes,” said Moodie, who had by this time done blushing at his blunder,
-“at the Congress of Vienna, Lord Castlereagh sat among the starry host of
-plenipotentiaries in a plain blue coat, without one solitary decoration.
-‘Ma foi! c’est bien distingué,’ said good Bishop Talleyrand, who himself
-had a star for every oath he had broken, and whose tailor could not find
-room on his coat for all of them!”
-
-“It was ‘distingué,’” said the Captain; “he belonged to a country whose
-citizens do their duty for their duty’s sake. That is distinction enough
-for any man.”
-
-“Yes,” said Birger, “_if they do_—but a good deal depends on that little
-particle;—however, even if citizens could be got, whenever wanted, to do
-their duty for their duty’s sake, which I doubt; distinctions, which of
-course involve precedence, are useful in themselves. In your country,
-people are always jealously guarding their position in society; you are
-always on the look out, lest some interloper should thrust you out, or
-refuse you the honour you consider your due. This is what makes you
-Englishmen so unsociable and exclusive; you are always on guard, walking
-sentry over your own honour. Now look at our people—our barons and our
-tradesmen, our princes and our farmers, all meet together without fear of
-losing caste, because every one has his position secured to him, beyond
-the possibility of invasion. You dare not do this.”
-
-“Do not say, ‘you,’” broke in the Captain, “I, thank God! am a gentleman
-born, and have not to work for my daily dignity.”
-
-“That is only another instance of what I assert—‘a gentleman born!’ you
-can afford to do what we all do, because, by birth or by accident, you
-find yourself in the very position in which we Swedes are all placed by
-the customs of our country.”
-
-“That is all very true,” said the Parson; “for the amenities of life,
-I grant your system is by far the best; men live happier and more
-contentedly under it; and it certainly does produce a much more genial
-and social intercourse among all classes, that men are dependent for
-their dignity on something else than their wine merchant and their
-pastry-cook. Still, yours is not the condition of progress; your people
-live content, perhaps happy, in their fixed position; but every man of
-ours, who is working for his daily dignity, as the Captain calls it,
-is, in a very unpleasant and uncomfortable manner, pressing onward and
-improving his own condition. Now, that nation in which every man is
-continually excited to improve his condition, is nationally progressive;
-that, in which every man is content in his own place, is nationally
-stationary. I do not say which is the best principle, only, there is
-something to be said on the other side. One thing is certain, our
-principle is not the same as yours; and it is excusable, when we do
-borrow from the continent, if we make a generous blunder in a science
-which we do not understand, and in the largeness of our heart, give
-medals to runaway Belgians, without remembering that the honour of
-the medal lies not in the silver, but in the action which the silver
-commemorates, and that, in truth, what we have given to the cowards who
-ran, we must have filched from the brave fellows who had earned for that
-medal its value.”
-
-“So far, at all events, you are right,” said Birger, “that your nation
-does not understand the science of decorations any more than ours. You
-helped to spoil your own Waterloo medal much more than ever the Belgians
-spoiled it, and that not altogether from your largeness of heart. If I
-had been a pink-faced ensign of that day, I should have been ashamed to
-wear my medal in the presence of a Peninsular veteran, who had done five
-hundred times as much as I. It was a better feeling than that of being
-ranked with the Belgians that made your people shy of their Waterloo
-medals. And now that you begin to distribute your decorations, you do
-not know how to do it: first of all you give it for any little trumpery
-affair, like sticking those Chinese pigs, and then you give it to all who
-have seen the smoke of the gunpowder.”
-
-“We presume that every one present does his duty, and that none can do
-more,” said the Captain.
-
-“A very pretty poetical fiction,” said Birger, “pity that it is a
-fiction. However, one thing is certain—that will never be prized that is
-shared by all alike; you see that at once in our case—it is equally true
-in you own.”
-
-Just then the Stockholm steamer, _Daniel Thunberg_, hove in sight, with
-her light blue pennant of smoke, so unlike the black volumes that roll
-from the chimneys of coal-burning Englishmen.
-
-“They have got something on board for us,” said Moodie; “that calico
-concern on her foremast is their best Swedish imitation of our English
-jack, and they always hoist it whenever they have got a letter or
-parcel for me. There goes a gun; those rascals are always glad of any
-opportunity for making a bang. Hallo, there! Nils!” continued he, in
-Swedish, to the master of his yacht, who had gone to sleep against the
-heel of the bowsprit, with his pipe in his mouth; “answer that signal,
-and send a boat on board the steamer.”
-
-He spoke as if he had a frigate’s crew at his command. Nils started
-up, and as he happened, at that moment at least, to be the captain and
-the whole ship’s company in his own person, he proceeded to obey both
-orders personally—in a few minutes was alongside the gay little craft,
-and returned with a letter, the writer of which, to judge from the
-superscription he placed upon it, must have considered Moodie a very
-great man indeed, so many titles did he prefix to his name—High-born and
-Illustrious were the very least of them.
-
-Moodie, a little afraid of the Captain’s satire—though the direction,
-after all, was nothing more than the ordinary Swedish form in which
-one gentleman addresses another, and quite as appropriate as our much
-mis-used esquire,—crumpled up the envelope in great haste.
-
-“Hurrah!” said he, flourishing the letter over his head, “this is the
-very thing for us—you are in high luck; look here.”
-
-“What is it?” said the Captain, for the letter, which was in Swedish and
-written in the Swedish character, might as well have been Cyrillic or
-Uncial, for anything he could make out of it.
-
-“Why, there is to be a skal in Wermeland, next Tuesday; a grand bear
-hunt, in which they drive twenty or thirty miles of country; this letter
-is from the very man I have been speaking of—Bjornstjerna, the Ofwer
-Jagmästere, and my own particular friend. Some half dozen respectable
-farmers have made oath to him that they have been annoyed by bears, and
-he tells me he has written to the præster of the neighbourhood, to give
-notice from their pulpits, and to turn out the whole country. That is the
-legal form on such occasions, and there is a heavy fine for any man who
-does not obey it.”
-
-“Hurrah!” said the Captain, in his turn, “then we shall kill a bear at
-last.”
-
-“That you will,” said Moodie; “Bjornstjerna knows his business as well
-as any man in Sweden; there are people who fancy his patronymic a
-nick-name[47] of his own earning. He would not be turning out the country
-for nothing, you may depend on it.”
-
-“Where is this to take place?”
-
-“Why, in Upper Wermeland, as I told you, near Lysvic, not very far from
-the banks of the Klara, a river I know well, as full of grayling as it
-can hold; not that that has much to do with bear hunting. It is not above
-a hundred and fifty or two hundred miles from this.”
-
-“Quite in the neighbourhood,” said the Captain, laughing.
-
-“O that is nothing, we never mind a hundred miles or so. If we get
-anything like a breeze, we will run across the Wener, in the yacht, we
-can send the carioles on by land to Amal, and we will pick up a waggon,
-or something, for the men, at there or at Carlstad; and then you will
-see how we will rattle up the country. We must send a boat, though, to
-Wenersborg this very night, and tell the post-master to make out a forbud
-for us; it will not do to trust to chance on such an occasion as this,
-for we shall have to collect a good many horses at every station. Let me
-see, we shall want one for each of us, and three for the waggon, that
-will make seven; and I suppose they will charge half a horse more besides
-the forbud; for we shall have four men with us, and we must take things
-enough to make us comfortable, for I dare say we shall have a week in
-the forest, one way or the other. Come, finish that bottle, and we will
-go in and have some coffee; it is not so well to stay out here at night
-when that blue mist is hanging on the swamp; besides, these rascally
-musquitoes are anything but pleasant.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-WENERN.
-
- “The Night has covered her beauty. Her hair sighs on Ocean’s
- wind. Her robe streams in dusky wreaths. She is like the fair
- Spirit of heaven in the midst of its shadowy mist.
-
- “From the wood-skirted waters of Lago ascend at times
- grey-bosomed mists, when the gates of the West are closed on
- the Sun’s eagle eye. Wide over Lara’s stream is poured the
- vapour dark and deep. The Moon, like a dim shield, is swimming
- through its folds.
-
- “‘Spread the sail,’ said the King; ‘seize the winds as they
- pour from Lena.’ We rose on the wave with songs,—we rushed with
- joy through the foam of the deep.”
-
- _Ossian._
-
-
- “So peaceful, calm, and leaden grey,
- Beneath our keel the waters lay,
- Parting around the vessel’s prow
- With rippling murmur, sweet and low,—
- And rising slowly from the lake,
- The wreathing mists asunder break—
- Revealing all concealed before
- Of forest, hill, and rocky shore.”
-
- _Anon._
-
-
-There was no great stir next morning at Gäddebäck, considering the
-importance of the expedition; as for preparations, no more preparation
-was necessary than is necessary for a detachment of soldiers that has
-received its route; the guns and ammunition were paraded, and the
-knapsacks were packed in light marching order; the carioles had been
-despatched over night to the post-master at Wenersborg, under the charge
-of Piersen and one of Moodie’s people, with directions to send on a
-forebud, and then to proceed by land to Amal; and the cutter having
-received her freight, had, on the preceding evening, hauled out into the
-stream in order to be taken in tow by the night steamer, for Wenersborg.
-Moodie had determined that there was no need of disappointing himself
-or his friends of their day’s fishing at the upper rapids, seeing that
-they might easily be taken on the road. He proposed, therefore, joining
-the cutter at Wenersborg in the evening, and making the passage to Amal
-by night, observing, that by getting what sleep they could while at sea,
-they would lose no time, and might start immediately on landing.
-
-“This is rather close shaving, Moodie,” said the Captain, as they sat at
-breakfast the following morning,—rather an early breakfast, for Moodie
-meant to give the fishing-ground what he called a full due.—“You have
-made the evening breeze an element in your calculation; we shall be in a
-mess if this night is anything like the last.”
-
-“O, but it will not be, ‘you see ghosts by daylight,’ as our people say;
-there is always a breeze on the open lake, it is not like this valley;
-besides, if it does fail us, we have only to post; there is a regular
-posting track across the lake, with stations on the islands, where they
-keep boats in the summer and horses in the winter. If the breeze does
-fail us, which I tell you it will not, we have only to send the dingy to
-Leckö or Lurön, whichever we may be nearest to, and get boats enough to
-carry us all.”
-
-The Parson made no opposition, though in his heart he agreed with the
-Captain that the experiment might very possibly involve the loss of
-their ultimate object, the skål; the salmo ferox was, however, a new
-fish to him, and notwithstanding all he had said in its disparagement
-on the banks of the Torjedahl, he would not much have liked to lose his
-chance of landing one. By his advice a light rod or two were added to the
-baggage,—for the rivers north of the Wener abound in grayling, though,
-strange to say, these delicate fish are never found south of it.
-
-The four-oared gig being the fastest pulling boat, carried them up the
-stream to the point at which the great canal leaves the river; beyond
-this it ceases to be navigable on account of its rocks and rapids, but
-for this very reason becomes much more valuable as a fishing preserve.
-At these rapids, which was the crack station of all Moodie’s fishery,
-was a sort of out-post, where he had a keeper’s house, with a separate
-establishment of boats. The Captain turned up his eyes a little at
-hearing of this fresh proof of his friend’s magnificence; but it sounds
-grander to English ears than it is in fact, for Moodie made money by
-his fishery, and of course required men, not only to preserve it, but
-to catch the fish while he was absent on any roving expedition like the
-present; and as for boats, where planks may be had at the saw-mills for
-almost nothing, and where every man is more or less of a carpenter,
-rough fishing punts are articles of very small expense indeed, and are
-generally built at home.
-
-It is said that the great lake, Wener, even now the largest in Europe,
-was once much larger; that it once extended to the falls of Trollhättan;
-that all the low-lying and marshy shores, which are now the delight
-of ducks and the glory of musquitoes, were once under water, but that
-the stream having gradually worked its way over the falls, like a saw,
-continually wearing away the rock from which it fell, and carrying it
-off, portion by portion, opened a deeper passage, and that the lake has
-gradually receded to its present limits.
-
-This of course, happened in Preadamite times, or, to use the language
-of the allegorical history of creation supplied by the prose Edda—in
-those days, “before the sons of Bör had slain the giant Ymir.”[48] And
-certainly the formation of the valley afforded some grounds for the
-conjecture: two low lines of hills, steep and cliff-shaped, suggested
-readily the idea of Preadamite banks; while the flat bottom of the
-valley, in many places irrecoverably marshy, in all liable to be covered
-with water whenever the river is in flood, looked quite as much like the
-bottom of a drained pond as it did like the real land. It was not without
-its beauty, either; if ever it had been a lake, it must have been a
-lake studded with low islands, and these, as well as much of the marshy
-ground, were covered with forests, hiding, by the luxuriance of their
-growth, the numerous cultivated spots which intervened.
-
-It was a very different description of scenery to that of Norway
-certainly, for the hills of Hunneberg and Halleberg, which bound the view
-to the east and contain some very valuable limestone quarries, are, what
-limestone soil invariably is, tame and monotonous. They, however, abound
-in oak—a very rare tree in the north,—and also in deer and roe-bucks,
-which are not common either, but this being a royal forest, they were
-probably better looked after than they are in private lands, and Moodie,
-who, practically, had the rangership, as he was the only man allowed to
-shoot there, was scrupulously particular, and would as soon have thought
-of shooting a keeper as of shooting a deer.
-
-The rapids are formed by a ridge of rock which crosses the river, over
-which it pours down one or two steps leaving deep broad pools of eddying
-water between them. The whole of this part of the river is overhung with
-trees of the largest growth which Sweden affords, and is as beautiful a
-spot as any they had seen. As the rocks are extremely rugged, the river
-is of very unequal breadth,—the banks, at one place, approaching so near
-to each other, that an Alpine bridge is formed of pine trees thrown
-across it. Four of the longest firs that could be found, with their
-stems resting on the rocks, are tied together in pairs, at their upper
-ends, by means of two iron bands, forming a broad Gothic arch. This is
-the skeleton of the bridge; the horizontal timbers, which were laid for
-the footways, passed them at about a third of their height, like the
-cross-bar of the letter A, and formed ties to steady them as well as to
-support the rest of the structure. It was an exceedingly picturesque
-affair, and told well for the ingenuity of the architect.
-
-This bridge was their first stage. The keeper’s hut commanded the pools
-both above and below the bridge, and had establishments of boats for both
-divisions of the river—for there was considerable difficulty in getting a
-boat from one to the other.
-
-The salmo ferox, when small, is often caught with a fly, and may be so
-caught when fourteen or sixteen pounds weight, but this is not a very
-common occurrence. The usual way of fishing for him is with a large litch
-of six pairs of hooks and a lip-hook, very heavily loaded and baited
-with a bleak or a gwinead, of which there are plenty in the river. A
-boat is absolutely necessary. The fisherman stands in the stern, and
-runs out some thirty yards of the line heavily loaded, with a short
-stiff pike-rod; the boat must be kept continually traversing the stream,
-beginning at the head of it and quartering it down to the foot, while
-the troller at the stern, with the point of his rod low, keeps his bait
-spinning in jerks,—the object being to imitate a sick or wounded fish.
-At each turn of the boat, the line must be gathered in by the hand, or
-the edges of the rapids, which indeed are the most likely parts, would be
-untried; four out of five fish are caught while the boats are in the act
-of turning.
-
-This rather monotonous description of sport had gone on for some time,
-when the Parson felt the rod nearly taken out of his hand by the rush
-of a fish. The battle was furious, for the salmo ferox does not belie
-his name, but it was a mere trial of tackle, without any opportunity for
-the exercise of skill,—carried on, too, at the bottom of water twenty
-feet deep; and when, after a quarter of an hour’s boring against the
-bottom, the Parson succeeded in bringing to the gaff his huge capture, he
-declared he had done enough for fame, struck up his rod, sought the lower
-pool in pursuit of gös and id, with which, as well as with trout, it was
-said to abound.
-
-The Swedes say that gös is a fish very difficult to catch; to an
-Englishman, by far the most difficult part of the business is to name
-the fish when he has caught it. Certainly, no one is qualified to do so
-who speaks of Göthe under his English appellations of Goth and Goaty:
-the dotted o affects and softens the preceding consonant as well as the
-vowel, and the name of this fish is pronounced much as if it was spelt
-“yeus,” in French letters. The difficulty experienced by the Swedes in
-catching it, arises from the fact of its requiring fine tackle in the
-clear waters which it frequents, instead of the coarse gimp or wire which
-is sufficient for the rash and headlong pike; in all other respects the
-habits of the two fish are very similar, except that the gös is a much
-smaller fish, and very much more prized. For him, the Parson was content
-with setting lay-lines with live baits and considerable length of fine
-gut, while he directed his personal attention to the id.
-
-In every particular, except one, the id is a chub; his haunts, his
-habits, his food are those of a chub; in looks, too—though certainly not
-altogether so clumsy, and, so to speak, chubby,—he reminds one forcibly
-of the chub family. He is something like the half-polished parvenu in his
-transition state of existence, just admitted into aristocratic circles,
-but, as yet, unable entirely to lay aside his brandy-and-water habits
-and feelings. In every particular, _except one_, the id is a chub, and
-that is, that he is by far the best eating of any of the cyprinæ; in
-fact, so far as the pot goes, he is a very respectable prize. The Parson,
-who, in his youth, had caught many a chub, and was fully aware of the
-zoological affinity of the two fish, was by no means at a loss for
-subjects of mutual interest between himself and his new introduction; a
-fly, resembling, as near as it could be made on the spur of the moment,
-a humble-bee, was tied on his finest gut, and the boat, anchored in
-the stern, was by slow degrees permitted to descend within long-cast
-of a still, over-shaded pool: the fly, thrown from as great a distance
-as he could command, fell as lightly as so clumsy a combination of fur
-and feathers could be expected to fall, and was moved very slowly and
-regularly over, or rather through, the water; for, as it may be supposed,
-the length of line caused it to sink a few inches below the surface.
-
-His science was not unrewarded, for, before long, a sluggish roll in the
-waters, and a strong, obstinate, pig-headed pull at his line announced a
-capture. This was quickly followed by others, for id, though gregarious,
-are quite as indifferent to the troubles of their neighbours as if they
-were human creatures; provided you do not show yourself and alarm them
-for their individual safety, their friend may kick and struggle before
-their eyes, without causing a single wag of their selfish tails.
-
-It was not bad fun upon the whole, for the id, though not possessing a
-tithe of the life and activity of the salmo genus, pull like donkeys,
-and might have lasted some time longer, for the Parson was getting
-interested, when Jacob was seen making his leisurely way along the
-bank, for the purpose of announcing “mid-dag’s mad.” The ground was
-sufficiently tangled, and Torkel, who was managing the boat and landing
-the fish, was extremely amused at the air of vexation and annoyance
-with which he dipped under a low-spreading fir branch, or put aside a
-too affectionate bramble. About a hundred yards above the id pool was a
-little beach of the whitest and smoothest sand that ever fairy danced
-upon. From the point where the boat was anchored, it was evident that
-this was caused by a little dull-looking stream, which had brought the
-white particles from the hills during the floods; but which then, very
-suspiciously, did _not_ run into the river, but lost itself behind the
-white beach. All this was lost upon Jacob, who was in the wood, and who,
-not liking the tangled ground, made a valorous jump on to the white beach.
-
-“Der var et spring af en Leerovn!” shouted Torkel, quoting a Danish
-proverb (“there was a jump for a tile-stove!”)—as poor Jacob flopped
-through the thin crust of white sand into a bed of black, tenacious
-clay, in which he seemed planted up to his middle, with his long flowing
-coat-tails spread out upon the unbroken sand.
-
-The more he screamed with fear, the more they screamed with laughter.
-There was not the slightest danger, for he had evidently got as far as he
-meant to sink; but as for getting out without a purchase from something
-solid, the thing was impossible.
-
-“We must have another fish,” said Torkel, to make up the dozen; “and it
-will be impossible to get Jacob out without spoiling the pool by pulling
-the boat across it.”
-
-The Parson coolly took another cast,—Jacob screamed louder than ever.
-
-“Bother that fellow,—I have missed him,” said the Parson, meaning not
-Jacob, but the fish.
-
-“Try again,” said Torkel, coolly, “you will get him next time.”
-
-A despairing shriek from Jacob.
-
-“Ah! that is in him!—this is the biggest we have had yet! mind what you
-are about with the landing-net,—do not let him run under the boat!
-Well, really, we must pull out poor Jacob, or he will poison us with bad
-cookery, out of revenge. Up killick! or whatever you call it in your
-language, and shove across to him.”
-
-But when they landed, they seemed as far from the rescue as ever. Jacob
-had jumped vigorously, and the bank from which he had jumped was high. To
-reach him was impossible, and to get out on the sand would be to share
-his fate. While Torkel was trying to slip down the bank, the Parson took
-out his knife to cut a branch.
-
-“Stop! stop!” said Torkel, who, unsuccessful, had scrambled back. “What
-are you doing?—we shall all suffer for this; it is elder that you are
-cutting.”
-
-“Well! what then?”
-
-“Why, if we take it without asking for it, the elves will have power over
-us for nine days, and the chances are, some of us will die suddenly.”
-
-The Parson was inclined to laugh, but he did not, and turned to look for
-a branch of less dangerous wood; but Torkel, placing himself before it,
-taking off his hat and bowing three times to the tree, said, “Elf-mother!
-elf-mother! let me have some of thy elder, and I will give thee something
-of mine.”
-
-The elf-mother certainly did not refuse, and Torkel took silence for
-consent, which it proverbially is, and cut away at the bough, which,
-stripped of its side branches, formed a communication with the imbedded
-Jacob, who, black without and sulky within, and, as Torkel said, looking
-more like a pig than ever, was dragged floundering to the shore,—not at
-all the more pleased when Torkel reminded him that, as they were in light
-marching order, he would have to wash his shirt, trousers, and stockings,
-and to sit without them till they were dry.
-
-When the party met at their mid-dag’s mad, which was not till long
-after the Swedish time for mid-dag’s mad had passed, there was a very
-respectable show of fish—not only enough for the cutter, but also a very
-handsome basket for the Gotheborg steamer that evening, which was duly
-packed and forwarded in a light cart to the locks; while the party,
-shouldering their weapons and that part of their prize which they had
-reserved for themselves, took the forest path to Wenersborg. Before
-sundown they were safely established on board the little cutter, who
-immediately tripped her anchor, hoisted jib and foresail—for the mainsail
-was already set,—payed off slowly before it, and stood out into the lake,
-which was glowingly reflecting the red beams of the setting sun, but
-still faintly rippling under the easterly breeze.
-
-“Did not I tell you so?” said Moodie, who, seating himself with his legs
-dangling down the well, had assumed the tiller just as a gentleman drives
-his own carriage; “we have had a capital day’s sport, and got a glorious
-breakfast for to-morrow. I have turned a few bancos, which will help to
-pay for the trip, and here we are, resting from our labours while the
-wind is carrying us on our journey.”
-
-“I hope it will stand,” said old Nils, “but it is easterly, you see, and
-the sun is setting; the wind does not like to blow in the face of the
-sun.”
-
-“Go to the—Strömkarl—your old croaker, and check the main-sheet; you
-have got the sail a fathom too flat. The wind is drawing round to the
-southward, as any one may see; ease off the jib and foresail too, while
-you are about it.”
-
-The fact was, that the wind had stood steady enough, but Moodie, in his
-anxiety, had let her fall off a couple of points, which Nils saw, but
-was too sulky to mention, and which the rest of the party did not see,
-because, as strangers, they were ignorant of the true course, and there
-was no binnacle, or, so far as they could see, compass of any kind,
-besides those they had in their pockets.
-
-The cutter was half-decked, with a tidy little cabin forward, and a
-couple of bunks for sleeping—one on each side of the well; in these the
-party very shortly disposed themselves, for they knew that a pretty stiff
-day’s work lay before them; and having established the best defence in
-their power against the musquitoes, slept as campaigners sleep, in right
-down earnest.
-
-“Hallo, Nils! where are we?” asked a sleepy voice next morning.
-
-The Captain, who had curled himself into the opposite bunk, was not quite
-certain whether it was not still a part of his dreams.
-
-The next call was quite enough to settle this fact.
-
-“Nils!” roared Moodie, “why Nils! confound the fellow, I believe he is
-asleep.”
-
-And so, sure enough, he was, with his head on the rudder-case, as fast as
-any one of the seven sleepers of Ephesus; and poor Nils was by no means
-singular in this respect—passengers were asleep, attendants were asleep,
-dogs were asleep, Jacob was asleep and snoring, the winds were asleep,
-everything was asleep but the sails, and they were waving to and fro with
-the knittles pattering against their surfaces, and shaking the night dew
-on the deck like rain, while over all, like an eider-down coverlet, had
-sunk on them all a steaming white fog, so thick that the sharpest eyes
-could not see the little burgee at the mast-head, or the out-haul block
-at the bowsprit end. It was not dark, it never is in summer, but no one
-could tell whether the sun had risen or not.
-
-“Here’s a go!” said the Captain.
-
-“Faith! I wish it was a go,” said the Parson, putting his head out of the
-cabin door; “it seems to me just the reverse.”
-
-Moodie, whose clever plan seemed to promise anything but success, was as
-sulky as Nils had been overnight, and rated the poor fellow soundly for
-going to sleep.
-
-Nils represented, not altogether unreasonably, that the wind had gone to
-sleep first.
-
-“What is to be done now?” said Moodie, breaking off a discontented and
-reflective whistle, the last notes of which had been singularly out of
-tune; “I cannot send this sleepy old fool to Leckö, or anywhere else, for
-I do not know where Leckö is, or where we are, or anything about it in
-this fog; who was to have thought of this?”
-
-“Never mind,” said the Parson—
-
- “The wisest schemes of mice and men
- Gang aft ajee;”—
-
-“I suppose this fog will clear off some time or other, and we are well
-provisioned, at all events.”
-
-“Yes,” said Moodie, “but we have sent on a forebud, and we shall have to
-pay for the horses all the way up.”
-
-“Well, that is a bad job,” said the Parson, “as far as it goes; but the
-worst that can come of it is to pay double,—once for the failure, and
-once for the real journey.”
-
-“No, that is not the worst, by any means; we have not only lost our
-money, but our forebud; we shall be kept waiting for an hour or two at
-every station, and shall most probably arrive when the fun is over. At
-such out-of-the-way places there is not a chance of holl-horses, that is
-to say, horses which the post-master keeps himself on speculation, and we
-shall have to send to the farms, whose turn it is to furnish them. I have
-been kept waiting that way for four hours at a single station.”
-
-Here Nils, who had been up to the mast-head to see if he could make out
-anything (for these fogs very often lie on the surface, not a dozen
-feet thick, looking from above like so much cotton wool in a box, while
-the sun is shining brightly above them), slid down the back-stay, and
-declared he could feel a light air aloft on the starboard beam; “his
-cheek felt quite cold,” he said, “though the heavy main-sail, dripping
-with dew, did not acknowledge the breeze at all.”
-
-“How is her head; why, confound you, you have forgotten the compass” (not
-at all an unlikely piece of forgetfulness in a river yacht.) This was
-soon remedied, for the Parson put his own little pocket affair on the
-deck, which, as it was a calm, did quite as well as her own.
-
-She was looking a little southward of east, having probably turned round
-and round a dozen times during the night.
-
-“That would do, the wind was southerly then; but where were they?”
-
-The day was now getting bright, and the fog was looking like a silver
-veil; the tiresome pattering of the knittles had ceased, or was renewed
-only at intervals; she was evidently gliding through the water,—but
-which way were they to steer? Amal certainly must be somewhere to the
-northward, but within six or eight points it was impossible to tell
-where after such a sleepy watch as had been kept during the past night.
-Reluctantly, Moodie brought her to the wind, and hauled his foresheet to
-windward.
-
-But the breeze increased, and the fog began to lift now and then; it
-could be seen under, as it were, and though just as thick about the
-mast-head as ever, a hundred yards or so of the surface could be seen
-plainly on either side.
-
-Nils rubbed his hands at this infallible sign of the rising of the fog,
-and Moodie, somewhat easier in his mind, ordered coffee.
-
-“There’s land on the port-beam,” said the Captain, during one of these
-lifts. “I am sure I saw land, whatever it is.”
-
-“There ought to be no land there,” said Moodie; for, lying as she did
-now, close to the wind, she had brought the east, that is to say, the
-great expanse of the lake, to her port-side, and was looking exactly on
-the opposite direction to her course; “get a cast of the lead, and keep a
-bright look out for rocks.”
-
-Just then the curtain of the fog rose in earnest, and disclosed a cluster
-of rocks and islets, among which they had got themselves completely
-entangled. “Why, what is this?—it is! no, it can’t be! yet it is—”
-
-“It is Lurön,” said Nils.
-
-“Lurön,” said Moodie, “why, that is miles to the eastward of our course!
-Where have you been steering to during the night?”
-
-“You told me to ‘keep her as she goes,’ and so I did.”
-
-And so he had; the fault lay with Moodie himself, who from the first
-starting had steered two points to the eastward of his course; the fog
-and the current—for the Wener is big enough for current—had done the rest.
-
-It did not however signify, the breeze blew merrily and promised to
-stand; the fog now lay in light fleecy clouds far above their heads;
-the sun, not far from the horizon, began to smile upon them and to
-chase away the dangers of the night, and with them the ill-humour they
-had engendered; the fore-sheet was let draw, and as she gathered way
-she tacked, fell off on the port-tack, and with a jolly breeze on her
-quarter, buzzed away through the water to the northwest.
-
-Soon a line of trees appeared on the horizon, as if they were dancing
-in the air, or floating in the water; then the trunks began to form and
-unite with something below them; then the line of land, real firm land,
-began to manifest itself; then red, and white, and black, and brown, and
-striped cottages began to show out; and before ten the anchor was let go
-before the little town of Amal.
-
-The horses were still awaiting them, for the allotted three hours, during
-which they are bound to remain, had not yet elapsed and they escaped on
-payment of the regulated fine for being after time. The men were sent
-on immediately in the waggon which Moodie had spoken of, and which he
-had written to his friend the farmer to borrow, sending his note by the
-forebud. In half-an-hour the carioles were harnessed, and as they plunged
-into the forests at the back of Amal, the last thing they saw was the
-pretty cutter, close hauled, lying as near to her course to Wenersborg as
-the wind would let her look.
-
-The trees of Western Carlstadtlan, which they were now traversing, are
-said to be the finest in Sweden; this is due partly to the depth and
-goodness of the soil—a circumstance which will eventually secure their
-destruction, by offering a temptation to convert the fjeld into arable
-land; that they stood, even yet, was principally on account of the
-absence of any great rivers, which afford the only means of conveying
-timber to the coast. The land is quite as good on the banks of the Klara
-and Swedish Glommen, the latter of which runs into the lake a few miles
-eastward of Amal, but there is a sensible difference in the growth of the
-timber. There was fir, no doubt, in plenty—there is no Swedish forest
-without fir,—but there were also huge beech trees, and a sprinkling of
-not very happy-looking oak, that put one in mind of the English in India:
-they lived in the country, but they did not enjoy it.
-
-The whole country looked like an enormous park—rather too thickly
-planted, to be sure,—one kept looking, at every turn of the road, for
-the mansion; and the road, too, though not one of very great traffic,
-was very good, winding along with a great border of short turf on each
-side, comparatively level on the whole, but occasionally interrupted
-by a descent so sharp that it seemed as if the carioles were going to
-cut a summerset over the horses’ ears,—more particularly as the horses
-invariably chose those portions of the road for going as hard as they
-could lay legs to ground, a peculiarity sufficiently trying to the
-nerves; and as those portions of the road were invariably cut to pieces
-by the rush of the water, and were full of rocks besides, sufficiently
-trying to the bodily feelings.
-
-On the opposite sides of these ravines, the horses would creep at the
-rate of about a mile an hour, the passenger being so absolutely expected
-to walk up them, that many of the horses came to a dead halt at the
-bottom, and refused to proceed at all till disencumbered of their weight.
-
-“It is not without reason,” said Birger, as they sat on the roadside, at
-the top of one of these descents, watching the slow progress of their
-carioles, under the care of their respective schutzebonder—little boys
-or girls, as the case may be, who sit on the foot-boards, and bring the
-horses back after they have done their stage;—“it is not without reason
-that the ancient Swedes have invented the legend that in certain places
-the elves and the trees are identical; that these forest elves are
-intensely patriotic, and that in times of invasion they assemble their
-bands and fight by the side of their human countrymen, in defence of
-their common country. Many of the trees in Carlstadtlan, as well as in
-other places, are trees only by day, but are armed soldiers by night.
-Of course the idea is that the forests fight for the country in case
-of invasion, and add to the numbers of its defenders; and so they do.
-Russia might pour her thousands upon us, and sweep us off the face of the
-earth, by mere force of numbers, in an open field; but how would she ever
-force her passage through a forest like this, filled with a few thousand
-riflemen? The trees would fight for us even by day; but by night our
-numbers, counting the elves, would be irresistible.
-
-“The slight variety that there is in the legend in Denmark, bears this
-out there also; where the deep Sound and fjords intersect the kingdom,
-the stony promontories are its best defence, and the elf kings are called
-Klintekonger, or Promontory Kings. There are several stories about their
-parading their elf soldiers, with fife and drum, on the breaking out of
-a war, and driving over the sea, with snorting horses, in clouds and
-blackness, from one promontory to another. The elf king of Bornholm will
-not allow any earthly prince to sleep more than three nights within his
-dominions, nor will King Tolv permit any king besides himself to pass the
-bridge of Skjelskör. This is all part of the same allegory; the elves are
-the spirits of the woods, and the Grims of the cataracts, and the Haaf
-manner of the sea, and the Strömkarls of the rivers. They all bear the
-same character; they are capricious as the elements are over which they
-preside, and often injure most those who are most accustomed to them, but
-in case of an invasion become rivers, and lakes, and fjords, and forests,
-and unite to repel the invader. Bother that little schutzebonde of mine;
-I wish she were a boy, that I might whip her instead of the horse;” and
-Birger strode down the hill to infuse fresh spirit into the post-horse
-and post-girl.
-
-Thus they travelled on, at the rate of five or six miles an hour on the
-average, bowling along through the forest, but interrupted, whenever
-they came near cultivation, by timber fences and swing gates across the
-road, living mostly on their own provisions, with the help of a little
-gröd which they got from the post-houses, sleeping when they would in the
-haylofts, sometimes in the open air, and occasionally on peculiarly dirty
-sheepskins in the post-houses. Oh those sheepskins—
-
- “Ye gentlemen of England,
- Who live at home at ease,
- How little do you think upon
- The dangers of the fleas!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE MEET.
-
- “A various scene the clansmen made—
- Some sate, some stood, some slowly strayed,—
- But most, with mantles folded round,
- Were couched to rest upon the ground—
- Scarce to be known by curious eye
- From the deep heather where they lie;
- But when, advancing through the gloom,
- They saw their chieftain’s eagle plume,
- Their shout of welcome, shrill and wide,
- Shook the steep mountain’s steady side,—
- Thrice it arose, and lake and fell
- Three times returned the martial yell.
- It died upon Rochastle’s plain,
- And silence claimed her evening reign.”
-
- _Lady of the Lake._
-
-
-Evening had already begun to close in, and the dark branches of the
-firs, which for the last five or six miles had canopied the road, were
-beginning to grow darker still, when the carioles emerged from the great
-forest into a green park-like glade, studded with feathering clumps of
-birch and spruce; and rattled up to the door of the little inn that stood
-on the borders of it, which was the place appointed for the meet.
-
-The inn, which, after all, was little better than a post-house, was
-evidently not large enough to contain a tenth part of the crowd collected
-in front of it; nor did the half dozen wooden houses, which formed the
-village, afford much more extensive accommodation.
-
-Few, however, of those there assembled seemed to care much about the
-matter; the evening was warm, the sky was clear, and the stars were
-beginning to twinkle merrily through the calm blue sky; the good green
-wood was shelter enough for the hardy peasants and their equally hardy
-landlords, and would have been shelter enough though the ground had been
-white with snow.
-
-Fires were beginning to rise here and there, bringing into view the
-gipsy-like groups collected round them, as they sat, stood, or lay at
-full-length upon the turf—some busied about the little tin kettles,
-in which they were mixing their rye gröd, some bringing in fuel,
-some returning from the inn and the temporary stalls that had been
-established round it for the sale of bread, cheese, butter, brandy,
-and other necessaries; though most of the party had brought good store
-of provision in their own bags. Some—and they mostly the elders of the
-parish—were quietly smoking their pipes, and discussing the events of
-former skals, and prophesying good or bad of the present one, according
-as their dispositions were sanguine or the reverse; but all were talking,
-laughing, hand-shaking, imparting or listening to little pieces of
-domestic news, or parish scandal—for, in the forest parishes, (and in
-Sweden most parishes are of that character), a skal brings together men
-who have but few other opportunities of meeting.
-
-A few old stagers, indeed, were trying to get one good night’s sleep, in
-order to prepare themselves for the fatigues of which the morrow was but
-the beginning, and were stretching themselves on the turf, with their
-feet towards their fires; but new arrivals were continually rousing them
-up, and some fresh Calle Jonsen, or Swen Larssen, or Nils Ericsen, would
-be continually dropping in with fresh inquiries, fresh news, and fresh
-greetings.
-
-From the windows of the inn, which were wide open, a broad, bright
-glare of light was streaming across the glade, obscured now and then by
-the shadow of some great head and shoulders—for the room was full of
-people,—but strong enough, notwithstanding, to light up the boughs of the
-old lime trees that shaded the porch, glittering among their soft green
-leaves, as if they really were what the Swedes suppose them to be, the
-roosting places of the Spirits of Light.
-
-This was evidently the head quarters of the skal, where the generals
-and field officers were holding high council, receiving information,
-arranging plans, and issuing orders; and Birger, springing from his
-cariole and throwing the reins of his horse to his schutzebond, or
-post-boy, and committing, with utter recklessness of consequences, the
-whole department of quartermaster-general, and commissary-general to
-boot, into the hands of Jacob, rushed into the room, followed by his
-three friends.
-
-This opportune reinforcement was greeted with shouts of welcome: Birger
-himself was an old friend of the Ofwer Jagmästere, and had, before this,
-signalized himself as a hunter. Englishmen are invariably popular both in
-Norway and Sweden; and besides, the value of English rifles, and English
-sportsmen to carry them, was universally acknowledged. Moodie, however,
-was the great prize; he had been now, for four years in the country,
-and had been there quite long enough to be known and appreciated as the
-best shot and the most sagacious and inventive leader in the province.
-With a natural turn for the chase in all its varieties, he had thrown
-himself, heart and soul, into the business of bear hunting, had studied
-it theoretically and had worked out his theories practically, till he was
-universally acknowledged to be a fair match for the “gentleman in the
-fur cloak, who has the wisdom of ten and the strength of twenty,” as the
-Swedes periphrastically term their great enemy, the bear.
-
-He had remained in the porch for a minute or two, giving some directions
-to his followers, so that the greetings, and introductions, and first
-inquiries had a little subsided when he entered; but the moment his
-well-known green cap was seen in the doorway, there arose such a shout of
-welcome, that it made the flitches of bacon and strings of onions tremble
-from the rafters.
-
-“Modige! Modige!”[49] for so they had naturalized his name into a word
-which, in their language, signifies courageous.
-
-The well-known cry was caught up among the parties out of doors, and
-echoed back again from tree to tree, while the glare of the camp-fires
-shewed dark shadows of insane figures, waving arms and hats, aye, and
-handkerchiefs, too, for every woman who can possibly slip away from home,
-turns out on a skal.
-
-“Modige! Modige!” again came thundering and screaming back in all sorts
-of voice, old and young, male and female; now dying away, then bursting
-forth, as some distant post took it up again.
-
-“Upon my word,” said the Ofwer Jagmästere Bjornstjerna, speaking in
-French, out of compliment to the strangers—for this language, though
-utterly despised in Norway, is pretty generally spoken among the Swedish
-aristocracy; “upon my word, the people have decided the matter for us;
-I wanted some one to take charge of the hållet, and was going to offer
-you the command the moment I saw you, but the people seem to have taken
-the matter into their own hands now; you cannot possibly refuse, you are
-elected by acclamation.”
-
-“I am delighted to be of any use,” said Moodie,—in fact, he did look
-delighted in good earnest,—“and will do my best; but you are aware that I
-am not very familiar with the ground here.”
-
-“Never mind that,” said Bjornstjerna; “we will soon find some one to be
-your quartermaster-general; what we want is, a man that the people look
-up to, who knows his business, and is accustomed to command.”
-
-“How many shall I have under me in the hållet?”
-
-“We cannot spare you above five hundred,” said Bjornstjerna; “but the
-ground is easy enough, at least so far as the hållet is concerned. See
-here,” and he produced a rough but well-executed military sketch of the
-ground, which he had surveyed and mapped that morning; “this plain is the
-country we mean to drive,—there is about three miles of it in length,
-that is to say,” he added, parenthetically, nodding to the Englishmen,
-“what you would call in your country, one or two-and-twenty. On the
-west, as you see, it is bounded by the river which I have marked here
-in blue; this, in its course, expands into these two lakes, and just
-by the water-side the country is comparatively open, with a few farm
-houses and hamlets about it; the forest, however, closes it all round,
-getting thicker as you approach the mountains. On the east is this range
-of heights which, as luck will have it, I find are scarped by nature
-into cliffs, so that nothing but a bird can get up them—except at these
-passes, which I have marked on the map with a cross. These are mostly
-the dry or half-dry beds of torrents, and by the side of almost all
-of them there is a passage into the upper fjeld, practicable for men,
-and, consequently, for beasts also, when they are frightened. At this
-point, where we intend stationing our dref, the range of hills is about
-six of your miles distant from the line of the river, but it gradually
-approaches it; and at this point, where there are some falls and rapids,
-the distance is very trifling—not above a thousand eller—somewhere about
-half an English mile; and, besides, there is a spur of rock here which
-causes the falls of the river, and upon this the forest is very thin and
-open. Here I propose placing you with the hållet. You will establish
-yourself on the reverse slope of the spur, so that our shot will pass
-over your heads; you will then only have to clear away sufficient of the
-under-stuff from the front of your position to give you a fair shot at
-anything that attempts to cross.
-
-“About a thousand or fifteen hundred eller in front of your position, and
-parallel to it, runs a cow-track to the upper säters, which, upon the
-whole, is pretty open, and upon which you may as well set a hundred or
-two of your men, to improve to-morrow into a shooting line. Here we shall
-take our stand after we have driven the country. There is a thickish bit
-between this path and your position; the game will not object to enter
-it, and if they do, we ought to get every one of them, for to the left
-the rock is absolutely perpendicular, and on the right the rapids are
-such that nothing can cross them.”
-
-“You have no skal-plats?” said Moodie.
-
-“Why this is a skal-plats,” said Bjornstjerna, “rather a large one, to be
-sure; but we shall not run much risk of getting our men shot in driving
-it, because you will be on the reverse slope; and, by the way, you must
-be very particular in cautioning all your skalfogdar to keep their men
-from showing themselves on the crest of the hill. I did at one time think
-of making a skal-plats here, on the banks of this lower lake, and driving
-from both ends at the same time; but the ground is not favourable; a
-good deal of it is cleared, and every bear will make for the roots of
-the mountains, where the under-stuff is thickest; they cannot get up the
-perpendicular cliffs, to be sure, but we should have them creeping up a
-little way by the branches, and then stealing back as soon as the dref
-has passed the place,—upon the whole, though, I think my present plan is
-the best.”
-
-“I really think it is,” said Moodie, “as far as I can judge from seeing
-it on paper; but you seem to have a pretty large country to drive, not
-less than twenty miles English in length. What number do you muster?”
-
-“Not above fifteen hundred or two thousand at the most,” said
-Bjornstjerna, “though I have called out five parishes; but look at the
-place, it seems cut out for a skal,—half-a-dozen boats will guard the
-river, which is navigable in its whole length till you come to the rapids
-which flank your position, and not a bear will go near the houses, as
-you know, or face the open ground, if he can possibly help it,—so much
-for our right flank; while for the other, a small picket at each of the
-water-courses, will be quite sufficient to guard them till the dref
-has passed, and then the picket can either strengthen the other guards
-farther on, or reinforce our line, or join you at the hållet, according
-as they are wanted. Then, since the cliffs keep approaching the river, in
-proportion as we drive forward so our line will be strengthened by the
-men closing on each other, till, in the end, when the beasts begin to
-break out, we shall be able to send you a reinforcement of two or three
-hundred men, for we shall have more than we want.”
-
-“That will do,” said Moodie; “we shall have a glorious skal, I see, and I
-give you great credit for making the most of your men.”
-
-“The truth is, I have quite as many men as I want—I have never been at a
-loss for them; what I have been at a loss for, hitherto, is officers,
-for the Indelta has been unexpectedly summoned to Stockholm, and with
-them I have lost almost every man who knows how to command.”
-
-“Why not wait till they come back?” said Birger; “they never keep the
-Indelta out for more than three weeks, and I am sure the ‘Fur-clothed
-Disturbers’ would wait for you:” (no Swede ever mentions the bear’s name,
-if he can possibly help it).
-
-“Yes,” said Bjornstjerna, “but after that the militia is to be called
-out, and if I get my officers I should lose my men—aye, and two-thirds of
-the women, too. How many women do you think would turn out, if you took
-away all the men between the ages of twenty and twenty-five? And let me
-tell you that the women, though the law does not allow us to press them
-into the service, are just as useful as the men,—and in the dref, where
-all you want is to drive the game forward, a great deal more so, for they
-talk twice as much, and their screams, and squalls, and laughter, are
-heard as far again as the men’s shouts. O, by the Thousand! I had rather
-lose my men than my women. But you gentlemen are a perfect Godsend; I
-shall do very well for officers now. Herr Modige is kind enough to take
-the hållet, and, whether you like it or no, Master Lieutenant, you will
-have the charge of that skal-arm which furnishes the pickets.”
-
-“Well, I suppose I must obey my superior officer; I wish they treated us
-Lieutenants of the Guards as well as they do those of England, and then I
-should be Captain as well as you—commanding you, perhaps, if I happened
-to be senior.”
-
-“Would you, my boy? I would have you to know that I rank a Colonel now,—I
-write ‘Hof’ before my name.”
-
-“Upon my soul, old fellow, I congratulate you; I do not know any one who
-deserves it better.”
-
-“No more do I,” said Bjornstjerna, “and I must say that it is not often
-that the Förste Hof Jagmästere shows such a specimen of discrimination.
-However, to business. Along the left flank of the dref, you will see
-that in the course of our beat there are some fifteen or twenty places
-where game can escape by climbing up the water courses. At each of these
-you will post a picket, strong or weak, according to the nature of the
-ground. Herr Länsman, can you furnish the Lieutenant with a man who knows
-the country?”
-
-The Länsman, or tax-gatherer, who in these remote districts acts as
-police officer, and is, in fact, the sole representative of majesty,
-offered his own services in that capacity.
-
-“Very good,” said the Ofwer Jagmästere, “then you will point out the
-particulars; but, to help you, I have marked all the more practicable
-passages with red crosses. Here, however, is your principal danger—in
-fact, it is that which made me hesitate about establishing the hållet
-where it is. You see where this cow-path leads to the hills—the path, I
-mean, which I have just pointed out to Herr Modige as the place where I
-wish him to arrange the shooting line; carry your eye onward to where it
-ascends the hills; that is an easy pass, such as you can ride up, and it
-is so close to the hållet that any beast that turns at the line, would
-naturally dash at the opening. Here you must post a very strong force.”
-
-“I cannot do better than put my English friends there,” said Birger, who
-saw at a glance that this was the very crack post of the whole line; “I
-will venture to say that their rifles will not allow anything to pass
-alive through that opening, from an elk to a rabbit.”
-
-“Hush, not a word about elks,” said Bjornstjerna; “neither they nor stags
-must be touched—the new law is very strict about that.”
-
-“It is very difficult to tell one beast from another, in the thick
-juniper,” said Birger; “I never could myself.”
-
-The Ofwer Jagmästere laughed, but put on an official frown.
-
-“Do you know, Birger,” said the Parson, “I should like to be your
-aide-de-camp better than to hold any definite post; I could carry your
-orders, you know.”
-
-“And deliver them in English or French,” said Birger; “I shall have a
-very effective aide-de-camp indeed. However, if you like it, I will give
-you the post, and I think you are right; you will see more in that way
-than in any other, and you can reinforce the post of danger whenever you
-are tired. Indeed, you may as well consider it your home during the
-skal. Would the Captain, then, take charge of that point?”
-
-The Captain was quite willing, and promised to give a good account of it.
-
-“Well, then,” said Birger, “I shall not want Piersen to-morrow, so you
-may have him, and your own man Tom, and Jacob for cook. The Parson
-will probably take Torkel, but I dare say the Länsman can find you an
-intelligent Swede, who knows the ground and can understand a few words
-of English, and three or four fellows for sentries; that will be quite
-enough for you, for the Parson and Torkel will join you, and be under
-your orders before there is anything serious.”
-
-Here the Ofwer Jagmästere spoke a few words in Swedish to Birger, who
-laughed and replied—“No, no, certainly not; I am confident he would
-consider it an honour of no small magnitude to bear a commission in our
-service. The fact is,” continued he, addressing the Captain, “everything
-in these skaller is arranged according to military discipline, and
-everyone here has military rank. And as you have to command a picket, you
-would not object to hold a temporary commission, not quite equal to your
-own in the English service.”
-
-“Object!” said the Captain, “O, no—delighted, of course!”
-
-“Then give me your cap,” said Birger. “Hand me over that chalk,
-Bjornstjerna;” and he wrote upon its peak the mystic letters, “S.F.,”
-being the initials of Skal Fogde; and accordingly the Captain took rank
-as full sergeant in the Swedish army.
-
-“Now, then,” said the Jagmästere, “as I have arranged matters so
-satisfactorily here, I will start at once for Lysvik, where I have
-ordered the dref to assemble. I shall have enough to do to-morrow
-morning, as you may imagine,—what with numbering the men, and appointing
-their skalfogdar, and seeing them at their stations, the commander
-has no easy life of it. As for you, Moodie, I need not tell you your
-business—you know it as well as I do myself,—but begin appointing your
-skalfogdar the first thing to-morrow. You need not wait for your full
-complement of men, they will drop in in the course of the day; but
-as your best men are sure to be the first, appoint at once; at twelve
-precisely write the numbers in their hats, as they stand, and we will
-fine all that come later than that. That, Mr. Länsman, must be your
-business; but first of all look out for Lieutenant Birger fifty of your
-best men. That,” turning to Moodie, “will leave you nearly five hundred,
-which is quite as much as you can want, as the boats will be manned from
-my party. You, Birger, will march at daybreak, for I must have every
-picket posted by twelve, at which time we move forward with the dref.
-Now, Lönner, my horse, as quick as you please, for we have seven quarters
-to go before we sleep.”
-
-The Ofwer Jagmästere might almost be said to “exit speaking,” for he
-continued his speech into the porch, and the last words were lost in the
-canter of his little hog-maned pony, as he floundered off, followed by
-Lönner and a couple of orderlies, together with the Länsmen of the two
-other parishes, who had met him by appointment at Ostmarkand, and now
-formed his personal staff.
-
-Moodie, who was now in command, hesitated for a moment whether he
-should exercise it by clearing the inn for the sleeping accommodation
-of himself and friends, but, on turning the matter over in his mind,
-the interior looked so dirty and stuffy, and was withal so redolent of
-tobacco, brandy, and aniseed, while the exterior was so fresh and green,
-and the moon was shining down so softly, and the air was so still, and
-the camp fires so bright and inviting, that, with universal consent and
-approbation, he adjourned the divisional head-quarters to a spreading
-fir-tree, whose branches were illuminated by a fire worthy of a General;
-while the provident Jacob, who had tilted the carioles on end, to form
-a sort of screen, spread out before them the contents of his ambulatory
-larder.
-
-This was soon discussed, and then a quiet pipe, a moderate horn of brandy
-and water, a hopeful good night, a roll in their cloaks, and before their
-heads were well on their knapsacks, the whole four were in the fairy land
-of sleep and forgetfulness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SKAL.
-
- “When shaws beene sheene and shrads full fayre,
- And leaves both large and long,
- ’Tis merry walking in the fayre forest,
- To hear the small birde’s song.”
-
- _Robin Hood._
-
- “These mounds I yet may clamber,
- And look on the rocks so grey,—
- On these huge stones on the summits
- I can lie, as oft I lay.
-
- “And if it soughs in the forest,
- In the beechwood’s native land,—
- And if the wave roars deeply,
- I nod to sea and strand.
-
- “O, never my heart forgetteth
- The cairn, the wood, and the strand,—
- For my heart is only at home in
- The warrior’s fatherland.”
-
- _Holger Danske-Ingemann._
-
-
-The sun had not yet lighted up the spires of the fir-trees, when a buzz
-of voices and a shuffling of feet broke the slumbers of the head-quarters
-party. Länsman Matthiesen, true to his word, had not slept before he
-had picked out his fifty mountaineers, chalking their hats at the back
-with the letters “H.F.,” standing for hög fjeld, or the high forest,
-indicating the position they were to occupy.
-
-While Birger was still rubbing his eyes and kicking up Jacob to boil
-the morning’s coffee, Matthiesen was numbering them from 1 to 50, with
-chalk, in the front of their hats, and selecting their skalfogdar, who
-were marked, as the Captain had been on the preceding evening, with the
-letters “S.F.” It is usual to appoint a skalfogde to every ten men; but,
-as these were to be divided into small parties, it was thought expedient
-to appoint one to every five, it being understood that, whenever any of
-these parties were united, the skalfogde whose number was lowest should
-reckon as senior, and command the whole.
-
-Fire-arms are not very plentiful in any part of Sweden, but Matthiesen
-had so picked his men, that about one-fifth of them had something of the
-sort,—most of these weapons looking very much more formidable to the
-sportsmen who carried them than to the game at which they were pointed.
-The rest were armed with poles, many of which had spikes at the end.
-Here and there was an old sword or a pistol that had seen service in the
-Thirty years’ War; but most of the men carried very efficient axes,—an
-excellent weapon against a tree, and not a bad one with a bear in close
-conflict, if such a thing ever does take place in a skal; but the fact
-is, the beasts on these occasions are so completely cowed, that they
-rarely, if ever, show fight.
-
-The men had been searched that morning, and all their brandy taken from
-them, and the rest of their provisions examined, to see if there was
-enough to last out the number of days for which they had been summoned.
-But, before starting, Birger served out to each a horn of hot coffee from
-Jacob’s soup kettle, with a double allowance of sugar in it; for if there
-is anything that comes near to brandy in the estimation of a Swede, it is
-sugar, which he eats and drinks whenever he can get it, like a very child.
-
-Birger then, having first taken a careful survey of the whole plan of
-the skal, a copy of which Matthiesen had placed in his hand, summoned
-the Parson and Torkel, and, placing himself at the head of his party,
-gave the word to march. This was obeyed in a very military fashion,—for
-every Swede is or has been a militia-man, and is very proud of his
-soldiering,—and the party was soon lost among the green shades of the
-forest.
-
-Moodie watched them very composedly, and then quietly set himself down
-to breakfast, not a little to the discomposure of the Captain, who, if
-he had had his will, would have been walking sentry on his post with
-his rifle in his hand, looking out fiercely for the bears,—a proceeding
-which, as the dref or driving party was not to move till noon, and then
-would be twenty miles from the scene of action, evinced, to say the least
-of it, more zeal than discretion.
-
-The Captain need not, however, have disquieted himself, for the
-preparations all that time were going steadily forward. Moodie,
-having selected six of the most experienced hunters as Adjutanter
-or lieutenants, left them to nominate and chalk off the fifty
-Skalfogdar which his party required, and to distribute the men into
-tens in such a way that every part of the line should be equally
-provided with fire-arms. The farmer who owned the land had offered
-his services as personal attendant, or what the Jagmästere had called
-Quartermaster-General; and Moodie, quite aware that the authorities of
-the place, who knew the characters and capabilities of the men, would
-set in order these details much better than he could, permitted them
-to manage things their own way, and interfered but little with their
-arrangements.
-
-It was not before ten that everything was put into proper order, and the
-little flags prepared which were to mark out the ground; but then Moodie
-readily enough got his men into marching order, and proceeded to take up
-the position. This was distant about four miles (English) from the place
-of meeting; the road to it leading down the glade, and at right angles to
-the direction taken by Birger and his party that morning.
-
-If Moodie had seemed apathetic and dilatory while others were capable of
-doing the work, there was no want of energy in him when the party had
-arrived at the ground. His orders were given with that distinctness and
-decision which evinces an intimate acquaintance with the business in
-hand, and ensures the prompt obedience of all engaged in it.
-
-Two of the Adjutanter, with three men from each skalfogde’s command were
-detached to establish the line which the hållet was finally to occupy,
-and to mark out with little flags of white calico, on which were painted
-their numbers, the post of each subdivision. In the meanwhile the main
-strength of his party were engaged in preparing the mountain road which
-the Jagmästere had pointed out for what is termed the shooting line,—that
-is to say, the line on which the dref or driving division was finally to
-halt, having thus enclosed the game in the patch of wood between it and
-the hållet, which is called the skalplats.
-
-The shooting line was formed, by cutting down the junipers and lower
-branches of the trees for about twenty yards on each side of a mountain
-road which ran parallel to the front of the position; but the great
-labour was to remove everything that had been cut, for, had such evident
-traces of man’s work been left, not one single head of game would have
-ventured across the clearing. For this reason, also, Moodie began his
-work in this place, leaving the clearing of his own line for future
-operations, in order that he might give time for the scent to clear
-away,—and therefore it is, that when the shooting line is once formed, no
-one is ever permitted to cross till the dref arrives, driving the game
-before them.
-
-The peculiar kind of the ground had, in this instance, caused the
-skalplats to be made very much larger than is usual; in fact, it was
-nearly half a mile deep, and very much more than half a mile in front
-width—and from this it would be difficult to dislodge game which had been
-thoroughly frightened. But Moodie’s English education had suggested a
-remedy: besides the main shooting line, the axe-men were instructed to
-subdivide the skalplats by parallel “rides,” as they are called in an
-English cover, running from front to rear, so that a marksman placed at
-the end of any of these would have a fair shot, as the game moved from
-one block of forest to another.
-
-All this, however, was a work of time as well as labour, and though
-four hundred men were employed about it, and though they worked as men
-work who combine pleasure with duty, the day was far advanced, and the
-skal had begun for some hours before Moodie took his final survey, and,
-dispatching the Captain and his party to their post in the mountains,
-withdrew his workmen to their own position on the reverse slope of the
-spur. Having posted his sentries on the crest of the hill, he dismissed
-the remainder to procure their suppers, and to make themselves as
-comfortable as was consistent with extreme watchfulness.
-
-Long before any serious impression had been made by Moodie, on the
-shooting line, Birger and the remains of his party had reached his
-farthest post, having taken his route along the crest of the heights.
-Calculating his time with military precision, he had visited the heads of
-all the different passes, stationing at each a picket, the strength of
-which was in proportion to its ascertained importance, or blocking it up
-with an abattis of trees—a very easy thing to do, for the bear, when his
-suspicions are fairly roused, turns readily at the slightest appearance
-of a trap. And now, as the minute hand of his watch indicated twelve, a
-fact which he took care to point out to the Parson, Matthiesen was in
-the act of displaying from the branch of a dead fir tree which overhung
-the precipice, the long fluttering slip of white calico, which not only
-marked out the position of the pass to those below, but was the agreed
-signal that it was occupied.
-
-The day was bright and hot, as a northern summer’s day generally is, and
-within the cover of the woods not a breath of wind had been felt; but on
-the exposed cliff, where they then stood, or rather lay—for the recumbent
-was decidedly the favourite position;—a light and refreshing air was just
-creeping up the sides of the cliffs, stirring the feathery leaves of the
-birches, but leaving the heavier foliage at rest.
-
-It was a joyous scene, as the eye traversed the tops of the great forest
-stretched out like a map below, and traced the different colours of the
-foliage—here was a thick, close array of firs, forming a solid column, of
-miles in extent—there were the serried ranks of the spiry spruce,—here,
-again, where the axe had been at work selecting the best trees and
-leaving the rest to succeed as chance had planted, there was a broad,
-park-like expanse full of juniper underwood, bordered, it may be, by a
-belt of birch, the consequences of some forgotten fire, or a patch of
-white poplars, indicating a marshy bit, or a dozen or so of restless
-aspens, balancing their leaves when all around was still;—here, again,
-was a svedgefall, as they term the places where the wind gets under the
-branches of the firs, and levels acres of them together. Sometimes these
-form parks of exceeding beauty, as the young trees grow up sparsely;
-but here and there, where they are too small to be worth removing, they
-lie, entangled with weeds and undergrowth, a mass of rottenness and a
-stronghold of Bruin, out of which it will sometimes take hours to drive
-him.
-
-Here and there, too, was a sœter, or, as we are now in Sweden, a
-satterval, or mountain pasture farm, with its low roof of pine-branches
-and its meadow of rough hay, which generally stood in large cocks, ready
-to be removed as soon as the snow should form a road; round most of
-these, groups of cattle might be seen; but there was no smoke from their
-chimneys, for every human being was at the skal.
-
-Far in the distance, indeed too far to be seen, except where the sun
-lighted up its waters and returned a dazzling reflection, was the river,
-already guarded by its fleet of boats, though these were entirely
-invisible from the cliffs.
-
-To the southward, the range of heights sank gradually into the plain,
-which here was traversed by the main road, cutting both the ridge and the
-river at right angles.
-
-Beyond this, all was one black, dreary, desolate wilderness, without a
-shrub, or a bush, or a blade of grass; nothing but bare, grey, ghost-like
-trunks of dead trees, stretching forth their charred and blackened
-branches, and looking as if a curse was resting on them. Three years ago
-that blackened track had been a flourishing pine forest, but the fire
-had passed over it, and it was gone. According to a generally received
-Swedish superstition, though the birch might succeed it, no pine could
-grow there again for ever: the burnt tree had been cursed in itself and
-in its seed.
-
-This superstition is actually borne out by fact: cut a pine-forest, and
-a pine-forest succeeds it; burn a pine-forest, and the succeeding trees,
-when they do again clothe the ground, are invariably birch. In reality,
-this is not so strange as it seems at first sight; the fir is the natural
-seed of the country, and the young fir is the hardiest tree,—wherever
-that tree will grow no other can compete with it; but its seed is heavy,
-and cannot fall far from the parent tree, when once vegetation is
-destroyed,—the fir-seed can never travel into the wasted land; but the
-birch-seed flies in the wind, and its young seedlings are invariably the
-first green which succeeds a fire.
-
-This black wilderness was one cause among many which had induced the
-Jagmästere to select this particular spot for his skal; no game would
-willingly break through his line when they knew that miles of uncovered
-country must be traversed before they could again find shelter. He had,
-therefore, that morning marshalled his dref along the high road, by
-placing them in position there, and numbering their hats as they stood,
-from the centre to each flank; but, true to his word, no sooner had the
-white flag fluttered from Birger’s post, than his bugle sounded the
-advance along his whole line, and the skal was already begun.
-
-The Parson and Birger, whose work for that morning was done, were seated
-on the outer ridge, with their feet fairly overhanging the precipice,
-reconnoitring with their glasses the progress of the dref, as here and
-there the men emerged into a more open space, which the skalfogdar
-were taking advantage of, in order to reform or repair their line, and
-re-establish their communications with the parties right and left of them.
-
-Every now and then a sudden shout, followed by half-a-dozen shots,
-marking the place by a light puff of smoke, (Swedish powder makes plenty
-of that), would point the glasses to some particular spot,—but on no
-occasion was any game visible from above.
-
-According to law, all shouting is strictly forbidden in skals, and so is
-firing at small game, and so is the presence of women or boys, upon the
-express count that they are too noisy; but these laws seem to have been
-made for no other purpose except that the people might enjoy the pleasure
-of hunting and breaking the law at the same time, for no one ever thinks
-of keeping them; shouting is incessant, women are plentiful, and, as for
-shooting at small game, the best chance a cock-robin stands of his life
-consists in the very great probability of a Swedish piece missing fire,
-or a Swedish marksman missing his aim.
-
-And, indeed, it is universally admitted by the moderns that their
-forefathers were in error; that not only shouts and musketry are useful
-in keeping up the men’s pluck and pointing out to each other their
-whereabouts, but they are positively of advantage in driving the game.
-When the ring is once completed, either by artificial or natural means,
-and the game is fairly surrounded, it is far better that it should be
-aroused by distant shouts, and should be suffered to slink off quietly
-and unseen, approaching by degrees the hållet, where, after all, it must
-be brought up by the standing line, than that it should be surprised by
-the dref advancing in silence. A startled bear is just as likely to bolt
-backwards as forwards, and, if he does, the chances are that he gets off
-scot free. He must be an unlucky bear, indeed, who, at the earlier part
-of a skal, and before the men have closed in, charges the line and gets
-more than one shot at him; and a most particularly unlucky bear must
-he be if that shot takes effect, whereas it is just as likely to take
-effect on some Jan or Karl, who stands with his eyes and mouth open as
-the “Disturber” rushes by,—and thus affords, in his own person, the only
-chance of a sitting shot, which Swedes delight in;—indeed, this is almost
-the only way in which accidents do happen in skals; the bear very seldom
-revenges himself, but he now and then gets people to do it for him.
-
-The Parson sat reclining against a rock, very much at his ease, sometimes
-watching the progress of the skal, sometimes picking off the stalks from
-a quantity of ground-mulberries[50] which he had gathered during that
-morning’s march. Indeed, the Parson, in the course of that march, had
-succeeded in making a very pretty figure of himself: his knowledge of
-botany amounted simply to a desire of appropriating to himself every
-unusual flower he came across; so that by the end of the day his hat,
-which was of that description popularly known as a wide-awake, was
-generally surrounded by a garland fit for a May-queen.
-
-In the present instance, the front of his hat exhibited a purple plume
-of the “laf-reseda,” which perfumed the air around him with an odour
-like that of the night-scented stock. He had placed it there not so much
-for that or for its beauty, as because, like the ground-mulberry, it is
-never seen south of the latitude in which they then were—not even in the
-south of Sweden. Twining round the hat-band was a wreath of “Baldur’s
-brow,” a beautiful white flower, dedicated in heathen times to the
-god of Innocence, and still bearing his name, and retaining a portion
-of its ancient sanctity.[51] The lily of the valley, which in Sweden
-signifies much the same as it does in England, formed its appropriate
-companion; and so might the heart’s-ease, which fairly tinged the hill
-sides with blue and yellow, had it retained any equivalent to its English
-appellation; but in Sweden it is called “skart-blom,” and is appropriated
-to the Devil. It is the flower the witches decorate themselves with when
-they ride by night to the Satanic rendezvous, and dance infernal polkas
-in the wilds of Blaakulla.
-
-“See!” said Birger, “look at that white flag! there it is, glancing
-against the corner of those firs in the svedgefall; now you see another
-in a line with it,—that is the Ordningsman and his party; he marks the
-centre of the advancing line. Before they started, the Jagmästere will
-have given him his precise bearing from the centre of the hållet, and
-his business is to attend neither to the bears nor to the beating, but
-to advance steadily on his own line; for that purpose he has those three
-flagsmen allotted to him. There, you see that fellow on the farther edge
-of the svedgefall, showing his flag from that black-looking fir?—look
-through your glass, and you will easily make out the Ordningsman himself;
-there he is, with his compass in his hand, close by the farthest flag; he
-is taking the bearings of the first man that we made out; and there is
-the third now advancing to take up a new position. What he has to do is
-to keep those flags always in the straight line, and all the rest dress
-from him.”
-
-Just then, the Jagmästere rode, or rather clambered, into the svedgefall
-on his little cream-coloured pony, which, accustomed to the work,
-scrambled about the fallen trees more like a dog than a horse. He was
-attended by a large party on foot; one of these, who might be termed
-his orderly, had to lead his horse round by the forest cattle tracks,
-whenever it happened, as it very frequently did happen, that the
-under-stuff was too thick for a horseman to traverse.
-
-His right wing, which had been beating the easier and more open country
-towards the river, had got some distance in advance, and he was evidently
-directing the Ordningsman to halt in the svedgefall till the left had
-time to come up. Messengers were dispatched right and left; the bugles
-began to sound, some the “advance” and some the “halt,” and those
-parts of the line which had begun to emerge from the trees, were seen
-collecting in little groups in different attitudes of rest, lighting
-their pipes, or visiting their havresacs for their mid-dag’s mad of black
-bread and hard white cheese.
-
-Before long the left wing, the advanced flank of which was under their
-feet, made itself to be both heard and seen. The ground here was much
-more difficult, because at the immediate foot of the cliff the _debris_
-of ages had formed themselves into a very steep slope. This part, rugged
-and uneven with fallen blocks of stone, was covered with a close brake
-of underwood, not only of juniper, but of hazels and rowan bushes, all
-matted together by brambles,—as well as birch and ash, the last of which,
-winding its long roots among the stones, had in most places attained the
-dignity of timber trees.
-
-Well aware that every head of game disturbed along the whole line would,
-if possible, seek refuge here, the Jagmästere had intended that his left
-wing should be thrown forward, and had allotted a hundred men, under the
-most experienced of his Adjutanter, to search the ground well, keeping
-a mile or so in advance of the line. The eagerness of the men on first
-starting had somewhat disturbed this arrangement, for at the beginning
-the cover, along the greater part of the line, had consisted of firs,
-which not only screened the men from the eyes of their officers, but, by
-destroying the under-stuff, permitted them to get forwards without any
-great exertion. It was to rectify this that the halt had been called.
-
-“What is that?” said the Parson, jumping up and scattering half his
-mulberries down the precipice, as a rush of wings came sharp round the
-corner of the rock, and a great cock-tjäder, as big as a turkey, came
-close over his head, and dashed into the firs that crested the hill.
-
-“That,” said Birger, unslinging his rifle, “that is a hint that we ought
-to keep a better look-out;—not that we should have had that fellow
-though, for, awkward and heavy as they seem, they rush along like a round
-shot, when once they get into their flight. But never mind, we shall have
-more of them presently—mind where you shoot, though, if you use your
-rifle,—there will be a peasant or two knocked over before we have done,
-most likely. We do not think much of that, but you would not like to be
-playing Archbishop Abbott[52] yourself, would you?”
-
-The Parson laughed, as he examined and poised his double-barrelled
-gun—for the rifle was in the charge of Torkel,—and made a successful
-right and left shot among a covey of orre grouse that were skimming over
-the tree-tops at his feet.
-
-“Oh, if you stick to small shot,” said Birger, who had despatched a human
-retriever down the watercourse to pick up the birds, “you may fire away
-in the men’s faces if you like; there is not a Swede who would not stand
-the chance of a peppered jacket, to be able to pick up an article of
-game,”—a sentiment fully confirmed by the grinning faces of the picket,
-for whose benefit he had translated his words.
-
-“But we are not likely to have bears coming up to us, if we keep up such
-a popping as this,” said the Parson.
-
-“‘A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush;’ if there are bears within
-the skal, depend upon it we shall get them, sooner or later. Fire away!
-most of us like a broiled grouse for supper.”
-
-“Here goes for the bird of Yggdrasil,” as a magnificent peregrine falcon
-came floating through the air, as if by the mere act of volition; “he
-shall never sit again between the eyes of the eagle.”[53]
-
-Birger had, however, miscalculated his distance, for the bird, taking no
-more notice of his shot than if they had been hailstones, sailed quietly
-on his course, without turning to the right or left.
-
-“The bird of the gods bears a charmed life,” said the Parson, “it is no
-use firing at him. Come, load away! look sharp, or you will lose your
-next chance.”
-
-Game, however, is nowhere very plentiful, either in Norway or in Sweden;
-and though every eye in the picket was on the look-out, nothing more
-was seen, except a blue Alpine hare, that came quietly lopping up the
-watercourse, and sat on its hind legs, innocently looking Matthiesen in
-the face during the minute and half in which he was taking aim; the shot,
-however, was successful at last, and puss was destined to supply the
-evening kettle.
-
-“If you want a chance at big game,” said Birger, “I will tell you what
-you should do; it is altogether against the law, no doubt—and that is
-one of the few laws relating to skals that ought to be observed;—but if
-you were to slip down one of these watercourses with Torkel, and take
-your course quietly and silently through the fjeld, keeping four or five
-miles ahead of the dref, more unlikely things have happened than that you
-should set your eyes upon some beast or other stealing off. You have got
-your compass, and you cannot be lost in a little strip of a forest like
-this, not half a dozen miles across. Besides, every stream you come to
-runs from our pickets, which you may always reach by following it. You
-can always distinguish them in the day-time by their flags, and if you
-should be overtaken by night—”
-
-“If I should,” said the Parson, “there is nothing I should like better.
-Torkel will soon get up a fire. I have plenty of provisions in my
-havresac, and a little of the contraband, too,” he added, shaking his
-bottle; “they forgot to search me; so that if we should be out at night,
-we will try if we cannot make a night of it.”
-
-“So be it, then,” said Birger; “be early at the Captain’s post, that is
-all, for you may depend upon it, if I know anything of the lie of the
-country, there will be sport there long before the dref comes up. You
-will probably find me there before you.”
-
-“Au revoir, then,” said the Parson, as he swung himself off the cliff on
-which he had been sitting, into the boughs of an ash, and thus dropped
-into the watercourse; down this he disappeared, with Torkel after him,
-floundering, crashing, and rolling the stones before him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE SATTERVAL.
-
- “’Tis merry, ’tis merry, in good greenwood,
- Though the birds have stilled their singing;
- The evening blaze doth Alice raise,
- And Richard is faggots bringing.”
-
- _Alice Brand._
-
-
-Avoiding the advanced column of the dref, which had halted just short of
-the watercourse, the Parson and his follower took a line nearly parallel
-to that of the hills. It is no easy thing to beat a Swedish forest,
-for there are every now and then thick-tangled brakes, and grass-grown
-svedgefalls, and occasionally, it may be, a little lake to break the
-line, causing perpetual halts, since one part must necessarily wait for
-another. But simply making a passage through a Swedish forest is almost
-as easy as walking on plain turf:—here there will be a wide patch of high
-pines, under which nothing will grow,—then there will be actual green
-glades of considerable length, with short mountain turf, broken only by
-tufts of lilies of the valley, or, perhaps, whortleberry or cranberry
-plants; and everywhere, when the trees are young, or have been cut, and
-the understuff has been permitted to come up thick, the whole space is
-intersected by cattle paths,—for all the fjeld is divided into sœters
-belonging to the lowland farms, forming the summer runs for their cattle.
-
-The Parson and his follower, therefore, had no difficulty in leaving the
-whole line behind them, so that first their shouts and then the reports
-of their firearms were lost in the distance, and the forest, soon to be
-so busy with life, looked as quiet and lonely as if it never could echo
-sounds louder than the coo of the wood-pigeon.
-
-After five or six miles’ walking, the closeness of the air under the
-trees began to tell upon them—more especially as this afternoon’s
-excursion had been preceded by a morning’s walk of sixteen or seventeen
-miles, and neither of them felt at all sorry when, in a natural opening
-of the forest, the rough enclosures of a sœter came into view.
-
-“Come,” said Torkel, “we shall get some brandy here, anyhow.” He was
-mistaken, however, for no living thing was to be found there, except a
-dog tied to a stump (for dogs are strictly forbidden in skals), that at
-first made the forest ring with its barking, but soon became reconciled
-to the intruders by that sort of free-masonry, whatever be the cause of
-it, which always exist between a dog and a sportsman.
-
-“At all events, they must have milk here,” he said, “and I am not sure
-whether, just now, I had not rather find milk than brandy.”
-
-The Parson laughed at Torkel’s unusual feelings of sobriety, but quite
-participated in his longing for milk. This they found, and plenty of it,
-for the single room of the cabin was full of vessels, shoved in anywhere,
-as if the milkers had been in such a hurry to complete a task which they
-could not have neglected without spoiling their cows, that they had not
-given themselves time to put their milk away.
-
-Torkel went down on his hands and knees, put his mouth into a bucket
-that stood near the door, and drank away as if—like Odin, when he
-wheedled Gunlauth into letting him take a sip from the cup of poetic
-inspiration—he meant to drain it to the very bottom, and then set to
-upon a sort of cake that he found strung upon a cord between two of the
-rafters, which looked something like a number of round, thin discs, of
-semi-transparent paste, with holes punched out of the centre to hang them
-up by.[54]
-
-The Parson, who was not less thirsty and exhausted, evinced a little
-more moderation than this “hog of the flock of Epicurus;” he was content
-with filling his horn occasionally at the milkpail, and floating in it a
-handful of cranberries, bushels of which were growing wherever a glimpse
-of sunshine could penetrate the canopy of foliage, “incarnading” with
-their red berries the turf of the whole forest, “and making the green one
-red.”
-
-The refreshment was, as Torkel had observed, better than brandy, and
-both felt quite sufficiently invigorated for a fresh journey; but their
-present quarters looked very comfortable,—the shadows of the evening
-were fast lengthening, and they had already advanced far beyond any
-point which the skal could be expected to reach that day. They remained,
-therefore, comfortably sitting on the rail fence, and looking down the
-grassy glade, without any intention of going farther that night. Since
-diving into the forest they had not seen a head of game of any kind,
-except a flock (for it hardly deserved a more sportsman-like appellation)
-of the smaller description of grouse, which Torkel, whose eyes were
-everywhere, had detected on the higher branches of one of the trees.
-Three of these the Parson had brought down in the most pot-hunting and
-unsportsman-like fashion, by getting them into a line as they sat, and
-bringing them down as a boy massacres fieldfares. These Torkel was
-indolently picking, and preparing for the frying-pan, an article which
-is generally to be found in a sœter, while, at the same time, he kept a
-professional eye on the glade. The Parson, sitting beside him, was as
-indolently pulling off the fruit of the hägg, a sort of wild cherry, a
-clump of which overshadowed the fence on which they were sitting, and
-afforded them a partial cover from any quick-sighted animal coming up
-from the forest.
-
-“I do not like these great summer skals,” said he. “If you really want
-to see sport you should come here in the winter, when the snow is on
-the ground,—that is the time for a man to set his wits against ‘old Fur
-Jacket,’—to ring him in the snow—to look out for his den—to turn him
-out—to dash after him through the snow on our skier—to follow him day
-after day—to camp on his track—and after him again as soon as day breaks,
-and at last, after a week’s hunting, perhaps, to run in upon him and
-put a rifle-ball upon his head. All this too is done quietly,—a party
-of two or three at the most,—not mobbing the poor devil to death in
-this fashion,—that is the thing that tries a man’s talents as a hunter.
-In such a skal as this, one of those squalling women could knock over
-a bear as well as the best of us, if she happened to meet with him;
-he very seldom shows fight, either, in the summer time,—he sees he is
-overmatched, and gives it up as a bad job; but in the winter, you may as
-well have a firm heart and a steady hand before you bring your rifle to
-bear, and you would be none the worse for a stout comrade to stand beside
-you, with pike and knife.”
-
-“The bear does charge them sometimes?” said the Parson.
-
-“Yes, if hit,” said Torkel, “or if he thinks you have got him into a
-corner, otherwise he would always rather run than fight. I remember one
-journey I had with two young Englishmen a few years ago; we went to shoot
-in Nordre Trondhjemsampt;—ah! you should go there if you want shooting.
-I never saw such a place for grouse of all kinds,—aye, and for deer too.
-Well, these Englishmen were always wanting to find a bear,—they would not
-be satisfied with the very best of sport, they kept saying that it would
-never do to come from Norway without having a bearskin to show their
-friends,—for all these Englishmen seem to think that bears are the common
-game of the country.”
-
-“We shot deer and grouse as many as we pleased, but we did not so much
-as hear of a bear till we had given up shooting altogether, and were
-travelling home, which we did by the road through Ostersund, Hernösand,
-and Gefle. When we got to the post-house at Skalstuga, the first on the
-Swedish side of the mountains; early in the morning, long before it was
-light, the cow-boy came in crying, and said that a bear had just killed
-one of the cows. Off goes one of our Englishmen, half naked, with his gun
-in his hand, just as if he had nothing bigger to shoot than a hare. I
-caught up an axe that was lying there and ran after him. Up he comes, and
-stands right in the bear’s path, just as if he cared no more for him than
-for a big dog, and fires away two barrels right in his face. Lord! it was
-nothing but small shot, such as he had been shooting grouse with, and the
-bear came at him like Thor’s hammer. Just in the way, as luck would have
-it, stood a sapling fir-tree; and I never could tell whether the bear
-was blinded by the smoke, or whether some of the small shot had taken
-him about the eyes, but he seemed to take the tree for that which had
-hurt him, and he reared himself up against it, and shook it, and fixed
-his teeth in it, and shook it again, and seemed to mind nothing else,
-till I stole up quietly behind him and drove the axe into his skull. The
-Englishman never seemed to care a bit about the danger he had escaped;
-all he said was, ‘Got him at last!’ ‘That’s the ticket!’ and shoved into
-my hand more yellow and green notes than ever I saw there before or
-since; and, for all he was so free with his money, he went to the Länsman
-at Ostersund and got the bear’s nose sealed, and touched the Government
-reward for it, just like one of us, and then he tossed the money to me,
-and told me to get drunk upon it.”
-
-“Which you did, I’ll be sworn,” said the Parson.
-
-“I believe I did!” said Torkel; “I was not fairly sober for a good three
-days after it.”
-
-“Hist! what is that,” said he, dropping, as he spoke, on the inside of
-the fence, and motioning the Parson to do so likewise.
-
-A wolf came lolloping along with the slovenly gallop in which that
-disreputable beast usually travels, looking as if it had sat up all
-night drinking and was not quite sober yet. The Parson laid down his
-gun, and quietly taking his rifle from Torkel, cocked it, and lodged it
-upon an opening between the planks. The wolf had not seen them, but came
-shambling on, when, either scenting his enemies, or knowing by experience
-the ineligibility of a path near fences, he edged away towards the close
-covert, showing a portion of his ungainly side at a long shot, and though
-looking as if he were lame of all four legs at the same time, clearing
-the ground with his immense and untiring strides faster than any dog
-could have followed him.
-
-Crack went the Parson’s rifle; but whether the wolf was hit, or whether
-he knew what a rifle-shot meant, or whether he so much as heard it, or
-saw the smoke, it was all the same; his course was not altered, his pace
-was neither relaxed nor quickened, he went lolloping on, just as when
-he was first seen, and, as much at his ease as ever, disappeared in the
-forest not a hundred yards from them.
-
-“Missed him, by all that is unlucky!” said the Parson, jumping up.
-
-“There is no knowing,” said Torkel; “if you had hit him it would have
-been all the same. Unless the shot strikes a part immediately vital they
-take no notice of it.”
-
-There was evidently nothing to be done; and, indeed, the probabilities
-were that the Parson really had missed, for there was not a vestige of
-blood to be seen on the turf; and as the shades were closing in and the
-woods were getting too dark to see anything, they returned to their
-comfortable quarters, and, by bringing in one of the cocks of rushy hay,
-they succeeded in making up on the floor of the hut two couches, much
-more luxurious than anything they had enjoyed since leaving Gäddebäck.
-
-“That will do,” said Torkel; “it is a great piece of luck that we
-happened upon this sœter. We shall make a much better cookery of our
-grouse here than we should have done under a tree in the fjeld. There
-must be a frying-pan here somewhere, if we had only light to find it by.”
-
-“Why do you not light the fire?” said the Parson; “that will give you
-light enough, for this fuel is as dry as tinder, and good honest birch,
-too, with some heart in it. You must have a fire for cooking, whether you
-want it for light or not, so heap up the hearth-stone at once.”
-
-This was done as soon as said; and to the cheerful blaze of dry and
-crackling fir succeeded the steady, candle-like flame of the birch,
-lighting up the remotest corners, and glancing on that indispensable
-requisite of mountain life which Torkel had been seeking. Fresh butter,
-just from the churn, is not altogether uneatable even in Sweden, and
-besides, hunger is not nice; the Parson consumed, with considerable
-relish, his own share of the grouse, and only wished they had been as big
-as black game, or tjäder. Brandy there certainly must have been somewhere
-in the hut, for there never was a Swedish hut without; but so well was it
-hidden, that all Torkel’s experience failed to bring it to light, and,
-very much to the Parson’s delight, they were reduced to milk, of which
-there was enough to supply the whole skal.
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, who had succeeded in twisting up his hay into
-a sort of chaise-longue, with a well-formed cushion for his back, “I
-did not expect to have a roof over my head; I must say this is a real
-piece of luxury. Why we are better off than the Captain with his tents;
-everything we want to our hands, and no host to ask for a reckoning.”
-
-“That would not be over safe in the Hardanger-fjeld,” said Torkel; “but
-I suppose Sweden is another thing: indeed, in Norway it is only on the
-Hardanger that the thing is permitted.”
-
-“What is permitted?” said the Parson.
-
-“Why the ghosts of the damned,” said Torkel, “are permitted to wander
-about the Hardanger as they please. No great favour after all, as you
-would say if you had ever seen the place; and when they see travellers
-coming they build comfortable huts by the wayside, with fires burning,
-and dry clothes, and plenty of brandy and good provisions, and everything
-a man wants in order to make himself comfortable. It would be pretty
-much of a temptation anywhere, and you may fancy what it is on that
-exposed and treeless waste, where, whenever it is not raining it is
-snowing, and if it is not snowing it is raining. But if a man once enters
-and accepts the hospitality, he is lost,—the rushing wind carries away
-the house and all that is in it, and the travellers are never heard of
-more.”
-
-“You never happened upon a ghost-house yourself, did you?” said the
-Parson.
-
-“I never did,” said Torkel, “though I have been a good deal on the
-Hardanger-fjeld in my day; it is a capital place for ripar. But the truth
-is, these things are not so frequent as they used to be. My father,
-though, once passed a very uncomfortable night on the fjeld, and he never
-could make out, to his dying day, whether the ghosts had or had not
-anything to do with it.”
-
-“How was that?” said the Parson, as he threw another log on the fire, and
-stirred the embers into a good ghost-story-telling blaze.
-
-“In those days,” said Torkel, “we lived near Bykle, on the upper
-Torjedahl, and grew a good deal of barley which we could not very well
-consume ourselves, and had no means to transport to Christiansand, where
-generally there is a pretty good market for it. So my father set up a
-still, and drove a good thriving trade with the country about Jordbrakke
-and Skore, exchanging our brandy for their salt fish, an article which
-is scarce enough in the Tellemark. My father used generally to meet a
-trader, of the name of Nilssen, at what is called a post-house, situated
-on a ridge that divides the Torjedahl from the waters that flow into
-Wester Hafvet (the North Sea). Why they called it a post-house I am sure
-I do not know, for there is not a horse within a day’s journey of it,
-nor a post-master neither, nor, indeed, any one else. It was built by
-Government, no doubt, but you seldom saw anything so bad at a common
-sœter. One miserable room of ten feet square, the walls built of dry
-stones, with the wind whistling in at one side and out at the other,
-which was the only means of carrying off the smoke. Fuel there was, and
-straw there was, for Government provides that, and the post-master
-of the next station is responsible that there shall always be a store
-of both; but Government says nothing about the quality, and we used
-generally to find the green bog myrtle which grows there, bad as it is,
-better fuel and better bedding than either of them.
-
-“One evening, about eight o’clock, my father arrived at the usual place,
-having appointed a meeting with Nilssen, but when he came there he could
-nowhere find the hut. He recognised the place well enough, there was
-no missing that; there was the deep still lake, the waters of which
-contained no living thing,—there it was, as black as ever; there, too,
-was that old mass of whinstone, which used to form the back of the hut,
-and always had a stream of moisture trickling down it, but no house was
-to be seen, and, what made matters worse was, that a thick mountain mist
-had come on, with driving rain, which felt as if every spiteful little
-drop was a needle. My father looked disconsolately along the track, and
-fancied he saw, through the blinding fog, the gleam of a fire; he went
-on some fifty yards, and there, sure enough, was a nice comfortable hut,
-water-tight and weather-tight, with the door wide open, a bright fire on
-the hearth, and two or three rounds of flad bröd and a Dutch cheese on
-the great stone in the middle which did duty for a table,—but not a soul
-was there.
-
-“My father was not easily frightened; he was an old sailor, and had
-helped to catch many of your English traders during the last war. He
-could have looked down the throat of a cannon, and did pretty near, for
-he was on board the _Najaden_ when the _Dictator_ sank her; but he did
-not much fancy being damned, for all that. So he looked and looked at the
-merry blaze that smiled its welcome through the door, and watched the
-cheese and the flad bröd which seemed to be dancing in its light, but for
-all that he laid himself down under the lee of a rock, and cold, and wet,
-and miserable, wished for morning, for the wind blew, and the rain kept
-pelting away all night, till he thought it would have floated him, rock
-and all, into the Normand’s Laagen; and there, all the time, was the fire
-blazing away, till it subsided into a glowing heap of red-hot embers.
-
-“Towards morning he fell into a miserable sleep, and when he woke up the
-mist was gone, the sun was shining brightly, and there was not a shred
-of cloud to be seen. The first thing he put his eyes upon was Nilssen,
-coming up from the shores of the lake, and looking as wet, and as cold,
-and as wretched as he was.
-
-“‘Ah,’ said Nilssen, ‘so you have been lost in the fog, like me. My
-misfortune was all my own fault, too. I got here yesterday in very good
-time, and lighted the fire, and made all comfortable, and then I must
-needs be fool enough to start after a covey of ripar, that I did not get
-a shot at after all; and then the mist came on, and I could not find my
-way back. A wretched night I have passed, I can tell you.’
-
-“‘What,’ said my father, ‘was it you who lighted that fire?’
-
-“‘To be sure I did,’ said Nilssen, ‘who else should? Men are not so
-plentiful in this cursed place.’
-
-“‘And you are not damned, after all?’
-
-“‘Not that I know of,’ said Nilssen.
-
-“‘That is not the old hut, though, I will take my oath.’
-
-“‘No,’ said Nilssen, ‘it is not; the other was very nearly to pieces,
-as you may recollect, when we were last here. The roof fell in not a
-month after that, and then the authorities of the three Ampts contrived
-to settle their differences, and do what they ought to have done years
-ago—build a new one at their joint expense. They have not made a bad job
-of it. Come in, you are cold enough.’
-
-“‘And I have been lying out in this cursed rain and wind all night,’ said
-my father, ‘with a good fire before my eyes, and a warm roof within fifty
-yards of me, fancying all the while that you were damned, and that you
-wanted to take me off to the Devil along with you! What a confounded fool
-I have been!’
-
-“But I am not sure that my father was such a fool either,” continued
-Torkel, “for Nilssen died very soon after that; in fact, he had caught a
-bad cold during that night, and as he had sold us a lot of bad fish, I
-have no doubt he _was_ damned; at all events, it is quite true that from
-that day forward my father was never entirely free from the rheumatism,
-and this in his latter days, when he began to get religious, he always
-attributed to the sight of the fire in the post-house; for he never was
-without his misgivings that Nilssen had been damned before he met him.
-He once went as far as Hardnæs to ask the priest about it, and he said
-that the idea was new to him, certainly, but that he would not take upon
-himself to pronounce it impossible. To the very end of his life, my
-father used to congratulate himself upon the fortitude and self-denial he
-had evinced during that terrible night, ‘because,’ said he, ‘if the bare
-sight of that fire through the mist was visited so severely, no one can
-say what would have been the consequence had I sat by it all night.’”
-
-“No,” said the Parson, solemnly, “no one can.”
-
-“You see,” said Torkel, “the whole question hinges on the fact whether
-Nilssen was damned or not; now he certainly did take us in about the
-fish—we were obliged to throw away half of it. I should like very much to
-have your opinion on the subject.”
-
-“Why,” said the Parson, gravely, “will you take upon yourself to say, on
-your conscience, as a Christian man, that there was no potato-haulm in
-the wash from which your brandy was distilled?”
-
-Torkel laughed, and rubbed his hands at the recollection. “No,” said he,
-“that I will not; I do not think the old scoundrel made much by us, after
-all.”
-
-“Well, if that is the case, I do not think, if I were you, I would be too
-hard upon poor Nilssen about the next world. But you ought to be able
-to judge for yourself whether the laager was a ghost-house or not; what
-became of it?”
-
-“O, there it is still,” said Torkel. “I have slept in it often myself
-since, and no harm has happened from it. But all that hill-country is a
-terrible place. Do you know, the Evil One once leaped over the Tind Sö,
-where it is four miles across? He did, indeed; I have seen the prints of
-his footsteps with my own eyes—and a very curious thing it is, that one
-foot is bigger than the other. Our Kyrkesonger says it is to mark the
-difference between mortal and venial sins.”
-
-“I am afraid your Kyrkesonger will never rise to the rank of Candidatus,”
-said the Parson, “if he does not get up his theology a little better. Is
-not this the place where your witches meet?”
-
-“It is not far from it; and it is generally supposed that it was in
-hurrying away from one of these meetings, which was suddenly dispersed
-by some one having accidentally named a holy name, that the Devil left
-the mark of his feet on the shores of the Tind Sö; but the actual place
-of meeting is the top of Gousta Fjeld. The ridge of the mountain is so
-narrow that you may sit astride on it, with a leg on each side in the
-air, and no resting-place under either foot for a thousand fathoms. On
-this ridge the Devil sits playing on the bagpipe, while the witches dance
-the polska round him in the air. They come from all parts of the country,
-riding upon the skyts-horse, which looks like a flying cow, and carrying
-with them all the children they can catch, in order to enlist them in
-the Devil’s service; for each witch has a needle, by which she unlocks
-the sides of the houses, and makes an opening, if she likes, big enough
-for a carriage and horses to pass through; and after she has passed,
-she locks them up so that no one can know where she has been. When she
-arrives at the convent—so the assembly is called,—she presents to the
-Devil all those children whom she has brought with her: she cannot force
-the children to take service with him,—some refuse, and the witches are
-obliged to carry them back again. These are good and holy people ever
-afterwards; but most of them do enter the Devil’s service, for though he
-is bound down with a chain, which he has always worn ever since our Lord
-came upon earth, yet he can make himself look so fine and so glorious
-that very few of them like to say ‘no,’ and to go back to their homes
-through the dark night. If they once say ‘yes,’ he gives them a silver
-dollar each, and marks them, by biting the crown of their heads; and then
-they are taught to curse all that is holy—the Heaven, and the earth, and
-the fruits of the field, and the birds of the air,—all except the magpie,
-for that is the Devil’s own peculiar favourite. And then the witches
-make them a mess of rö-gröd, with corn that has been stolen. They have a
-way of their own for stealing corn: they put a sack to the roof of the
-granary as they fly past, and say ‘Corn draw corn, and straw draw straw,’
-and then all the corn flies up into their sacks, and the straw remains
-behind. I know this to be true, for I have lost lispund after lispund
-myself that way. I had a girl in my service once, who was a witch, and
-I lost as much as three tonne of corn, and a great many things besides,
-while she was with me. But she vanished one night and has never been
-heard of since, and with her a great scoundrel, who had lately come into
-our parts, whom she called her lover,—but the people said he was the
-Devil in disguise.”
-
-“Very likely,” said the Parson, “lovers very often are; but what about
-your witch children?”
-
-“When they have done all this, the Devil gives notice of the next
-convent, and the witches take the children, and they grow up with their
-brothers and sisters just like any of the others, only that they are
-cross-grained children from that time forward, and are always getting
-into one mischief or another, and quarrelling, and fighting, and
-stealing, and lying, and doing the Devil’s work on earth; for they have
-all had new names given them at the convent, and whenever the Devil calls
-them by those names, they must go and do whatever work he sets them
-at, for they have taken his wages, and, having once engaged to be his
-servants, they cannot help themselves now.”
-
-The Parson felt by no means inclined to laugh at Torkel’s demonology,
-every bit of which may be found gravely and solemnly recorded in the
-State papers of Sweden, for it once formed the grounds of accusation upon
-which men and women were executed by the dozen; for with the exception
-of the material and tangible facts, the cow-like horse, and the silver
-dollar, and the ridge of Gousta, and the bagpipes, the whole of Torkel’s
-story was but an over-true allegory, the antitype of which may be found
-everywhere in real life; and the fact of the Superior Power compelling
-the restoration of all who do not willingly engage in the Devil’s
-service, is a very sound piece of theology. So he very readily joined
-in the prayer of the Evening Hymn, a very ancient composition, dating
-from centuries before the Reformation, which Torkel sang as well and as
-heartily as if he had been kyrkesonger himself. A portion of it has been
-thus translated:—
-
- “Ere thy head, at close of day,
- On thy lowly couch thou lay,
- On thy forehead and thy breast
- Be the Cross of Christ impressed.
-
- “Sin and shame, like shades of night,
- Fade before the Cross’s light,—
- Hallowed thus, the wavering will
- And the troubled heart are still.
-
- “Far, far hence, dark phantoms fly,—
- Haunting demons come not nigh,—
- Ever waiting to betray,
- Arch Deceiver, hence!—away!
-
- “Serpent! with thy thousand coils,
- With thy many winding wiles,
- With thy deep, meandering arts,
- Ruffling calm and quiet hearts;
-
- “Hence!—for Christ, yea, Christ is here,—
- At His token disappear;
- Lo! the sign thou well hast known
- Bids thy cursed crew begone!”
-
- It is a fact that the Gousta Fjeld and the Tind Sö, a very
- large and lonely lake at its foot, are popularly supposed to
- be the resort of the Devil and his adherents. The author,
- however, has not been able to meet with any authentic accounts
- of the diabolical convents in Norway. He has, therefore,
- substituted those of Sweden, the locality of which is
- Blaakulla, in Dalecarlia. These are quoted by Frederika Bremer
- from the manuscript of Kronigsward, which details the judicial
- murders which took place under Councillor Lawrence Kreutz,
- in 1671,—were continued for three years, and were suppressed
- at last by the exertions of Countess Catharine de la Gardie.
- But, though the executions for witchcraft were put an end to,
- the belief in it is as rife as ever. The same book contains
- a laughable story of a supposed witch residing in the island
- of Söllezo, in the Silya Sjön, and of her recovery; which
- proves that the clergy of Sweden have not lost their power as
- exorcists. Not many years ago, a young girl of that island
- asserted positively that she was conveyed every evening to
- Blaakulla. Her parents, who were honest but simple folks, were
- much disturbed about it. They closely watched their daughter
- by night,—bound her fast in bed with cords,—but nothing would
- avail; for, in the morning, weeping bitterly, she still
- maintained she had been at Blaakulla. At last, her unhappy
- parents took her to the clergyman upon the island, and begged
- him, with earnest tears, to save their child from the claws of
- Satan. After having had several interviews with the maiden,
- the clergyman one day said to her, “I know a remedy,—a certain
- remedy to cure you! but it will give me much trouble. Yet, as
- nothing else appears to be of any avail, we will have recourse
- to it.” With much solemnity, he caused the girl to seat herself
- upon a commodious chair in the centre of the apartment, took up
- a “Cornelius Nepos,” and began reading one of the lives. Before
- he had finished, she fell fast asleep; and when she awoke, the
- clergyman told her she was cured—and she was so!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-MAKING ANOTHER NIGHT OF IT.
-
- “Unstable are autumn nights,—
- The weather changes
- Much in five days—
- Still more in a month.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
- “Praise the day at eventide,
- The wife when she is dead,
- The sword when thou hast proved it,
- The maid when she is married,
- Ice when thou hast crossed it,
- Ale when thou hast drunken it.”
-
- _Ibid._
-
-
-Probably their couches were softer than usual,—probably the fact of their
-being under a roof where the sun could not shine on their faces, might
-have prolonged their slumbers; but the fact is, the cock, had there been
-one at the sœter, which there was not, would have “had his boots on”[55]
-a very long while before either the Parson or his follower had opened
-their eyes; and when they did open them, it was some time before either
-of them could recollect where they were. Swedes are not over fond of open
-air, and though their glazed windows in the towns are large enough and
-numerous enough to prove that no ingenious chancellor of the exchequer
-had ever devised a tax upon their light, yet in the fjeld, where glass is
-scarce, windows are scarce too, and the few that there are, are generally
-stuffed with hay. In the present case, though the sun was well above the
-trees, there was not light enough to see the smoky rafters over head,
-or the scarcely less dirty strings of flad bröd which were dangling
-from them; but all round the building there was a perpetual ringing of
-bells, from the great cracked bass to the little tinkling treble; the
-sheep, scared by the noises and the fires, had wandered home during the
-night, and the cows were collecting round the door of the sœter in hopes
-of being milked, which hopes, for one or two of them, at least, were
-speedily realized,—for Torkel, taking the bucket that had been well-nigh
-drained over night, proceeded very composedly to milk them, just as if he
-were in his own sœter in the Tellemark, observing quietly that new milk
-was better than old.
-
-In Sweden, as well as in Norway, every animal turned out on a mountain
-pasture has a bell round its neck; certain _esprits forts_ (all of whom
-do it, notwithstanding, as well as their more credulous neighbours)
-assert stoutly that it is to enable the girls to find them among the
-trees; but as cows generally keep together, and sheep do so, invariably,
-one bell would be quite sufficient for the purpose. The more probable
-solution is that given honestly in the Tellemark: that the bells are tied
-on to prevent the Trolls from milking them in the night,—for no Troll, as
-is well known, can abide a bell.
-
-While Torkel was in the midst of his operations as deputy dairyman, and
-the Parson was looking on, half doubting the propriety of the thing,
-and half inclined to put a stop to it, a sound of laughing and talking
-was heard behind the fence, and three girls, none of them more than
-eighteen or twenty, came clambering over it. Torkel did not seem the
-least in the world disconcerted, nor did they on their part testify the
-smallest surprise or displeasure, though one of them was the proprietor’s
-daughter, and temporary mistress of the hut, and the others were her
-servants; but after exchanging a few joking observations relative to
-their respective modes of passing the preceding night, and the young
-ladies’ taste for field sports, they all set to work milking in earnest,
-and provided for the sportsmen a better breakfast than they were likely
-to have achieved by their own unassisted efforts; nor could they be
-prevailed upon to accept any payment, beyond laughingly insisting upon
-the intruders carrying out every bit of hay, rebuilding the hay-cock,
-sweeping out the room, and putting everything tidily into its place;
-till the Parson detected Miss Lilla eyeing, with evident admiration,
-a pair of Tellemarken shirt-buttons,—round hollow silver balls, about
-the size of a grape-shot, with which he had decorated his broad-flapped
-hat. These, after a good deal of pressing, she permitted the “Herr
-Englesk” to fasten on the red silk handkerchief which formed her very
-becoming head-dress, and they parted mutually pleased, Lilla remarking
-politely—as the Parson, shouldering his gun and taking off his hat after
-the manner of the natives, bade her farvel (for the word is Swedish no
-less than English)—“Jeg er ret lykkelig ved at kunne berede dem denne
-lille Tjeneste,” which, as Lilla was a pretty girl, Torkel condescended
-to understand and interpret,—a thing which he had often professed himself
-utterly unable to do when the speaker was a bearded man, and informed
-the Parson that she was very happy in finding such an opportunity of
-rendering this trifling service.
-
-The Parson’s Swedish was at an end with his “farvel;” all he could do in
-return was to bow and smile, and wave his hand, as he vaulted over the
-rail and left the hospitable sœter behind him.
-
-Their journey through the forest was little more than a counterpart of
-that of yesterday,—now traversing spaces roofed with gloomy fir, and
-beech not less gloomy when you see their undersides only and breathe
-nothing but the confined air below them,—now breathing freely in a glade
-or svedgefall, and gathering a handful of whorts or cranberries by the
-way,—now pushing through a belt of under-stuff, thick enough to conceal
-an elephant, but all the time meeting with very little game. Indeed,
-skals are not by any means the likeliest times to find the smaller game,
-and even the larger lurk unseen till the very end of them. Torkel had
-cracked off the Parson’s rifle at a Lo, as he called it—that is to say, a
-lynx,—that jumped up from under his feet and dashed into a thicket, but
-with very little effect beyond frightening it, though the beast was twice
-as large as a fox and twice as red. The parson had brought down a hen
-“capercailzie,”—but that was the whole of their morning’s sport.
-
-For some time the under-stuff had been unusually thick, and had formed a
-considerable impediment to their progress; they had persevered through it
-for about half a mile, and the wood gave no signs of becoming more open,
-when Torkel stopped, and looked right and left of him through the stuff,
-as if to find an opening.
-
-“We must be skirting the border of a svedgefall,” said he, “where the air
-comes in freely; these hazels would never grow in the close forest,—let
-us edge a little to the right, we are taking the belt end-ways.”
-
-“The right!” said the Parson; “that seems even thicker than where we are
-now.”
-
-“That is the very reason,” said Torkel; “the nearer the svedgefall, the
-more air,—the more air the closer the understuff.”
-
-The Parson thought this remarkably good reasoning, and set himself boldly
-to face the difficulty, instead of shrinking from it,—a proceeding which,
-were it generally followed in our course through life, would seldom fail
-to meet with its reward.
-
-It did not on this occasion, at all events, for after a hundred yards or
-so of hard struggle, they suddenly emerged into an open plain of some
-miles in length, and a good half mile across. It was not a svedgefall,
-as Torkel had imagined, but the clearing formed by an old fire, the
-effects of which nature had already, in a great measure, succeeded
-in repairing; for a coarse grass, gemmed with all manner of flowers,
-covered the greater part of it, through which the spiræa raised its
-feathery head; large tracts were vividly green with young birches, as
-yet hardly higher than the grass, but closely set, as if planted in a
-nursery;—here and there the cranberry threw a gleam of crimson into
-nature’s carpeting, while the epilobium—an absolute tree compared to the
-dwarf plants around it—showed, with its thickly set flowers, a mass of
-lilac; and the fox-glove (in Sweden a holy flower), bent its head and
-rang its fairy bells, inaudible by mortal ears, whenever a good angel
-passed it by on his errand of mercy. A few great mournful dead trees were
-still stretching out their helpless and blackened branches, like the old
-and ruined families after a revolution, sorrowful remembrances of the
-glories which had passed away; but most of these had dropped where they
-had stood, and were already concealed by the vigorous young undergrowth,
-which was springing up all the more vigorously because the soil had been
-for ages fertilized by the leaves of their predecessors.
-
-The Parson sat down exhausted on one of these remains of fallen majesty,
-and fanned himself with his broad-leafed hat, while Torkel, standing on
-the highest point he could find, cast a look up and down the opening,
-which seemed as silent and as destitute of animal life as any part they
-had hitherto traversed.
-
-“There is something,” said he; “I see it move—I am sure there is
-something alive there.”
-
-The Parson was up in an instant, with his telescope in his hand.
-
-“There it is,” said Torkel, “on the farther edge, just under the high
-trees—that tall dead trunk with a forked head is exactly in the line;
-look there, I see it move now as plainly as possible.”
-
-“I have got it now,” said the Parson, “and it is a bear, too, if ever I
-saw one in the Zoological Gardens.”
-
-“Hush!” said Torkel; “do not say that, or we shall never get a shot at
-it.”
-
-“Why?” said the Parson; “it is almost out of sight, let alone out of
-hearing.”
-
-“That does not signify,” said Torkel, “that animal is wiser than any of
-us; whether it has a fylgia, or guardian[56] spirit, like us, is more
-than I can say, but it is the truth, that if ever you name its name you
-will get no shot at it, and fortunate for you if you do not meet with
-some piece of ill luck into the bargain.”
-
-“Well, well,” said the Parson, “I will take care in future; but what am I
-to call him?”
-
-“Call him Old Fur Jacket! or call him The Disturber! or call him The Wise
-One! anything you like, only do not call him what you have done just
-now. I hope no mischief will come of it.”
-
-“There are two,” said the Parson; “there is a little one—I see it plainly
-enough, now that they have got clear from that patch of epilobium. What
-on earth is the old—pshaw!—the Old Wise One about? she seems to be
-administering a little wholesome discipline to young Fur Jacket;”—and he
-handed the glass to Torkel.
-
-“She has been frightened,” said he, “she has been roused out by the dref,
-and she is making her cub get up into the tree; they very frequently
-do that when they suspect they will have to run or fight for it. Young
-Wilful does not seem to know what is good for him, and must be flogged
-into it. Just like our own younkers,” said Torkel, philosophically,
-taking another look through the glass.
-
-“It is not very good for him just now,” said the Parson, “with our eyes
-upon him. If he once gets up he is a lost Fur Jacket.”
-
-“And up he gets,” said Torkel, “and receives a parting benediction from
-his mother’s paw across his stern, just to freshen his way, as Tom says.
-And now how to get a crack at the Old Lady? if we were on the other side
-we might do it easily enough, but the stuff here is not high enough to
-hide us; those brutes have eyes sharp enough to see through a mill-stone.”
-
-“Had we better not watch her? perhaps she will think that which is good
-for young Hopeful will be good for her; we shall have her climbing,
-herself, next.”
-
-“Not she, she knows better; the branch that is very good protection to a
-little lump of brown fur, she knows well enough, would not do for a beast
-almost as big as a cow,—you will not catch her up a tree, and you need
-not expect it.”
-
-“What is to be done then? there she is still.”
-
-“I do not know anything better than to keep along this edge, till we put
-a mile or so of ground between us and her, and then to cross; and the
-sooner we start the better, for she will not stay long after she has
-disposed of her young one.”
-
-“Good!” said the Parson, “and now for finding the place again;”—and he
-took out his compass and placed it on the fallen trunk. “That forked
-tree bears to us exactly E. by N.; when we come down the other side and
-bring it W. by S., we shall not be very far from the place; and then the
-northern edge of that large clump of epilobium will give us the exact
-mark. And now to get there as quick as we may.”
-
-They had not proceeded a couple of hundred yards when they met with a
-brook which intersected the opening nearly at right angles.
-
-“This will do,” said Torkel, jumping into it, for it was not much more
-than knee deep, and clear as crystal. “The fall of the ground, the bed of
-the stream, and the stuff that always grows on the banks, will be quite
-sufficient cover for us.”
-
-On they went, stooping, sometimes splashing through the water itself,
-sometimes creeping on hands and knees under the bank, resting for a while
-behind some friendly rock or stump, then creeping on again, till at last
-they neared the opposite side; and then, seeking the shelter of the
-trees, they took a few minutes’ rest—for going on all-fours is anything
-but a comfortable mode of progression. Slowly and warily they advanced,
-peering about, moving from tree to tree, and looking closely into every
-bush before they showed themselves. There was the place evidently enough;
-the north corner of the epilobium was near enough to the forked tree
-to make a capital mark—there could be no mistake as to the locality;
-besides, the bear’s tracks were evident enough on some soft ground; but
-no living creature was to be seen. The bear had either heard them, or
-smelt them, or, having provided for her young one, and being restless and
-anxious on account of the noises that had roused her at first, had gone
-on to some thicker cover.
-
-“That comes of calling the beast by his name,” said Torkel, half sulkily;
-“never do that again, at least not in the fjeld. Well, never mind, we
-will have young Innocence, at all events; the reward is half as much for
-a cub as it is for an old one.”
-
-“That is all you think about,” said the Parson.
-
-“No it is not,” said Torkel; “I like the sport itself as well as any
-man living—I love it for its own sake; but I should not mind a few of
-their yellow notes, either, to be turned into honest, hard Norwegian
-specie-dalers, and laid up for the winter,—at least, just now, for Lota’s
-sake. Fancy what a set of scoundrels these Swedes must be, when they have
-to print on all their notes, ‘Whoso forges this shall be hanged’—we do
-not do that in Norway.”
-
-“No,” said the Parson, “you are none of you clever enough to forge—the
-_Norges Bank’s Representativ_ is quite safe in such clumsy hands as
-yours.”
-
-“There he sits, just in that fork close to the trunk,” said Torkel, who,
-if he had not, as the Parson insinuated, skill enough in his fingers to
-forge a note, had quickness enough in his eyes to see through a log of
-timber, if a bear had been hiding behind it. “There is young Innocence!
-Oh! do not spoil his skin with that small shot. Here is the rifle. Put
-the ball in under his ear,—that will not hurt him.”
-
-It did not seem to hurt him, in good truth, for he never moved an inch
-on receiving the shot, though the blood dripping down the tree showed
-that the ball had reached its mark. The cub remained perfectly dead, but
-supported by the fork in which he was sitting.
-
-“What is to be done now?” said the Parson; “I do not see how to get him
-down, for the trunk is too big to swarm up, and we have not a branch for
-twenty feet; but it will never do to leave him there.”
-
-“Leave him!” said Torkel; “O no! that would never do. I think we may get
-up into that tree, though, with a little management.”
-
-There was growing, within a few yards of the great tree which the bear
-had selected, a small thin weed of a fir, which, coming up in the shade,
-had stretched itself out into a long branchless pole with a bunch of
-green at the top, in its legitimate aspirations after light and air.
-Torkel, disengaging the axe which he usually carried at his back, notched
-it on the nearer side, and then, seeing its inclination would carry it to
-the great tree on which the cub was hanging, cut vigorously. In a minute
-or two the little fir sank quietly into the yielding arms of his great
-neighbour, and formed with its trunk a rough ladder. Up this Torkel,
-having paused for a moment to see if it had finally settled, climbed
-as readily as any bear in the forest. He was soon seen worming himself
-through the spreading branches, and slipping down to the fork; and the
-little lump of bear’s fat, about the size of a two-year-old hog, came
-squashing down upon the turf.
-
-Small as it was for a bear, it was impossible to carry it; so they tied
-its hind legs together, and hung it upon one of the dead trees in the
-open, the Parson having first pinned upon its snout a leaf which he had
-torn out of his note-book, and had written Torkel’s name upon it.
-
-Torkel, however, was mistaken about his share of the yellow notes,
-though the Parson did not suffer him to lose by it. Every bear killed in
-a skal is the property of the Ofwer Jagmästere; a regulation which is
-found to be absolutely necessary, in order to prevent men from breaking
-their ranks and hunting the likely places independently,—a proceeding
-which would ensure the loss of every bear except the particular animal
-which was the object of immediate pursuit. Of this Torkel was not aware,
-because in Norway skals such as this seldom or never take place, not
-only because the ground is generally too difficult, but principally
-because the inhabitants are too widely scattered to be easily collected
-in sufficient numbers, and a great deal too lawless to be managed if they
-could.
-
-With all the complacency which the consciousness of having done a good
-action confers, they proceeded on their journey, which, as their course
-happened to lie lengthways of the opening, was easy enough. Hot, and the
-least little bit in the world fatigued, they sauntered along on the shady
-side of the glade, till they began to discover that the whole country had
-become shady, and that a little sun, if it was to be had, would be just
-as pleasant. In fact, it had become extremely chilly.
-
-“There goes Thor’s hammer,” said Torkel, as a crash of thunder burst over
-their heads, echoing from tree to tree; “we need not fear the Trolls
-now, every one of them is half-way to the centre of the earth by this
-time.”
-
-“I wish we had nothing worse to fear,” said the Parson; “but this gradual
-darkening looks a great deal more like a spell of bad weather than a
-sudden storm. I wish we knew where the Captain’s post is.”
-
-“We cannot be within seven or eight miles of that,” said Torkel; “and
-I really do think that we are going to have a wet night, and plenty of
-mist into the bargain. It will be perfectly impossible for us to find
-the post, knowing so little of the country as we do. We had better hut
-ourselves at once. If we had been on the hill we might have seen this
-coming, but down here it was impossible, with no sky visible, except that
-which is right over our heads.”
-
-“Well,” said the Parson, “if it is to be, we may as well halt at once. So
-off with your havresac, and turn to. This spreading fir will do as well
-as any for our canopy.”
-
-Torkel was a man of deeds, and his assent and approbation were
-demonstrated by his throwing down his havresac and forthwith selecting
-and cutting down a young fir for his ridge-pole; and,—while the Parson
-was securing the locks of the guns with handkerchiefs, and such like
-extemporaneous expedients,—for the gun covers had, of course, been left
-with the baggage,—he had already cut down two pair of cross timbers to
-lay it on. The Parson, with his hand-bill, aided him vigorously, and
-the more so that the rain had now begun to patter sharply from leaf to
-leaf, and it was very evident that no long time would elapse before
-it found its way to their localities below. The frame-work of the hut
-was arranged, and branches of the fir and beech, and coarse grass and
-juniper,—in fact anything that could be collected on the spur of the
-moment,—was laid on as thatch, while Torkel hastily drew together and
-chopped up the driest stuff he could find for the fire.
-
-The rain was now coming on in right earnest, and the night was
-prematurely setting in. The drops came through thicker and thicker, each
-one as big as a marble; and the sportsmen, with jackets more than half
-wet through, crept disconsolately into the unfinished hut, in order, as
-Torkel said, to make themselves comfortable.
-
-The first piece of comfort which was discovered was that the havresacs,
-which had been thrown off at the beginning of the hutting operations,
-had been left where they were thrown, and were by this time wet through
-and through, together with every morsel of bread that they contained.
-The supper was not luxurious, and, as neither was greatly disposed for
-conversation, they laid themselves up in the warmest corner they could
-find, and courted forgetfulness, as well as rest and refreshment, in
-sleep.
-
-The Parson, as an old fisherman, had been pretty well accustomed to a
-minor description of roughing it. The boxes of dried poplar leaves of a
-Norwegian cottage, or the heaps of hay of a sœter-farm were to him as
-feather beds. A rainy day, too, he had often hailed as remarkably good
-fishing weather, but a night’s bivouac, sub-Jove, and that Jove pluviali,
-was rather a new thing to him; and his cloak, too, miles off, under the
-charge of the faithful Jacob. One habit, however, he had picked up in his
-travels, which stood him in good stead now, and that was the habit of
-“making the best of it.”
-
-Bad was the best; the fuel was wet and scanty, and the fire soon went
-out; and Torkel’s house, run up hastily and after dark, was as little
-water-tight as if it had been built by contract. Before midnight the
-Parson was roused up, first by detached drops and then by little
-streamlets falling on his face and person, and wet and chilled, he lay
-counting the hours, and envying Torkel, who snored comfortably through it
-all.
-
-Morning came at last—it always does come if we wait long enough for
-it,—and a dull and misty light began to struggle in through the opening
-of the hut, and through several other openings also, which, during the
-past night had officiated, though uncalled for, as spouts for the water.
-
-Still the rain fell, not in showers, not violently, for there was not a
-breath of wind, but evenly, quickly, steadily, as if, conscious of its
-resources, it meant to rain for ever; while the big drops from the fir
-branches kept patter, patter, on the soppy ground, and the mist hung so
-low that you could scarcely see the branches they fell from.
-
-“Hang that fellow, he will sleep for ever,” said the Parson; “come, rouse
-out Torkel, ‘show a leg,’ as Tom says, it is broad daylight now, and high
-time for us to be moving.”
-
-Torkel stretched himself and rubbed his eyes, and looked stupid; his
-thoughts had not returned from his native Tellemark, and his prospects of
-a “home and pleasing wife,” on the banks of the Torjedahl, of which, in
-all probability, he had been dreaming.
-
-“Come, Torkel, rouse up my boy,” said the Parson, kicking him; “here
-is the tail end of the brandy-flask for you, and when that is gone, we
-must find our way to where more is to be had.” The hint of brandy had
-the desired effect of waking up the old hunter; for even his iron frame
-was none the better for the night’s soaking. The brandy, however, put
-them both in good-humour, and having extracted from their havresacs that
-which had once been excellent kahyt scorpor, but which now were black
-soppy lumps of dough, they made an extempore breakfast, seasoned by some
-chips of Fortnum and Mason’s portable soup, a piece of which the Parson
-invariably carried with him, but which, as there was now no possibility
-of lighting a fire, they were obliged to suck or eat as they could.
-
-“Now Mister Torkel, _en route!_ hvar er väga til hållet? we must get
-there before we taste brandy again, that is certain; pray Heaven they
-have not broken up the skal, and left us alone in our glory. That is our
-direction,” continued he, looking at his pocket-compass, “but the thing
-is to keep it, in this thick wood and thick weather, when no one can see
-a dozen yards before his nose.”
-
-Every one who has been out in a fog knows the propensity the traveller
-invariably has to work round in a circle, and to return to the spot from
-which he started. True, in the present case, the compass was a safeguard
-against this, but to consult the compass when walking or riding requires
-time, the needle does not settle itself to the north without a good deal
-of vacillation; and here the lie of the country gave no assistance
-whatever; it was not a plain, certainly, for it was very uneven, and
-occasionally rocky, but there was nothing like hill, or any continuous
-direction of declivities, which could form a guide. Here and there were
-dense brakes, every leaf and twig of which, overcharged with moisture,
-showered down its stores upon them, and there was no possibility of
-picking the ground, where the only chance of finding the track lay in
-keeping the compass course. No brook had been met with of sufficient
-volume to render it probable that it had come from behind the hills; and
-besides, it was more than probable that the watercourses, which formed
-the only communications with the pickets above, were much too full now to
-be practicable.
-
-As hour after hour wore on, and the forest seemed always like that
-through which they had started in the morning, the Parson was more than
-once tempted to follow the course of the running water, and to make his
-way down to the river, upon the chance of at least a shelter and a meal
-at one of the farm-houses; but the hopes of effecting a junction with his
-friends, and still more with his baggage, kept him to his course, though
-the hållet—as Virgil’s Italy served poor Æneas—seemed to be continually
-going backwards as he approached it.
-
-“Hallo!” said Torkel at last, who was then a little in advance, “what
-have we got to now, a svedgefall, or a sœter? the fjeld is much clearer
-here. Oho, I see! this will do; look here, this juniper was cut only
-lately, and here is another stump, and the branches all carried away,
-too, and there is a tree that has got its lower boughs trimmed; we have
-got to the shooting line at last.”
-
-“Upon my word, I think we have,” said the Parson; “and if so, we must
-turn short up to the left, and the Captain’s post cannot be far from us.”
-
-“Unless they have broken up the skal,” said Torkel.
-
-“If they have, I am sure we shall find some one here, left to guide
-us; Lieutenant Birger knows that we are to make for this spot. Here is
-something, at all events,” as they came in sight of a line of peeled
-saplings, right across the path, which had for some time begun to ascend
-rather rapidly. “This will do, I am sure;” for now a peasant, who had
-been sitting cowering under the rock, with a soldier’s musket in his
-hand, the lock of which he had covered with a sack that had evidently
-done duty with the carioles, came forward to meet them.
-
-He was not very communicative, however, for he could not speak English,
-and would not understand Norwegian; but, at all events, they learnt to
-their comfort that the post was there still, and, after ten minutes sharp
-pull up a steep but very open and practicable pass, they came in sight of
-the Captain’s watch-fires, situated in the gorge of it.
-
-“Home at last!” said the Parson.
-
-“And high time, too,” said the Captain. “There, pick those wretched
-flowers out of that hat of yours, and let us see whether we cannot make
-you look less like a drowned rat.”
-
-“You have not broken up the skal, then?” said the Parson.
-
-“Oh, no! nothing like it; the rain came on late in the evening, and
-they could not have broken it up then if they wished, for the men would
-not have had time to go home, and might just as well make themselves
-comfortable where they were.”
-
-Comfortable! thought the Parson, shrugging his wet shoulders, and
-thinking of his own comforts during the night past.
-
-“And this morning,” continued the Captain, “the weather-wise say that the
-rain will not last; and as they have driven so much of the country, and
-fairly disturbed the game, the Ofwer Jagmästere sent for some brandy—not
-enough to make the men drunk, but as much as is good for them,—and they
-are to keep their fires burning and make all the noise they can, and so
-keep the game within the ring till the weather clears.”
-
-“And where did you hear all this?” said the Parson.
-
-“Oh, Birger is here,” said the Captain; “he came in about two hours ago,
-as wet as you are; he is asleep in the other tent. Did you not see a row
-of barked bushes as you came up?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Parson, “that I did, and I hailed them as the traveller
-did the gibbet,—the first mark of civilisation I had seen; but I cannot
-say that I understand what they mean.”
-
-“It was Birger’s plan,” said the Captain, “they have done it pretty
-continuously along the line of the dref; it is intended to look like a
-trap, and to prevent the game from coming up the pass during the rain,
-when we cannot trust to our rifles. We have had half-a-dozen wolves here
-last night; there is one of them,” pointing to a carcase which two of
-the men were skinning. “I was not ready for them, that is the truth,
-for I was eating my supper. I ought, certainly, to have had a brace of
-them, but this gentleman was a little in the rear of his party, and the
-Devil took the hindermost,—at least my little pea-rifle did. And there
-are a couple of foxes; Tom says their skins are valuable. I picked them
-off during the night. I am pretty sure we had a bear, too, early this
-morning; but he turned, whatever he was, before I could get a sight of
-him.”
-
-“No wonder, with that fire,” said the Parson.
-
-“Why, we do want to keep them in,” said the Captain; “besides, who is to
-do without a fire in such weather as this? There—had you not better go
-and make yourself comfortable. Jacob has brought your knapsack and cloak:
-you will find them there in the tent—(by-the-bye, what do you think of
-the use of tents now?) After that I suppose you will be ready for dinner?”
-
-“You may say that,” said the Parson; “it is little beside biscuit sopped
-in rain that we have had this day. Tom,” he shouted, “mind you take care
-of Torkel there; going without his grub is a serious thing to one of your
-country, and a still more serious thing going without his brandy.”
-
-“As for your wet clothes,” continued the Captain, “there is no help for
-that. Birger’s are much in the same mess, but we have a fire big enough
-to dry anything, if the rain would only hold off. In the meanwhile
-you must keep under canvas; those lug-sails of yours keep the wet out
-capitally. You see, I have used them for roof, and have built up walls to
-them with fir-branches and junipers.”
-
-“Upon my word,” said the Parson, “it is quite luxurious, and so is this
-dry flannel shirt—Heaven bless the man who invented flannel shirts,—I
-should have been dead with cold by this time, if I had been wearing a
-linen one. Hallo, Jacob! you look rather moist; what is the state of the
-larder?”
-
-Whatever the state of the larder was, the Captain had determined it
-should be a mystery, for he knew well that nothing unfits a man for
-subsequent work so much as a hearty meal after great fatigue upon little
-sustenance. As soon, therefore, as he heard that they had eaten little
-or nothing since their breakfast at the sœter on the preceding day, he
-gave a private sign to Jacob, and nothing whatever was forthcoming but a
-good strong basin of portable soup, smoking hot, with a couple of kahyt
-scorpor bobbing about in it; and, early as it was in the day—for it was
-not more than four in the afternoon,—the Parson was well satisfied to
-scoop out a bed in the dry moss of the tent, to draw his fur cloak over
-him, and to seek in sleep the rest which he needed quite as much as he
-did the food.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE WATCH FIRE.
-
- “Fire will be needful
- For him who enters
- With his knees frozen.
- Of meat and clothing
- Stands he in need
- Who journeys o’er mountains.
-
- “Water is needful,—
- A towel and kindness,
- For the guest’s welcome.
- Kind inclinations
- Let him experience;—
- Answer his questions.”
-
- _Hávamál._
-
-
-Sound and deep were the Parson’s slumbers, complete and absolute was
-his state of unconsciousness. Noises there were in the camp, no doubt,
-noises of every description: eight or ten people without any particular
-occupation, without any reason whatever for keeping silence—rather the
-reverse,—are apt to be noisy. But it was all one to him, the Seven
-Sleepers themselves could not have slept more soundly; and the next
-four or five hours were to him as though they had not been. His first
-perception of sublunary matters was awakened by the words of a well
-known air, which at first mingled with his dreams, and then presented
-themselves to his waking senses:—
-
- “O, never fear though rain be falling,—
- O, never fear the thunder dire,—
- O, never heed the wild wind’s calling,
- But gather closer round the fire.
- For thus it is, through storm and rain,
- The weary midnight hours must wane,
- Ere joyous morning comes again,
- And bids the gloom retire.”
-
-The Parson unrolled himself from his cloak and looked out; the night had
-fallen dark enough, and the rain, though it gave evident symptoms of
-having exhausted itself, was still falling, but scantily and sparingly.
-The mist was thicker and darker and blacker than ever; all, however, was
-bright light in the camp, for the bale-fires of Baldur could not have
-burnt more brightly than the watch-fires of the picket. The Captain had
-had plenty of spare hands and plenty of spare time, and had kept his men
-in work by collecting stores of fuel; besides which he had made use of
-an expedient which, common enough in winter camps, is seldom resorted to
-in summer. A full-grown pine, which seemed to have died of old age, and
-had dried up where it stood, was cut down; the head, already deprived of
-its branches by Time, was chopped off and laid alongside the butt, end
-for end, and the fires had been lighted on the top of these two pieces
-of timber. The interstice between them admitting the air from below,
-roared like a furnace, and blew up the bright flames on high; whilst the
-trunks themselves, which had speedily become ignited, contributed their
-own share to the general light and heat. There were several supplementary
-fires, for the great furnace was much too fierce for culinary operations;
-and the smoke from all these, pressed down, as it were, by the
-superincumbent mist, formed, by the reflection of the flames, a sort of
-luminous halo, beyond which it was impossible for eye to penetrate. Here
-and there fir branches were stuck into the ground to dry the clothes
-upon, for though the drizzle had not exactly ceased, the heat dried much
-faster than the rain moistened.
-
-Full in the blaze of light, and as near as he could approach to it
-without burning himself, stood Birger; his neat little figure just as
-tidy, and just as carefully dressed, as if there had been no such thing
-as falling rain, or wet juniper, or prickly brambles in the world. He
-was standing with his back to the fire, and his hands in the pockets of
-his shooting-jacket, watching the preparations for a late supper, and
-singing, at the full pitch of a very powerful voice, the magic words
-which had recalled the Parson to a state of consciousness. The Captain,
-who had evidently been furbishing up with fresh chalk the “S. F.” on
-his cap, which looked quite white and new, notwithstanding the rain, had
-just returned from visiting his sentries, and was examining the lock
-of his American rifle, which he had carried with him, to see if it had
-sustained any damage from the wet. Jacob, and his attendant imps, were
-emerging from behind the flames with the everlasting black kettle, which
-was accompanied this time by a pile of steaks, cut from some mysterious
-animal, and served up on the splash-board of one of the carioles, by way
-of dish.
-
-“Halloo! Birger,” said the Parson; “you here! Rather a change in the
-general aspect of affairs since we parted last!”
-
-“You may well say that; I never saw such a determined day’s rain; I
-thought the twilight of the gods was come in real earnest.”
-
-“To judge from the fire that you have got up,” said the Parson, emerging
-from the tent, “you seem inclined to realize the old prophecy, that that
-twilight is to finish off by a general conflagration.”
-
-“You need not cast inquiring glances at me,” said Birger to the Captain,
-who, having satisfied himself about the state of his weapons, was trying
-to make out the allusion. “I am not going to tell you that long story
-now. The gods themselves, if we may trust the high song of Odin, used to
-take off the edge of their hunger, and thirst, too,—for they were thirsty
-souls,—before they called on Bragi, the god of minstrelsy, to sing even
-their own deeds. And, to tell you the truth, to say nothing of my being
-as hungry as a hunter, these steaks are most magnificent, and this kettle
-unusually savoury.”
-
-“What have you got in it?” said the Parson.
-
-“Andhrimnir cooks Sahrimnir in Eldhrimnir,” replied Birger, quoting from
-the cookery of the prose Edda. “Do you not see Odin has sent us a present
-of heavenly meat from Valhalla?”
-
-“Nonsense! what is the meat of Valhalla called here on earth?”
-
-“Goat’s flesh,” said Birger, demurely.
-
-“Humph!” said the Parson, turning over, with his crimping knife, a bone
-almost big enough to have belonged to a small ox; “and this is a goat’s
-rib, is it?”
-
-“Valhalla was always remarkable for its breed of goats,” said Birger:
-“but never you mind what rib it is, there’s a biscuit to eat with it,
-that is all you need care about, just now. I am afraid our host, the
-Skalfogdar” (bowing to the Captain), “cannot find you any currant jelly
-to eat with it.”
-
-“I can find you some cranberry jelly, though,” said the Captain, “which
-is a much better thing, and much more characteristic of the country.
-Here, Jacob, hand me that mess-tin, will you. The very first thing I did,
-after reconnoitring my post, was to lay in a store of these cranberries,
-and to make them into jelly. I had not to go far for them. You would not
-like them in the Swedish fashion—pickled,—would you? I think the men have
-got some which they have made for themselves.”
-
-“Thank you, yes; and a little of the forbidden stuff, too, to wash it
-down with. Never mind the water, Piersen, I have taken my share of that
-already.”
-
-Here Jacob made his appearance, with four or five orre grouse, spitted
-upon a strip of fir;—Jacob piqued himself on his fjeld cuisine, and
-really did serve up his dinners admirably. The whole was concluded with
-split grayling, by way of cheese, for being north of the Wener Sjön, they
-were in the grayling country,—a circumstance which the Captain, whose
-post was not a mile from the river, had not been slow to profit by;—on
-the sunny morning of the preceding day, he had caught them by dozens.
-The grayling, which are seldom caught in Norway, where the rivers are
-mostly too rough for such tender fish, abound throughout the whole north
-of Sweden, and are worth anything to the fisherman; they render his
-chances of sport, as well as of provisions, very much less precarious,
-because they do everything which trout do not; they are stationary
-when—in Sweden, at all events—the trout is migratory; they come into
-high season when the trout are going out; they will not rise in a stormy
-day, which the trout loves; but, when the sun is bright and the wind is
-low, and not a ripple curls the surface, and not a trout stirs beneath
-it, the swift, shadow-like grayling dot it with their rises like so many
-hail-stones. They are very good eating, too, when dressed in any way man
-can devise; but a very excellent method, and a very common method in
-Sweden, is to split them down the back, pepper them well, and dry them in
-the hot sun before broiling them, or making them into plok-fiske. This
-Jacob was unable to do on the present occasion, for the rain had been
-falling from the time of the Captain’s return from the river; so he had
-substituted for the sun that which was scarcely less hot—the Captain’s
-blazing fire; and his imitation was unanimously pronounced to have
-exceeded the original.
-
-“I do not think I should have fared like this at any of the farm houses,”
-said the Parson, stretching himself at full length on his cloak and
-basking at the fire, for the rain had now entirely ceased, and the
-bivouac began to look home-like and comfortable. “I must say it required
-a pretty firm determination to keep steadily onward, with soaked clothes
-and chilled bones and empty stomachs, such as we had this morning. I was
-sorely tempted to make for shelter; but I set before me the comforts of
-persevering, and I am very glad I did so. To say nothing of your company
-and Jacob’s dinner, this glorious blaze is far better than a farm-house
-stove, and my old cloak than a dirty sheep-skin. Well, virtue is its own
-reward. Jacob, fill the pot with hot water, and let us have a few embers
-here to keep it warm. Have you got any sugar?”
-
-“There is nothing your countrymen are so remarkable for,” said
-Birger, “as a steady, resolute perseverance against difficulties and
-discouragements.”
-
-“Pluck?” suggested the Captain.
-
-“Yes, Pluck! you did not know when you were beaten at Waterloo, and so
-you won the battle; Wellington would have got an army of Englishmen out
-of the scrape of Moscow, if he had ever been ass enough to get them into
-it.”
-
-“I think,” said the Parson, “that this may be traced to a national
-peculiarity of ours—love of adventure. Other men will undergo hardships
-and incur dangers, in search of gain, or even in the pursuit of some
-definite object, but the Englishman seeks his hardships for the pleasure
-of undergoing them,—courts his dangers for the pleasure of surmounting
-them, and follows out his adventure for adventure’s sake.”
-
-“In fact,” said the Captain, “he does just what we are all doing now.”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “and let no one say—what is the use of it?—what is
-the Englishman the better for diving into mines, and scaling mountains,
-and crossing deserts?—what has he to show for it? He has this to show
-for it,—a manliness of character,—a spirit to encounter the dangers of
-life, and a heart to overcome its difficulties. Depend upon it, while
-your aristocracy—men brought up and nourished in the very lap of luxury
-and ease—seek their pleasures in the dangers of the wild ocean, or the
-hardships of the stormy mountain-side, you will see no symptoms of
-degeneracy in the hardihood and manliness of your national character.
-Pluck is a genuine English word, slang though it be.”
-
-“I think you may translate it into Swedish,” said the Captain, “for our
-English blood has a cross of Scandinavian in it, and there really is as
-great a similarity in our national characteristics as there is in the
-structure of our languages.”
-
-“I think,” said the Parson, “your word ‘Mod’ implies pluck, with a dash
-of fierceness in it. When it is said of some grand berserkar, ‘har
-oprist syn mod,’ it means that he has summoned his pluck, with the full
-intention of making his enemies aware of that fact. Still, however, it is
-a fair rendering of our more peaceable word, and you have a right to it;
-but I am quite sure you cannot translate that expression into any other
-language under the sun, without losing some part of its force.”
-
-“Whether any foreigners can translate the word into their own language,”
-said the Captain, “is more than I will undertake to say, but they
-perfectly understand and appreciate this peculiarity of our English
-character. Last year I was arranging with one of the Chamouny guides an
-expedition into the higher Alps; I had with me a jolly talking little
-French marquis, whom I had picked up at St. Gervais. He was an ambitious
-little fellow, and volunteered—Heaven help him!—to be my companion.
-My guide—(you recollect old Couttet, Parson?)—looked rather blank at
-this, and taking me aside, said in a low voice, ‘_absolument je n’irais
-pas avec ce Monsieur lá_.’ ‘Why?’ said I, rather astonished at the man
-refusing that which would certainly have put some additional francs into
-his pocket. ‘_Je connais bien ces Francais_,’ said he—‘an Englishman
-is fearful enough in the valleys, always saying he will not do this,
-and he cannot do that, because in truth he is so proud that he does not
-like to take anything in hand and be beat in it; but once get him on the
-mountain, and fairly in for it, and be the danger what it may, he faces
-it, and be the fatigue what it may, he keeps up a good heart, and in the
-end gets through it all as well as we do ourselves. Your Frenchman is as
-bold as brass in the valleys, and does not do badly for a spurt if he
-thinks people are admiring him, but he gets cowed when danger comes and
-no one to see him, and sits down and dies when he is tired.’”
-
-“Mr. Couttet was a sensible fellow, and knew his man,” said Birger, who,
-descended from the old aristocracy of Sweden, hated and despised the
-French party most cordially; “and how did you get rid of your travelling
-companion?”
-
-“O! Couttet took the management of that upon his own hands; he made
-the poor little marquis’s hair stand on end, with all sorts of stories
-about snow storms, and whirlwinds, and frozen travellers; which no doubt
-were true enough, for there is not a pass in the High Alps without
-its well-authenticated tale of death; so the little fellow came to me
-heartily ashamed of himself, and looking like a dog that was going to be
-whipped, with his ‘mille excuses,’ and so forth, and in fact, we then and
-there parted company, and I have not seen him from that time to this. He
-certainly was rather an ambitious Tom Thumb for the Col du Géant.—Hallo!
-there is something on foot there,” said he, interrupting himself, “hark
-to that! there goes another.” And in fact, three or four shots not very
-distant from them were distinctly heard, though they came, not sharp
-and ringing as such sounds generally strike upon the ear through the
-clear air of the north, but deadened by the mist, as if, so to speak,
-the sound had been smothered by a feather-bed. “There goes another! and
-another!” then came a whole platoon—“O, by George! I must go and visit my
-sentries.”
-
-“All nonsense,” said Birger, “one fellow fires at a rustling
-leaf, and then all the rest crack off their pieces, by the way of
-follow-the-leader; you may just as well make yourself comfortable,”
-drawing his cloak round him by way of suiting the action to the word.
-“Hand me over the bottle, Jacob! some more hot water in the pot!”
-
-“I shall go, however,” said the Captain, who was young at picket work,
-and proportionably anxious; so shouldering his rifle, and calling to Tom,
-his corporal and interpreter, he disappeared into the outer darkness,
-while his friends settled themselves more comfortably in their cloaks,
-and threw half a dozen additional, not to say superfluous, logs into the
-glorious blaze.
-
-The dispositions at the foot of the pass had been made with great
-judgment; the object was, if possible, to prevent anything from passing
-during the night, but at any rate to arrange matters so that nothing
-should pass without being seen.
-
-For this purpose a pretty large fire was lighted so near to the
-perpendicular part of the rock that nothing would be likely to go behind
-it, the shrubs of course being cleared away from its vicinity; and on the
-opposite side of the passage was a little sentry-box of fir branches,
-under which sat two Swedes, with directions to let fly at anything that
-crossed between them and the fire; so that if they missed, as most likely
-they would, the picket above might at least be prepared.
-
-The men, who had been excited by the firing, were sharp as needles, and
-indeed, were not very far from letting fly at their own commander, but
-they had seen nothing that they could be very certain about, though of
-course their imaginations were full of half the beasts in Noah’s Ark; and
-so, after straining his eyes into the thick darkness for half an hour
-or more, the Captain heaped fresh fuel on the fire, recommended a sharp
-look-out, returned slowly up the pass, and was well laughed at for his
-pains as he resumed his seat by the blazing tree.
-
-“By the way, Birger, what is that story that you and the Parson were
-alluding to just before dinner, I hope you have eaten and drank enough by
-this time to qualify you for relating it.”
-
-“What, the twilight of the gods? the Ragnarök, as the Edda calls it; that
-is not a story, it is a bit of heathenism.”
-
-“It seems to me,” said the Captain, “that you Swedes keep your heathenism
-a great deal better than you do your Christianity.”
-
-“The Norwegians do, certainly,” said Birger, “the fact is, their
-conversion was effected by force of arms, rather than by force of
-argument; the party of Olaf the Christian was stronger than the party of
-Hakon the heathen, so they killed and converted, and the people became
-Christians, and very appropriately adopted the saint’s battle-axe for
-their national emblem. As for their Reformation, that was simply an order
-from a despotic court, not resisted, only because the people did not care
-much about the matter. ‘It will not make herrings dear,’ was the popular
-remark on the subject. The creed of Odin was the only religion that they
-were in earnest about, and that is why the legends that they cling to,
-are, nine times in ten, heathen rather than Christian.”
-
-“I think I have read that story about the herrings in Geijer, but applied
-to a different nation,” said the Parson; “it will not do for you Swedes
-to be throwing stones at Norway, in the matter of that Reformation; your
-original conversion by St. Ansgar, was a good deal more creditable than
-theirs, but your Reformation was simply the party of Gustaf stronger than
-the party of Christiern—you reformed your Church because you wanted to
-dissolve the union of Kalmar.”
-
-“What do you say about your own Reformation?” said Birger.
-
-“That it has nothing to do with the twilight of the gods, which the
-Captain wants to hear about—tell us what you Swedes believe about that.”
-
-“Why, we Swedes do not believe in it at all; it is not like the legends
-of the Walpurgis Night, or the death of Baldur, which are annually kept
-alive by the change of seasons which they commemorate. This legend
-has lost its hold on the popular mind; but it is a curious theory,
-notwithstanding, because it contains evident traces of a revelation
-corrupted, because disjoined from that people to whose guardianship had
-been committed the oracles of Divine Truth. In the twilight of the gods
-may be clearly traced a representation of the end of the world, such as
-is revealed to us:—a fierce winter, the most terrible natural affliction
-to the northern mind, is to usher it in; then comes the general falling
-away, which we are ourselves taught to expect.[57]
-
-“The sun and the moon are to be devoured by the wolves, that have
-been continually pursuing them ever since creation, and every now and
-then, by seizing them, have caused eclipses; the stars fall, the earth
-quakes so that the trees are shaken from their roots, and the mountains
-totter;—then the Midgard Serpent turns on its ocean bed, and an immense
-wave rushes over the land, upon which floats the phantom ship, Naglfar,
-which is built of the nails of dead men—the wolf, Fenrir, together with
-the midgard serpent,—both of them the offspring of Loki, the Principle
-of Evil,—which hitherto have been chained down by the Æsir, are now
-permitted to break loose; the heavens are cleft in twain, and the sons
-of Muspell, the Band of Brightness, headed by Surtur the Avenger, ride
-through the breach, and advance by the bridge of Bifrost which bursts
-asunder beneath them. For the time the Avengers join their bright bands
-with Loki and the Children of Darkness, and advance to the battle-field
-of Vigrid, where the destinies of the world are to be decided.
-
-“In the mean while the gods are fully prepared; Heimdall, the Warder
-of Heaven, has sounded the Horn Gjallar, and the gods assemble in
-council;—Valhalla pours out from its five hundred and forty gates its
-hosts of heroes; these, which are the men who have been slain in battle
-from the beginning of the world, and ever since have been trained by
-daily tournaments for this very purpose, are eager for the combat; and
-Odin, having previously ridden over for the last time to the Well of
-Mimir, and consulted the Norna, marshalls his hosts on the field of
-Vigrid; loud and desperate is the battle, the Powers of Evil fall one by
-one before the gods, but very few of these survive the conflict. Thor,
-having killed the Midgard Serpent, falls exhausted with his efforts and
-dies; Frey, who has parted with the sword of victory, falls before the
-avenger, Surtur; Loki and Heimdall engage in battle and mortally wound
-each other; Odin himself is swallowed up by the wolf Fenrir, which is
-instantly destroyed by Vidar; and last of all, Tyr, the God of Victory,
-falls in the very act of overcoming the dog Garm.
-
-“Surtur the Avenger, having now no opponent, sets the earth and the
-heavens on fire with his excessive brightness, and the whole race of men
-is consumed, with the exception of certain chosen individuals who lie
-hid and protected in the forest of Hodmimir. Then Surtur himself retires
-before Vidar, the God of Silence, who, calling to him Modi and Magni
-(Courage and Might) the sons of Thor (Violence), and summoning Baldur
-(Innocence) from the realms of Hela (Night or Invisibility), founds a new
-heaven and a new earth, and a new race of inhabitants, and they dwell on
-the plains of Ida (perpetual youth), where Asgard formerly stood, and
-their descendants shall spread over the new earth, which shall be lighted
-by a new sun.
-
- “‘The radiant sun
- A daughter bears
- Ere Fenrir takes her;—
- On her mother’s course
- Shall ride that maid
- When the gods have perished.’
-
-“And now, to quote the conclusion of the Prose Edda, ‘If thou hast any
-further questions to ask, I know not who can answer thee, for I never
-heard tell of any one who could relate what will happen in the other ages
-of the world. Make, therefore, the best use thou canst of what has been
-imparted to thee.’”
-
-“Why,” said the Captain, “this is Revelation!”
-
-“To be sure it is,” said the Parson; “and my wonder is not that so much
-of revealed truth should have been corrupted, but that so much should
-have been preserved. There is no occasion for the sneers of those who
-say that in the conversion of Scandinavia, St. Ansgar merely substituted
-Valentine for Vali, St. Philip for Iduna, and our Lord for Baldur. He
-had, in truth, little to teach his converts beyond explaining allegories,
-and shewing them that their religion was only a mild, yet tolerably
-faithful type of that which was actually true,—that Thor and Odin
-were attributes, not persons, and that Asgard and Gimli, and Hela and
-Nifleheim, were states and conditions, not places.”
-
-It must not be supposed that this conversation had been continued
-altogether without interruption. Shots had from time to time rung through
-the night-air; some faintly and from great distances; some, as it would
-seem, within a few hundred yards of them; there was evidently something
-restless in the circle of the skal, but their own sentries gave no
-notice, and the ear becoming accustomed to such noises, the shots had of
-late been little regarded.
-
-One moment, however, changed the whole aspect of affairs, and recalled
-the thoughts of the party from the heights of Asgard to the affairs of
-middle earth.
-
-A shot from the foot of the pass; then another! “Hjortarne! hjortarne!”
-(the stags! the stags!) roared out the sentries.
-
-The Captain sprang into a dark corner, bringing the whole blaze before
-him, and cocked his rifle. Then came a sound like a troop of horse
-at full gallop—a rush!—a charge! Jacob flying into the arms of the
-sportsmen, his coffee pot scattering around its fragrant contents,—dark
-forms bounding across the bright spot of light, scattering the men,
-and the wet clothes, and the cookery, and the crockery! A crack from
-the Captain’s rifle! a crash! and the whole scene passed away like an
-illusion, leaving the circle tenantless, in the midst of which the great
-fire was blazing away as quietly and peaceably as if nothing unusual had
-ever been illumined by its light.
-
-“By the Thousand! that shot told somewhere,” said Birger, picking himself
-up. “By George, it is Jacob! poor devil! Well, I am sorry for him, the
-old scoundrel.”
-
-But Jacob, when he could be brought to his senses, could not find out
-that he had been wounded at all, though his great unwieldy frock-coat
-was split up the back, and the tails rolled in some unaccountable way
-round his head. His ideas, which were never peculiarly bright, had got
-completely bewildered, and nothing could convince him that a legion of
-Trolls had not been making a ball-room of his ample back.
-
-“It was not Jacob I fired at,” said the Captain, quietly reloading his
-rifle; “take a pine knot, and look a little further up the pass; I
-suspect you will find something more valuable than our fat friend. Oh,
-that’s it!” as a loud shout was heard; “I thought it could not be far
-off,—bring him into the light.”
-
-Birger repeated the command in Swedish, and presently three or four of
-the men emerged from the outer darkness, bearing, with some difficulty,
-an enormous elk, the patriarch of the forest.
-
-“Well done,” said Birger; “capital shot! Here! Tom, Torkel, out with your
-knives, and off with the skin; do not think twice about it. Ten to one
-we shall have Moodie here; he will not mind his own people much, but he
-knows that we are not in the habit of firing into the air, and he will be
-coming to see what has been disturbing the camp all night. There, look
-sharp! never mind a tear or two; make that beast into goat’s flesh as
-soon as you can. Cut off the head at once, you cannot disguise the horns!”
-
-“Well, but what if Moodie does see it?” said the Parson.
-
-“Why,” said the Captain, “Birger is quite right. Moodie is in command,
-and he would consider it his duty to report us; and besides, I will
-answer for it he would jump at the chance of playing Brutus, and delating
-his own friends. There was a good deal of significance in the way he
-cautioned us that elks and red-deer were strictly preserved. It is a
-fact, too, that with all that immense range of royal forest at his
-undivided command, he has never shot a stag or an elk yet. He considers
-himself on honour, and behaves like a gentleman and a kammerjunker, as he
-is.”[58]
-
-“He is the only man in Sweden who does, then,” said Birger. “I will
-engage for it. Bjornstjerna, Hof Ofwer Jagmästere, as he writes himself,
-never loses a chance if he can get one on the sly. By the way, how nicely
-the mist has cleared off, without any one seeing it. Positively I can see
-the stars again. I told you it would be so:—
-
- “Through storm and rain,
- The weary midnight hours must wane,
- Ere joyous morning come again,
- And bid the gloom retire.”
-
-“I wish I could take you up to our day look-out place,” said the Captain;
-“we should have a good view of the watch-fires from it now. I stood there
-for an hour together on the first night, looking at the fires of the
-hållet; and by this time the dref must have come quite near enough for us
-to see them too.”
-
-“Well,” said Birger, “come along! I think I know the way,—it is the path
-I came down by this morning, is it not?”
-
-“Yes it is, but it will never do on a dark night like this; it is not
-over-safe by day, and there are shreds of the mist hanging about us
-still. We want light for that path.”
-
-“And light you shall have,” said Birger. “Here, Tom, split me this
-fir-root, it is as full of turpentine as it can hold. There,” continued
-he, thrusting the end of one of the slips into the blaze, and striking up
-the song of the Dalecarlian miners:—
-
- “‘Brother, kindle thy bright light,
- For here below ’tis dark as night;
- Gloomy may be on earth thy way,
- But light and good shall make it day.’
-
-“Now then, I think we start by this ledge; light another of these
-pine-slips, Tom, and bring the whole bundle with you.”
-
-The path was not altogether a safe one, certainly, for it was a narrow
-ledge, winding round the face of the cliff that formed the northern side
-of the pass, and leading to a sort of promontory which jutted forward
-somewhat in advance of the range; but there were plenty of branches to
-hold on by, and there was no real danger as long as there was light
-enough to see where to place the feet; and when they had got fairly out
-of the range of their own enormous fire, the stars were glimmering, and
-the night was not, after all, so very dark. A withered ash, the bare
-trunk of which stretched out horizontally, like a finger-post, from the
-extreme point, was their look-out, and bore the strip of calico, once
-white, but now sullied and dishonoured by twenty-four hours of continuous
-rain, which marked the position of their picket.
-
-The look-out commanded completely the position of the hållet, the
-encampment of which was placed among some straggling copse that feathered
-the reverse slope of the spur of rock which connected the range of
-hills with the rapids and falls of the river. Among this bushwood were
-scattered, irregularly, the cooking and sleeping fires, glancing every
-now and then on the huts of boughs and other temporary shelter which had
-been run up to protect the men from the wet, while, on the bare crest
-of the spur, which had been entirely denuded of what little timber it
-possessed, was a line of fifty watch-fires, one to each skalfogde’s
-command; each of these had its stoker, who from time to time replenished
-its blaze with fresh logs,—and its sentry, who, sitting or lying in
-some dark recess, was to fire at everything that came within the circle
-of the light. Everything betokened extreme watchfulness; not a fire
-burnt dim,—black figures were continually passing and repassing before
-them,—and every now and then a straggling shot waked up the echoes, and
-kept the whole line in a state of continual agitation.
-
-The dref, which had advanced a little during the day, was still five or
-six miles off, and their fires, which formed a vast semicircle, were,
-for the most part, hidden by the trees; but a hazy and continuous line
-of misty light defined the whole position, tinging the very sky with
-redness, so that the receding skirts of the mist looked luminous, like a
-terrestrial aurora borealis.
-
-While they yet gazed, the tree tops, which, beyond the reflection of the
-fires, had hitherto been one unbroken sea of blackness, came gradually
-into view: first the spiry tops of the firs, then the rounder and softer
-outlines of the birch and ash, grew more and more defined; then the
-character of the foliage became distinguishable,—the glaucous white of
-the poplar and the fringiness of the ash and rowan: then a soft pale
-light, interspersed with deep broad shadows, was cast over the scene,
-slightly dimming the glow of the watch-fires, and contrasting strangely
-with their yellow light; and then the half moon rose up from the cliffs
-behind them, illuminating the distant landscape, but bringing that
-immediately beneath their feet into blacker and darker shade.
-
-“Your friend Bjornstjerna is a plucky fellow,—that I will say for him;
-most men would have turned tail at such a drench of rain as we have had;
-and now virtue promises to be its own reward—we shall have a glorious day
-to-morrow.”
-
-“I think we shall,” said Birger,—“indeed, I am sure we shall, as far as
-the weather is concerned; but I am afraid that will not prevent us from
-suffering some loss by what we have had already. You may depend on it
-every beast within our circle has gone the rounds and tried the weak
-points of it,—some have escaped, at all events. The wolves last night,
-and the stags just now, have forced the passage with very little loss;
-and certainly ours is not the most unguarded spot in the line.”
-
-“By George! Birger! that shot is from our post!”
-
-“Not a doubt of that;—and there’s another! Wait a bit, it may be nothing
-after all.”
-
-“O! but it is something!” said the Captain, in an agony, as three or four
-more shots rang from the out-post itself, followed by confused cries and
-shouts, as if men were engaged in mortal conflict.
-
-The Captain threw himself on the steep descent, the whole of which he
-would have accomplished very much quicker than was at all salutary for
-his bones, had not Birger caught him by the collar as he was disappearing.
-
-“For God’s sake, mind what you are about! Take a torch in your hand, if
-you must go; or, better still, let Tom go first. Whatever it is, the
-thing must be over long before you can get there. All you will do at that
-headlong speed will be to break your neck down the precipice!”
-
-Tom, much more cool, had already taken the lead, and was throwing a light
-on the narrow and broken pathway for the Captain to see where to place
-his footsteps. Birger’s selection of Tom for a leader was a good one,
-for it was absolutely impossible for one man to pass another during the
-descent, and no threats or entreaties from the Captain could urge the
-phlegmatic Norwegian beyond the bounds of strict prudence. The last ten
-feet of the rock the Captain leaped, and pounced down from above into the
-midst of the picket.
-
-Before the great fire lay a full-grown bear, dead, and bleeding from a
-dozen wounds, and round him were grouped the whole picket—including the
-sentries, who had deserted their posts,—whooping, and hallooing, and
-screaming, and making all sorts of unintelligible noises.
-
-The story was soon told, when the men had been reduced to something like
-order. The bear had been attempting to steal past the first fire, and,
-sidling away from it, had almost run over the two sentries, who were
-much too frightened to fire with any aim or effect. The bear, almost as
-frightened as they, had rushed forward, but, startled at the great blaze
-upon which he came suddenly at the turn of the pass, hesitated a moment,
-and received Torkel’s spear in his breast. The rifles and guns, which
-were lying about, were caught up and discharged indiscriminately, and,
-as luck would have it, without taking effect on any of the party. Some
-rushed on with their axes, some with knives, some with blazing brands;
-and the bear dropped down among them, mobbed to death, every individual
-of the party being firmly convinced that it was he, and none but he, who
-had struck the victor stroke.
-
-“Well!” said Birger, “there is the bear, at all events; and a good thing
-for us that he is there; we should not have heard the last of it from
-Moodie for some time, if he had slipped off. Hang him up, my men; we will
-skin him when we have time and daylight; we do not want to make goat’s
-meat of that fellow, at all events. Hang him up openly, by the side of
-the wolf.”
-
-“Bother that moon,” said the Captain, sulkily, for he did not enter into
-the spirit of ‘_quod facit per alium facit per se_.’ “What a set of
-lunatics we were to go staring after the picturesque instead of minding
-our business; all of us together, too!”
-
-“It was very poetical,” said the Parson.
-
-“Yes, that is the very thing. Birger, you do not take in the allusion, I
-can see—a ‘grāte powut,’ as they pronounce it, is, in Ireland, slang for
-an irrecoverable fool.”
-
-“Well! well!” said Birger, laughing,—for, being an old bear-hunter, he
-was not jealous, and could afford to laugh,—“we have not got to the
-higher flights of poetry yet, and we will take good care not to leave our
-posts again. As for you, Captain, _pends-toi, brave Crillon, nous nous
-sommes combattus à Arcques et tu n’y étais pas_. However, I think we had
-better get a little sleep, those who can, for the chances are we shall
-want steady nerves to-morrow.”
-
-So, sending back the sentries to their posts, the whole party, with their
-weapons by their sides, and everything ready for a sudden emergency,
-rolled themselves up in their cloaks, with their feet to the fire, one of
-them (taking it by turns of an hour each) walking up and down, rifle in
-hand, within the circle of its light.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-BEATING OUT THE SKAL.
-
- “Now the hunting train is ready. Hark, away! By dale and height
- Horns are sounding,—hawks ascending up to Odin’s halls of light.
- Terror-struck, the wild-wood creatures seek their dens ’mid woods and
- reeds;
- While, with spear advanced pursuing, she, the air Valkyria speeds.”
-
- _Frithi of Tegner._
-
-
-“Hillo, Moodie! what news?” said the Captain; “have a cup of coffee and
-a—a—chop,” as that individual strode down the pass from the side farthest
-removed from the skal looking—as, indeed, was very nearly the case—as if
-he had neither trimmed his beard nor washed his face since the beginning
-of the campaign.
-
-“Why, the news is, that you had better look out sharp, if you mean to
-do credit to my recommendation. I had a message from Bjornstjerna last
-night, that he meant to get the dref in motion an hour before sunrise, so
-as to beat out, and give the men time to get home before evening; they
-must have been advancing for these two hours; our people have heard their
-shouts distinctly enough, and I only wonder we have had no game yet.
-Capital mutton chops, these,” he added; “who is your butcher?”
-
-“O, we are pretty good foragers,” said the Captain, carelessly, but at
-the same time casting an anxious glance round the encampment, to see
-whether there were any tell-tale horns or hoofs lurking about. “Terrible
-weather yesterday, was not it?”
-
-“Upon my word, it was as much as I could do to keep the men at their
-posts; I have got one or two skulkers down in the Länsman’s books, but
-I do not think I can have the conscience to inflict the fine; I had
-half a mind to skulk myself;—we must do it, though, in justice to the
-honest fellows who braved the weather. I think the best man I have is
-a woman; she did more service in shaming the men and keeping them to
-their duty than a dozen of us. I had occasion to degrade a skalfogde
-for drunkenness, and I promoted her into the vacancy on the spot. How
-the men laughed: they call her some Swedish equivalent to the ‘Dashing
-White Serjeant,’—and I only wish I had a dozen white serjeants instead
-of one. But what have you done here in the shooting way? I heard a good
-deal of firing last night from your post; you have made yourselves pretty
-comfortable, at all events.”
-
-“It is a way we have in the army,” said the Parson. “There is our
-_spoliarium_, however,” pointing to a group of carcasses that were
-hanging to the lower branches of a fir,—“one bear, two wolves,
-five foxes, a lot of hares, and”—here the Captain plucked his
-sleeve,—“and—that is all, besides a young bear which I killed in the
-fjeld as I came along.”
-
-“Oh come! that is not so bad; and that bear is a glorious fellow! who
-killed him?”
-
-“Why, we cannot justly say,” replied the Captain, sheepishly: “the fact
-is, he made a charge upon the picket, and it took a good many hands
-to quiet him,—you may see that by the gashes; I am afraid the skin is
-terribly injured.”
-
-“What a mercenary dog you are; these are honourable scars, which, while
-they impair the beauty, only enhance the value;—every cut is the memorial
-of a gallant deed.”
-
-Whether the Captain,—who was vehemently anxious to kill a bear to his own
-hand, and whose conscience upbraided him bitterly for his last night’s
-dereliction of duty,—coincided in this sentiment, might be doubted;
-at all events, he made no attempt to remove the doubt by indiscreet
-confessions, and was only too glad to shift the subject, lest any
-untimely observation from his companions or attendants might reveal the
-true state of the case.
-
-“What have you done yourself?” said he; “I am sure your people must
-have fired twenty shots for our one; I thought you were having a mock
-skirmish, at one time.”
-
-“O, those people fire at anything or nothing, just for the sake of making
-a noise. We have got a good many wolves and foxes, though, and a rascally
-lynx or two; but we have not been so fortunate as you with the bears;
-though I am clear we saw two or three during the night. I am sorry to
-say that there were three or four stags killed, and I do not know what
-to do about it. There was a herd last night very restless; it had tried
-our line at several points. I had given strict orders to let them pass,
-but they always got headed back, somehow,—in fact, the men fired at them,
-that is the truth of it, and the skalfogdar say they could not prevent
-them. This morning, as many as three were brought in dead, and I am sure
-I do not see how I am to identify the men who fired; they were firing all
-night, and every skalfogde stoutly denies that his party had anything to
-do with it.”
-
-“Oh! how were the people to distinguish one beast from another in the
-dark?” said the Captain; “you may be thankful they have not shot one
-another, and that you have not had three or four peasants brought in this
-morning, instead of three or four deer.”
-
-“Upon my word, there would have been less said if it had been so.
-However, I must report it to Bjornstjerna, and leave him to do what he
-pleases. I strongly suspect my dashing white serjeant of being one of the
-murderers. Give me another chop,—that mutton of yours is the very best
-thing I have eaten since we left Gäddebäck,—and then you really must get
-to your posts; we shall have the dref down upon us before we know where
-we are. Several hares had been showing themselves, and trying to pass the
-line before I came up, and they will not do that by daytime, unless they
-are driven. You had better break up the encampment as soon as you have
-done breakfast: let Jacob stow everything ready for moving, and then send
-him off to have the carioles harnessed. The skal will break up before
-noon, and then there will be such a rush of fellows wanting to get home,
-that the chances are we shall have a Flemish account of our horses, if
-we do not look sharp after them now. People are in no ways particular on
-these occasions; there are so many of them, that it is difficult to fix
-the blame anywhere, and all roguery goes down to the account of mistake
-and confusion.”
-
-“Very well,” said the Captain, jumping up and carefully loading the rifle
-which Tom had just been cleaning from the effects of the night’s dews
-and rain, while the shot-gun had been doing duty in its place by the
-Captain’s side,—“then here goes; I am going to the foot of the pass, and
-shall not want Tom this half hour, so he may help Jacob. Birger is going
-to the look-out place, and he will not want his man either. What will you
-do, Parson?”
-
-“Why, I think I will take a turn with Moodie down the hållet, when he
-goes back to inspect his posts. I shall want Torkel to carry my rifle, as
-I may not come back here; but your two men will be enough to help Jacob.
-How are we to carry these great beasts?”
-
-“Oh, that is Bjornstjerna’s business. I dare say he has given orders for
-a sufficient number of carts, or, at all events, we shall have men enough
-to carry them when the skal breaks up. These are public property,—you
-need not trouble yourselves about them; what we have to think about is
-our own little belongings.”
-
-“Public property!” said the Captain; “I did not bargain for that; I want
-the skins to hang up in my paternal halls, as trophies of the battle.”
-
-“Then you must buy them,” said Moodie; “there will be an auction up the
-village as soon as the skal breaks up, and by offering a little more
-than the market price, you may secure anything that you want. It really
-is a very fair regulation,” he added, observing a shade of discontent
-on the Captain’s brow. “You shot them, no doubt; but you could not have
-got a shot at them at all if it had not been for these people driving
-them. Properly speaking, they belong to Bjornstjerna, but I understand
-he has given up his right to the men, if so, they will all be converted
-into brandy before night-fall, you may be quite sure. However, come
-along,—that last volley was from the dref, and it sounded quite close.”
-
-Moodie’s path was by no means either easy or safe, for he carefully
-avoided the straight road which would have led him across the shooting
-line, and contriving to make a circuit and scramble down the face of the
-cliff at a small fissure, which lay a quarter of a mile to the north
-of the pass, he attained the rear of the hållet without disturbing
-or tainting the ground. It may be observed, that there was no such
-extreme necessity for all this precaution; but Moodie was, after all,
-an Englishman, and a hunter of but four years’ standing, and, if he
-was the least bit in the world a martinet, he was not altogether
-without excuse,—and really his position was, it must be confessed, very
-scientifically occupied.
-
-At the time that he and the Parson came on the ground, the hållet was
-just relieving guard, in order to give the morning watch an opportunity
-of breakfasting before the general turn out; and the scene was extremely
-picturesque.
-
-The breakfast was an extempore affair enough, except among those parties
-who had been so fortunate as to knock a hare on the head, or to secure a
-joint of what Moodie turned his face away from, and the Captain persisted
-in calling mutton. A little rye meal, mixed up cold, or in special cases,
-when kettles could be had, made into stirabout, was very nearly the whole
-of it. An older commander would have closed his eyes to the sight of
-brandy, and his nose to the smell of aniseed, but Moodie was young, and
-faithful to his trust.
-
-Groups of men and women were collected round the fires for cooking,
-some rubbing up firearms, some snapping and oiling obstinate locks and
-picking touchholes which the wet had damaged, and drying powder which
-either would not go off at all or else flashed in the eyes and singed
-the hair and eyebrows of the operators. Gradually, however, they all
-began to straggle into their line, for the sounds of the dref were more
-and more audible, and now and then some scared and crouching beast would
-show itself on the side of the hill, and after drawing upon itself the
-fire of all who were within a quarter of mile of it, would shrink timidly
-back into cover, nine times in ten absolutely unharmed. Now would come,
-high over head, and altogether free from the chance of shot, a gallant
-blackcock or a tjäder, who, having run or flitted under cover for miles,
-had at last taken heart of grace, looked his danger in the face, and
-dashed across the line with that success which bravery deserves. Hares
-would from time to time race along the brow, unable to make up their mind
-which way they would head, and sometimes would draw a fruitless shot or
-two from a young and over-ardent sportsman, followed by the grave rebuke
-of his steadier skalfogde.
-
-Meanwhile the Captain had advanced along into the shooting line, and
-building himself up a screen of branches, where he could fully command
-the passage, waited patiently for what luck would send him; absolutely
-despising the smaller game that occasionally stole across the line and
-sheltered themselves in fancied security in the skalplatz, and not
-greatly disturbed by the occasional double-shots from Birger’s look-out
-place on the cliff above, though this was not unfrequently followed by a
-rattle of the twigs, or a soft _thud_, as his victim came tumbling to the
-earth.
-
-Birger’s post, indeed, had proved an excellent position for winged game,
-for the grouse, though by no means plentiful anywhere in Sweden, had been
-collected from twenty miles of country by the continued driving. Many, of
-course, had taken wing, and dashing over the heights, had found security
-in the higher fjeld, or across the river. But the grouse, especially the
-old cock, is a running bird, and numbers of them had continued toddling
-away by short and startled runs, a mile or so in advance of the dref, and
-now, hearing the noises in front as well as in the rear, and beginning
-to comprehend the precise dangers of their position, were, one after
-another, taking wing. Many of these followed the line of the cliffs,
-unwilling, perhaps unable to face them, but coasting their inequalities,
-and looking out for a lower point; these would come exactly on a level
-with Birger’s stand, and very seldom passed it unharmed.
-
-All this the Captain left unheeded; his soul was above black game; and,
-burning to wash away the disgrace of the preceding night, he kept his eye
-resolutely fixed on the shooting line; something moves—it is a bear—no—a
-rascally wolf, in that nonchalant style which no amount of danger will
-induce him to put off, slouches across—not across, for he is worthy of
-the Captain’s rifle; a shot reaches him, and he rolls over and over to
-the very foot of the shelter he had sought. Not a stir is heard from the
-Captain’s screen, and when the little puff of white smoke is dissipated
-into air, no one would have told where the fatal shot had come from.
-There goes a real full-grown bear, in downright earnest, and followed
-by two half-grown cubs, crouching and squatting, and making themselves
-as small as possible, like so many rabbits stealing out of cover; but
-confound them, they are three hundred yards down the line, the Captain
-will not risk wounding or missing them, and they disappear into the trees
-of the skalplatz to be headed back by the hållet when too late to return.
-
-And now the shouts and cries began to come louder and louder; and the
-hares, which had lingered as long as possible on the edge of the wood,
-began to creep, or steal, or race, or bound across the line, and among
-them several specimens of better game; the men were actually beginning
-to show themselves here and there in what, from the closing in of the
-ranks, had now become close order, so that nothing could have passed
-their line, when a gallant bear, with head erect and mouth open, dashed
-into the opening at full gallop, and came straight upon the Captain’s
-hiding-place, as if he knew where his enemy was lying, and meant, at all
-events, not to die without vengeance.
-
-The Captain fired deliberately,—paused for a moment to see the effect
-of his shot—then fired his second barrel; both took effect on the broad
-chest exposed to him, though without checking, for a moment, the rush of
-the bear. On he came!—the screen went down like reeds before him; but
-the Captain had thrown himself flat on the ground, and, covered by the
-branches, had escaped the view of his adversary, who plunged over them,
-dashed at the opposite cover, and disappeared from view.
-
-“Upon my word, that was a near thing,” said Bjornstjerna, who cantered
-up to the spot on his pony; “but a miss is as good as a mile,—not that
-you missed that rascal; I saw both shots strike as plainly as ever I
-saw anything in my life. Never mind, my boy, you have not lost him; he
-will not go far, for all his gallant bearing. Larssen!” he shouted,
-“Larssen! come here and take my pony. We must ride the Apostle’s
-horse[59] now;” and, leaping off, he proceeded to arrange his army,
-causing each skalfogde to muster his own men, as they came up, on the
-edge of the shooting line. Soiled, and wet, and dirty they looked: a
-Swede is rather a picturesque animal, when you are far enough off not
-to see his dirt, particularly when there is any general muster of them,
-for as each parish weaves its own wadmaal, or coarse cloth, and each
-wears it of a particular colour or pattern, the commencement of a skal
-looks, at a little distance, like a muster of regular troops, in regular,
-though rather eccentric uniforms: but the rains, and the dirt, and the
-mud-stains had reduced this to a very general average,—a sort of forest
-uniform of neutral tint.
-
-Advantage was taken of the halt to clean and reload the fire-arms, most
-of which had been rendered useless in the morning’s beat; for though the
-sun was shining brightly, there had been no wind, and the rain-drops of
-yesterday were glittering like diamonds on the branches, and pattering
-down like a shower-bath on all who moved them.
-
-In the mean time, the two chiefs having completed their junction, held
-a short consultation, and it was determined to advance a strong party
-from each side, close to the roots of the cliffs, sufficiently numerous
-to allow each man to touch his neighbour, and then to beat the skalplatz
-out to the river, which, not being quite so rapid or impassable as was
-expected, was guarded by the boats.
-
-This involved the abandonment of the Captain’s picket, which
-reinforced the beating party, the _materiel_ being conveyed, under the
-superintendence of Jacob, to the travelling-waggon which had been brought
-as near to the scene of action as the forest roads permitted.
-
-And now began the real dangers of the skal,—the difficulty of restraining
-the men from firing indiscriminately into the skalplatz, and shooting
-everything alike,—wolf, hare, fox, or beater.
-
-Fortunately the men were sober, and the officers well aware of the
-danger. Flags were sent into the forest to mark the advancing line;
-strict injunctions were given that none should be permitted to advance
-faster than his neighbours, and a trusty man on the outside of the
-cover carried a white flag about five yards before the main body of the
-beaters, followed by an _extempore_ provost marshal, with a party of
-trusty men, who had orders to tie up and flog on the spot any man who
-fired at anything whatever in the rear of the flags.
-
-All these arrangements were completed in little more than half-an-hour,
-and the bugles on both sides rang out the advance. The progress was very
-slow, not only on account of the necessity of preserving the accurate
-line, but because the beasts themselves required so much rousing; many of
-the smaller game, and, on one occasion, even a wolf, absolutely refused
-to move at all, and was knocked down or speared as it lay. In no case was
-resistance made by any of the wild beasts, with the single exception of
-the gallant fox, who, desperate but unsubdued, stood boldly at bay, and
-bit furiously at everything within its reach, but in vain,—for as the
-line soon became two or three deep, escape was next to an impossibility.
-One of the bear cubs, a three-parts grown animal, was dispatched by a
-blow of a hatchet, and the other was shot in the thick cover, by a man
-who had almost stepped upon it without seeing it. The Captain’s bear, a
-full-grown male, did not live ten minutes after it had gained the cover;
-there was no faltering in its gait or symptom of injury, for no muscle
-had been cut or bone broken by the shot, and its pluck and energy had
-carried it on till it fell suffocated by internal bleeding.
-
-And now the shouts rang out from the river-side; the she-bear had taken
-the water, and was gallantly forcing her way across it at a point rather
-higher than the boats had expected her. The stream was strong; the boats
-were at some distance; the Swedes, who were never good at moving-shots,
-had blazed away when she first dashed into the stream, and there was
-every chance of her escape, for they are terribly awkward in loading
-their terribly awkward firearms; the rowers were pulling away for life
-and death, and the heavy boats were forcing their slow progress against
-the stream, which was gradually bringing the bear down to them as she
-swam across it, when a long-shot from Bjornstjerna took effect, she
-rolled over, recovered herself, struck out again, but was carried down
-among the boats, secured, and brought to land.
-
-The game was then mustered,—so far, indeed, as it could be recovered, for
-it was shrewdly suspected by some, that the whole was not forthcoming.
-There were four full-grown bears and three cubs, seven wolves, two
-lynxes, three or four badgers, and a queer nondescript animal of the
-genus _canis_, which they called a filfras; foxes there were in some
-numbers, and this a much more valuable description of animal than ours;
-hares were numberless, and also squirrels,—many of both these last
-species of game, too, had been stewed and eaten on the preceding days.
-Whether any other description of larger game had been shot, did not
-appear. Notwithstanding what Moodie had said about the herd of stags,
-none were paraded at the muster, and as he did not, after all, make any
-complaint to the Ofwer Jagmästere on the subject, it may be concluded
-that the whole was a mistake or a dream of his own, and that no such
-breach of forest law had been committed by any one,—a fact of which the
-Captain loudly declared his complete conviction.
-
-[Illustration: DEATH OF FEMALE BEAR.
-
-p. 376.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE BALL.
-
- “Truly my brethren—truly my dear sisters—do you know how it
- seems to me—why it seems to me that no one can get along till
- he has taken a draught—How so? Eh? Your health, dear soul—
-
- Here’s to you day and night,
- New raptures, new delight.
-
- Strike up with the fiddles! beat the drums! a stout pull at the
- pot!
-
- Here’s to ye as is fit,
- The reckoning day endeth it.
- The big bottle hail ye,
- The drums beat reveiller,
- At one draught down send it,
- The reckoning will end it.
- Kajsa Stina stands a drawing,
- All my heart is clapper-clawing,
- From the pot my fingers thawing—
- Thus I sing my dying song.”
-
- _Fredman’s Epistle to Kajsa Stina, Karl Bellman._
-
-
-Never had the arches of the old forest rung with such shouts and screams,
-and roaring songs, and bursts of laughter, as they did on the evening
-of the great skal. A few of the elderly people, but a very few, had had
-enough of it, and went off quietly to their homes as soon as they were
-released from duty; as for the rest, no one could have supposed that
-they had been worked off their legs, and kept from their natural sleep,
-and drenched to the skin for the last three or four days and nights;
-they were not over-clean, certainly, though some of the youngsters had
-contrived, somehow or other, to smarten themselves up for the occasion;
-but the rest made a great contrast to the women, those at least who
-had taken no active part in the skal,—their white woollen jackets, or
-scarlet or green spencers covered with embroidery and buttoned down the
-front with silver knobs, formed a pleasing relief to the dinginess and
-raggedness of active service. As for the unfortunate buglers, who,
-most of them, were general musicians, and would play upon anything that
-was wanted, these, without the least regard to their previous fatigues,
-which had been even greater than those of the beaters, were placed upon
-barrels, or carts, or stumps of trees, fiddling and clarionetting for the
-bare life, while men and women tore in wild polska round them.
-
-Some travellers have characterized the Swedish dances as indecent;
-whether they are so or not, English papas, and mamas, and maiden aunts
-are very competent judges, for they are precisely the English polka, as
-we call it (dropping the s for convenience of pronunciation); the English
-polka is, in reality, the national peasant dance of Sweden; and in their
-own country the Swedes dance it with all their hearts and souls as well
-as their limbs and bodies—not sliding and mincing as we do, but downright
-pounding, so as to leave the print of the foot, and especially the heel,
-on the yielding turf.
-
-It might seem difficult to provide refreshments for such a ball-room
-in such a place, where the dancers mustered somewhere about two
-thousand strong—but in truth they were no way nice. The game, which
-Bjornstjerna had very liberally given up to them, formed a good part of
-these refreshments, a few sheep—“really sheep this time,” the Captain
-observed,—with a good supply of rye-meal made into stirabout, formed
-the solids, and these, though, with the exception of the game, they did
-not grow in the forest, were easily procurable, for the families of
-the combatants, knowing that a party of English gentlemen were engaged
-in the skal, and rightly conjecturing that their hearts would be open,
-had brought their stores to the meet, and all of these stores were not
-exactly solids; the barrels on which the fiddlers were standing were
-intended for something better than rye-meal: in fact, corn brandy, and
-a hot fiery liquor which they make out of potatoes—very beastly to the
-taste, but quite as efficacious in producing drunkenness as the very best
-Cognac—was in plenty, and, the restrictions of the skal being at an end,
-there was every prospect that the men would fully indemnify themselves
-for their previous abstinence.
-
-Birger and Moodie were stamping, and polking, and hurrahing, and kissing
-their partners with the best of them, and the Captain, also, was not
-altogether unsuccessful in his _coup d’essai_; as for the men, Tom and
-Piersen had altogether forgotten the inferiority of the Swedes to the
-true Norwegians, and Jacob’s long streaming coat tails had gone quite mad.
-
-Torkel, alone, stung by some jest from his friend Tom, about the peculiar
-duties and system of self-denial proper for an engaged man, crept up
-rather discontentedly to the fire, at which the Parson was standing and
-talking over the events of the day with Bjornstjerna.
-
-In Norway, which in reality is a republic, and not a monarchy, there
-is a great deal of independence and equality among all ranks, which is
-not by any means the case in Sweden; but even in Sweden, a skal is a
-time of saturnalia; and besides, Torkel, though in some measure acting
-in the capacity of a servant, was, in reality, the son and heir of a
-sufficiently wealthy proprietor; and the Englishmen, whom he ranked
-infinitely higher than he did the very first of Swedish nobility, having
-treated him all along more as a companion than anything else, he felt not
-the least shy of the Hof Ofwer Jagmästere, though he added the title of
-Count to his official honours,—and therefore entered very readily into
-conversation.
-
-They were turning over the skins of those beasts the bodies of which
-were already undergoing a conversion into soup; most of these had been
-purchased by the party, and were laid aside for packing; but the lynxes
-and the filfras, and some others, which are not considered good for
-eating, were still hanging by their heels to the lower branches of the
-tree.
-
-The filfras was a curious animal, about three feet long, but low in
-proportion to its length, with great splay feet, well calculated to form
-natural snow shoes—in fact, he leaves a track almost as large as that of
-a full-grown bear, and upon the whole, very like one, and climbs trees
-even better and quicker than his big brother. The present specimen had
-been detected on a tree, and being wounded while in the act of passing
-from one branch to the other, had come to the ground; but, wounded as
-he was, he had fought gallantly for his life, and had bitten so severely
-the first man who attempted to handle him, that he was obliged to leave
-the skal and go home. The filfras is a harmless beast enough, so far as
-sheep and cattle are concerned, and lives chiefly upon hares and such
-game, which, though his eyesight be not very quick, a remarkably keen
-scent enables him to tire down—he himself, in return, is even detected
-by his own scent, which is perfectly perceptible to human nostrils, and
-extremely disagreeable,—few dogs can be got to run him.[60]
-
-The lynx, though of the tiger race, is a very harmless beast unless
-attacked; he may carry off a young lamb now and then, but very seldom
-kills his own mutton—it is not for want of spirit, for he fights like
-any tiger when driven into a corner; throwing himself on his back, he
-polishes off the dogs as fast as they come near him. A pack of English
-fox-hounds might settle his business, as they probably would that of his
-Bengal cousin himself; but there is not a dog in Sweden that would look
-him in the face.
-
-“It is a great pity,” said Torkel; who was examining the shot-holes in
-the bear-skins.
-
-“What is a great pity?” said the Parson.
-
-“Why, to mob to death all these fine beasts, that might have given people
-no end of sport in the winter.”
-
-“And eaten up no end of sheep and oxen,” said Bjornstjerna.
-
-“Ah! well!” that did not strike Torkel very forcibly; he had, it must
-be confessed, led hitherto a rather miscellaneous sort of life; he knew
-a great deal more about hunting than he did about farming, and regarded
-the depredations of the bear—though some of them had been made on his
-father’s own farm—much in the light in which an English fox-hunter
-listens to tales of murdered geese and turkeys.
-
-The matter which weighed upon his conscience just then was, that poor
-Nalle[61] had not received altogether fair play. This had not struck him
-during the heat of the chase so very much, but, now that the murder had
-been committed, and that he was regarding the result of it in cold blood,
-he evidently did not feel quite easy in his mind about it.
-
-“Ah!” he said, “poor fellow,” turning over the skin of Bjornstjerna’s own
-bear, which was yet wet with the water of the river in which he had been
-killed; “well! we do not do such things in our country.”
-
-“No!” said Bjornstjerna, “you could not get a couple of thousand people
-together in your country without knives drawn.”
-
-“But how do you manage it in your country?” said the Parson, who was not
-a little afraid that his follower’s nationality would get the better of
-his politeness.
-
-“Ah!” said Torkel, “you should see one of our Norwegian bear-hunts in the
-winter; it is not an easy thing to get Master Nalle on foot, and he takes
-a good deal of looking after; but, when you do get a chance, it is worth
-having.
-
-“I remember my brother Nils one day, as he was coming home from church,
-took a short cut across the fjeld, and put his eye on a queer-looking
-heap in the snow, that he did not rightly know what to make of. While
-he was looking at it out came a great fellow—one of the biggest I ever
-followed,—as if he would eat him. Down tumbled Nils on his face, and the
-Wise One came ploutering through the snow right over him, but went on,
-minding his own business, as all wise ones do, and never stopped to look
-at Nils.
-
-“It so happened that my brother Nils had nothing but a pair of skarbogar
-on his feet (a rough sort of snow-shoe, made of wood and rope), and,
-knowing he could not get over the ground very well, never tried to
-follow him, but came home quietly and told me what he had seen. The
-weather looked fine, and there was neither snow likely to fall, nor wind
-likely to drift what was fallen already, so that we knew the tracks would
-lie; and the next morning, before it was well light, we had each of us
-our pair of skier on our feet, our rifles at our backs, a good iron-shod
-pole in our hands to shove along by, and a week’s provision in our
-havresacs. I took old Rig[62] with me, in case we should lose the tracks.
-
-“We soon came up with them, and off we went, taking it leisurely—for we
-had a long run before us. It requires some little exertion to get up hill
-with these skier; they do better for such a country as this than they do
-for the rocky and tangled fjeld in Norway; but, on flat ground, you get
-along five or six miles an hour without feeling it, and as for down-hill,
-you may go just as fast as you like, only for standing still and keeping
-your feet.
-
-“For four or five hours the track lay as straight and even in the snow as
-if we had been travelling the post road to Christiania. Old Nalle thought
-his winter quarters were not over safe, and meant evidently to make a
-passage of it, and had just been trotting along in the snow, not looking
-right or left of him.
-
-“After that the track came doubled and crooked, as if the old gentleman
-had been taking a view of the country, to see whether it would suit his
-purpose, before lying down for another nap,—so we had to work it out
-painfully, step by step. This was a slow job, for he had taken a turn
-to every point of the compass, and had crossed and re-crossed his own
-tracks, and had changed his mind so often, that the short winter’s day
-began to close, and we feared the light would fail; so we started right
-and left of the spot, and succeeded in ringing him before we met again.”
-
-“What do you mean by ringing a bear?” said the Parson.
-
-“Making a circle round his tracks,” said Torkel, “so as to be sure
-none lie beyond it; in that case you are independent of a thaw, for you
-know that the old gentleman must be within a certain space. When we met
-we agreed to leave our friend quiet, and to sleep till morning; so we
-cut down a tree or two, and got up a roaring fire in a little hollow to
-leeward, where we were sure the bear could not see our light or smell our
-smoke, and there we lay, snug and comfortable enough.
-
-“No thaw or mischance of any kind had taken place during the night, and
-the next morning we were on the tracks again; for we had marked the place
-where we had left off, by setting up one of the poles in it.
-
-“We soon got puzzled, however, and began to be very thankful that we had
-brought old Rig. Rig was a sharp fellow,—one of the quickest dogs I ever
-met with at picking up a scent, or taking a hint either; his namesake,
-when he watched at the gates of Asgard, could not have kept a brighter
-look-out. The ground soon got very tangled and sideling, so, as the ring
-was but a small one, we determined to give up the tracks, and to hunt for
-him with the dog.
-
-“The old fellow was not long in getting a sniff at him, and made noise
-enough to wake up the Nornir in the cave of Hela. I pushed on, and before
-I could tell where I was, ran my skier one on each side a little hole in
-the snow, where the dog was baying,—a place that did not look big enough
-for a fox to get in. I could not very well turn, for the points of the
-skier were one on each side the trunk of a great twisted birch, at whose
-foot the hole was; and I could not see what was in the hole, the snow was
-so dazzling in the bright sunshine that everything else looked black. I
-began to think that Rig had got hold of nothing better than a fox, and
-was beginning to be angry with the dog for making such a row, and running
-the chance of giving our real game a hint to steal off. I was looking
-down between my skier, with my face as low as my knees, when all at once
-I felt the snow heaving up from under me, and over I rolled, head over
-heels, and old Fur Jacket with me, and Rig, who had pinned him as he
-bolted, on the top of us both.
-
-“The old fellow was a great deal too much taken up with the dog to mind
-me; but before Nils could come up, or I could get my legs again, he had
-shaken him off, and was dashing through the deep snow at a rate that
-kicked it up in a white mist behind him.
-
-“I had kept fast hold of my rifle, all through, and the snow had not done
-it a bit of harm; in fact, the frost was so sharp that it came out of the
-barrel like so much flour; and besides, we always cover our locks with
-tallow after loading. He had got pretty well out of shot before we were
-in chase, but for his sins he had taken down-hill, and the ground was
-pretty clear, so we slid along after him like Fenrir after the Sun;[63]
-when all at once, Nils, who had a little the best of the race, touched a
-stump with the point of his skie, and flew up into the air, pitching head
-foremost into the snow. It was, luckily for him, deep enough to save him
-from a broken head or neck—at least, so I found afterwards, for I had not
-time to stop then. As for the dog, he was a mile behind.
-
-“Just at the bottom of the slope, I ran in upon the chase, and he turned
-short round when I was not half-a-dozen yards from him. I could no more
-stop than I could stop the lightning; so, setting my pole in the snow, I
-swerved a little, and just missed going over him, as Nils had done with
-the stump.
-
-“By the time I had curved round, I found he had taken advantage of his
-chance, and was going up again, travelling three times as fast as I could
-hope to do, for skier are desperate bad things up-hill. However, mine
-had seal-skin upon them, luckily, for in our mountainous country we are
-obliged to do something to prevent slipping back; but, for all that, he
-was getting much the best of it, so I took a cool shot at him, and heard
-the ball strike just as if I had thrown it into a piece of dough, but he
-never winced, or took the least notice.
-
-“However, Nils had managed to pick himself up, and I saw him and Rig
-together a good way above us, so I waved my cap and shouted: you can
-hear a shout in the winter half-a-dozen miles off. Nils changed his
-course, so as to cut us off. I followed, loading as I went. By-and-bye
-the old fellow seemed to find out that he had enemies on both sides of
-him, for he stopped, and growled, and looked back at me, and showed
-his teeth. Just then Nils made a noise above, by breaking through some
-understuff; and he turned, and came at me with his mouth open, charging
-down-hill as hard as he could lick. It was ‘neck or nothing’ with me now,
-I knew that, for there is no turning or dodging on skier, going up-hill,
-so I rested my rifle on the fork of a branch, and, waiting till he had
-come within a dozen yards of me, I shot into his mouth. Lord! it seemed
-as if somebody had given him a lift behind; his hind-quarters rose up,
-and his head went down, and he came sliding along the snow on his back,
-wrong-end foremost. I could not move right or left, hampered as I was,
-and he took me just across the shins with his huge carcass, breaking one
-of my skier, and carrying me with him as if I were riding in a sledge;
-but when we got to the bottom he never tried to hurt me, for he was as
-dead as Baldur.
-
-“That was something like a chase, and we turned a pretty penny by it,
-too; we got four specie for sealing his nose, and fourteen for his skin,
-to a young Englishman who wanted to prove to his friends at home that
-he had killed a bear, and gave two specie over the market price for the
-shot-hole; and, for ourselves, we had lots of fat, most of which, by
-the way, had got melted in the race, and had to be frozen again before
-we could carry it; and, for solid meat, the scoundrel weighed hard upon
-four hundred pounds. We had pretty hard work in getting him home, for in
-those two days we had run on end more than thirty of your English miles,
-besides the turns. We had to go home and fetch a sledge for him, and my
-sisters had a pretty job of salting when we got him there; Kari said that
-our work was not half so hard as hers.”
-
-“It is a curious thing, much as I have been in your country, I never saw
-a skie,” said the Parson; “I do not even know what sort of things they
-are.”
-
-“It would be strange if you had,” said Torkel; “we never keep them at the
-sœters, for the plain reason that we do not use them in summer at all,
-nor inhabit the sœters in the winter. You have been very little in any
-of our permanent winter homesteads since you have been here, and if you
-had happened to put your eye upon half-a-dozen long pieces of wood, with
-leather straps to them, the chances are, you would never have thought
-of asking what such very ordinary-looking articles were. I will answer
-for it, Herr Moodie has plenty of them at Gäddebäck; but they are, most
-likely, stowed away at the top of the house, in the winter store-room,
-where you would never think of going. They are long, thin strips of
-wood, of a triangular form, about three or four inches broad, with their
-points curved up for a foot or so, to clear the obstacles. In this flat
-country they make the left-foot skie, which is of fir, ten or twelve feet
-long; the right one is generally of ash, and not above five or six feet
-in length, or they would never be able to turn in them. I, myself, like
-them best both of a size, and not above five or six feet long,—only then
-you must have them broader, to prevent sinking in the snow. This is a
-disadvantage, certainly, still they are much handier to dodge about the
-trees with, than those unwieldy concerns they have here. Mine are a pair
-of old military skier, and there are none better.”
-
-“What! do the soldiers use them?” said the Parson.
-
-“That they do,” said Torkel. “I was always a good runner on skier, but
-I learnt a good many clever tricks at drill, when I was serving my time
-of duty in the militia. Our rifle regiment have all two light companies
-of skielobere, and are drilled to light infantry movements on skates.
-I did not like much being called out in the depth of winter for drill,
-and not a little did I grumble at the hard work they put us to,—scaling
-mountains, which we are obliged to do in skier, like ships beating to
-windward; and then charging down them among trees and stumps,—swinging
-this way and that, to keep one’s rifle out of harm’s way, and then
-suddenly called upon to halt and fire,—and preciously punished are we if
-the piece is not ready for action. However, I did not know what was good
-for me; I have been twice the man ever since after the bears and winter
-game.”
-
-“I suspect,” said the Parson, “that is pretty nearly the whole use of
-your skate-drill; it must be a pretty thing to see in a review,—but he
-must be a gallant enemy who undertakes a winter campaign in Norway,
-unless he is descended from the Hrimthursar themselves.”
-
-“Well! I cannot stand this any longer,” said Moodie, coming up; “half the
-party are drunk, and the rest are half-seas over; and there’s the Captain
-pounding away to his own whistling, for the last fiddler has just dropped
-off his empty barrel. It is time to go to bed.”
-
-“Bed, yes! but where are we to find it: Jacob, I suppose, is by this time
-numbered with the dead drunk.”
-
-“You may swear to that, and Tom also; I saw him very near his end an hour
-ago.”
-
-“Well I do not care, for one,” said the Parson; “my bed is here,” and he
-pulled out of his cariole his trusty mackintosh, and folding one of the
-sails to his own length, he spread the mackintosh upon it. “I shall sleep
-here luxuriously; and Torkel, bring me the cushion of the cariole seat. I
-will not forget to tell Lota how faithful you have been to her this day.
-Good night, all of you; we have work before us to-morrow.”
-
-And so they had,—for the sun was not yet far above the horizon, when the
-carioles were bumping along the forest roads to the southward.
-
-At Amal, Torkel, with good wishes from all, and presents from some of
-the party, took his leave to prepare for what Tom called the amending of
-his life, and parted on his separate road through Fjall, and laid under
-contribution a market boat from Wagne to Frederickshald, where he hoped
-to find a vessel to Tonsberg, or Larvig, on the Norwegian coast. The
-party proceeded leisurely along the western coast of the lake, to enjoy
-for some time longer the hospitalities of Gäddebäck.
-
-But the days began to shorten, and the joyous Scandinavian summer to come
-to its close. It was necessary to think of the homeward passage, in time
-to allow fine weather and sunny days for a leisurely cariole journey
-along that most picturesque of countries, the southern coast of Norway.
-Torkel’s wedding day, too, was approaching, and the party were under
-a half engagement to old Torgensen, which tallied very well with the
-necessity of reaching Christiansand for their homeward passage. “Time and
-tide wait for no man,” and a forebud having been laid to Strömstad, the
-carioles, accompanied as far as Wenersborg by Moodie, rolled away on the
-road to Uddevalla.
-
-One piece of luck attended them,—they were not yet to part from Birger,
-for it so happened that his royal highness the Crown Prince, was to
-pay his usual state visit to Christiania, on which occasion he was to
-be attended by Count Birger, our young scamp’s father, whose daughter,
-Birger’s sister, held also some appointment in the establishment of the
-Princess. Birger, therefore, was able to consult his pleasure and his
-duty at once, in going to Norway; to enjoy the coasting journey with
-his friends, and then to meet his family at Christiania after their
-departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE WEDDING.
-
- When he came into the house at nightfall,
- She was angry with him—his old mother—
- “Son,” she said, “thou lay’st thy snares each morning,
- And each day thou comest back empty handed!
- Either thou lack’st skill, or thou art idle;
- Others can take prey where thou’st taken none!”
-
- Thus to her the gay young man made answer:
- “Who need wonder that our luck is different,
- When the same birds are not for our snaring?
- At the little farm that lieth yonder,
- Lives a wondrous bird, my good old mother;
- Snares I laid to catch it all the autumn,
- Now, this very winter have I caught it.
- Marvellous is this bird! for it possesses
- Not wings, but arms for tenderest embracing;
- Not down, but locks of silky, sunny lustre;
- No beak, but two fresh lips so warm and rosy!”
-
- _The Young Fowler.—Runnèberg._
-
-
-It was the morning of the wedding-day, and that day, of course, Sunday.
-Autumn was a little advanced, but the sky was as serene, and the lake as
-still and as smiling as it was on that day on which the fishermen had
-last looked upon it.
-
-The Parson had strolled out with Birger, after a very hurried and
-uncomfortable breakfast,—the only time such a thing had ever occurred
-under the hospitable roof of Torgensen; this was not so much for exercise
-as for the sake of being out of the way of the good lady Christina, who
-looked as if she considered the whole of her daughter’s earthly happiness
-to depend on the perfection of the wedding-dinner, which, even at that
-early hour of the morning, was in the course of preparation. Upstairs
-and downstairs was she, with a face as red as her scarlet stomacher,
-her great bunch of keys jingling like a sheep-bell as she moved, and her
-embroidered skirt whisking round every corner. She was partially dressed
-for the grand occasion, though her head was as yet muffled in a rather
-dirty handkerchief, but the glories of her holiday gown were in a great
-measure obscured by an immense apron, which bore indisputable marks of
-something more than mere superintendence of her peculiar department. The
-whole district would be there, no doubt, for though there are generally
-appointed days for weddings, and several couples were usually married
-at the same time, and moreover, the beginning of winter is a very
-favourite time for such matters, yet the Torgensens were so indisputably
-the squires of the place, that besides their own party which had been
-collected from far and wide, and that of one or two of their dependants
-who were to be married on the same day, the chances were that they would
-have visitors enough from other and inferior bridals.
-
-Come as many as there might, there were provisions enough for them all;
-there was brandy enough to float a barge; there were heaps of fish and
-game of all sorts; and—a much rarer thing at the beginning of autumn
-and before the cattle have returned from the sœters,—plenty of beef and
-mutton. Puddings, sweet soups, and all the infinite variety of gröds had
-been in preparation for days and nights; still the good house-mother
-distressed herself; and rendered uncomfortable everything around her,
-lest something should have been forgotten, and the credit of Torgensen’s
-hospitality should suffer in the eyes of the strangers.
-
-The Captain, who had offered to officiate as bridesman, was taking
-lessons in his arduous duties from little Lilla, the præst’s daughter,
-who, proud of her English, and not at all unwilling to get up a
-flirtation with a good-looking foreigner, had neglected her own duties
-as bridesmaid, and enticed the Captain, nothing loth, to the præstgaard,
-where he was practising the required duties of his office; and, to judge
-from the time he took at his lessons, he must have been particularly slow
-and stupid in comprehending them.
-
-What was the morning occupation of Lota and her other bridesmaids was
-a mystery,—not one of them was visible; that it was something of an
-entertaining character was evident from the tittering, and gay laughter,
-and occasional little screams that proceeded from a large square-headed
-window wide open on the upper-floor, and on the farthest extremity of the
-building. The only anxious and unhappy-looking countenance was that of
-the happy bridegroom himself, who having nothing whatever to do, wandered
-up and down the terrace with his hands in his pockets, the only idle
-man, and consequently in the way of every one. Conscious that he was the
-object of every body’s attention, and the butt of those jokes which are
-common on such occasions, and no where more common or less delicate than
-in Norway, he laboured hard to be at his ease and succeeded but very ill.
-Indeed, his new jacket, which did not come down to his shoulder blades,
-and was a little too tight for him into the bargain, and his stiff
-glossy trousers would alone have been sufficient to disturb any man’s
-self-possession, to say nothing of the chain of filagree silver balls,
-each as large as a grape-shot, which were called shirt buttons, and hung
-down from his neck; while a stout broad hat twice as broad in the crown
-as in the rim, and stiffly turned up on each side, weighed on his brows
-like a helmet,—so very new that it still exhibited the creases of the
-paper in which it had been packed.
-
-Jan Torgensen, Lota’s brother, who was his other bridesman, was doing his
-best to keep him in countenance, for they had always been great allies,
-and in fact, Torkel had been Jan’s preceptor in wood-craft, and, so Lota
-declared, in every sort of mischief besides. At this present moment
-any one who had seen them both, would have taken Jan for the preceptor
-and Torkel for the pupil; and Jan for the happy bridegroom, and Torkel
-for the disappointed swain,—so happy looked Jan and so sheepish looked
-Torkel. But, in truth, Jan had his own particular pride and happiness,
-connected, though in a remote manner, with that of his friend. He had
-just received his appointment as skipper of the _Haabet_, vice Svensen,
-superseded in Lota’s affections by Torkel, and in the command of the brig
-by Jan; for the poor fellow, when he found how things were going with
-him, resigned the command, settled accounts with old Torgensen, and, much
-to the regret of the latter,—for Svensen was a first-rate sailor,—betook
-himself to Copenhagen, out of the sight of his rival’s happiness.
-
-Jan, who was a thorough partizan, and had never liked poor Svensen, not
-so much on account of any of his demerits as out of affection for his
-friend Torkel (for Lota it is to be feared, had coquetted between her
-admirers much more than was altogether proper), was singing, or rather
-roaring, at the full pitch of a sailor’s voice, the popular ballad of Sir
-John and Sir Lavé:—
-
- “To an island green Sir Lavé went;
- He wooed a maiden with fair intent;—
- ‘I will ride with you,’ quoth John;
- ‘Put on helmets of gold, to follow Sir John.’
-
- He wooed the maiden and took her home,
- And knights and serving-men are come;—
- ‘Here am I!’ quoth John.
-
- They set the bride on the bridal seat,—
- Sir John, he bade them both drink and eat.
- ‘Drink, and drink deeply!’ quoth John.
-
- They brought the bride to the bridal bed,—
- They forgot to untie her laces red:
- ‘I can untie them!’ quoth John.
-
- Sir John, he locked the door with speed;
- ‘Good night to you, Sir Lavé,’ he said.
- ‘I shall sleep here!’ quoth John.
-
- Word was brought to Sir Lavé there—
- ‘Sir John is within, with thy bride so fair!’
- ‘That am I, in truth!’ quoth John.
-
- At the door, Sir Lavé makes a loud din;—
- ‘Withdraw the bolts, and let us in!’
- ‘You had best keep out,’ quoth John.
-
- He knocked at the door with shield and spear,—
- ‘Withdraw the bolts, and come out here!’
- ‘See if I do!’ quoth John.
-
- ‘If my bride may not in peace remain,
- I will go and unto the king complain.’
- ‘Just as you like,’ quoth John.
-
- Early next morn, when the birds ’gan to sing,
- Sir Lavé is off to complain to the king;—
- ‘I will go, too!’ quoth John.
-
- ‘I was betrothed but yesterday,—
- Sir John has taken my bride away!’
- ‘Yes, so I have!’ quoth John.
-
- ‘If that the maiden to both is dear,
- It must be settled at point of spear.’
- ‘I’m very willing!’ quoth John.
-
- As soon as the morrow’s sun was bright,
- Came all the knights to see the fight;—
- ‘Here am I!’ quoth John.
-
- The two were mounted, and at the first round
- The knees of Sir John’s horse touched the ground.
- ‘Now help me, Heaven!’ quoth John.
-
- Once more, and in the second round
- Sir Lavé lies upon the ground;—
- ‘There let him lie,’ quoth John.
-
- Sir John he rode to his hall in state,
- And his maiden met him at the gate;—
- ‘Now thou art mine,’ quoth John.
-
- Thus was Sir John made happy for life,
- And the maiden became his wedded wife.
- ‘I knew I should have her,’ quoth John.
- ‘Put on helmets of gold, to follow Sir John.’”
-
-“Come, come! Jan!” growled old Torgensen, “hold your saucy tongue;
-Svensen was a better man than you will ever be in a year of Sundays.
-And you, you grinning flirts,”—to the servant-girls, with whom Master
-Jan was an especial favourite, and upon whom the application was by no
-means lost—“get along with you, and mind your own business,—as if you
-had nothing to do, on such a morning as this, but to listen to such
-fooleries! Be off with you, I say!”
-
-In the meanwhile the Parson and Birger,—who, by the way, hardly
-recognised each other in their gala habits, for the one was habited,
-in honour of the occasion, in the black dress of an English clergyman,
-while the other, with his sword clinking by his side, blazed in all
-the blue and yellow splendour of the Swedish guard,—took up their old
-position at the lich gate of the church; one as before balancing on
-the stocks, the other astride on the dwarf wall, glad to be out of the
-din of preparation. It was not a happy day for any of them, for it was
-the last day of the expedition, which every member of it had enjoyed so
-thoroughly;—Birger’s leave of absence was running to an end, and the two
-Englishmen had taken passage with young Torgensen to the _Haabet_. They
-were to sail—so Torgensen said—that night; but, as it was quite certain
-that, before that time, the whole crew would be drunk, in honour of their
-young mistress, this probably meant to-morrow. Still, to-morrow was to
-be the final break-up of the party; and Tom had been philosophizing,
-with tears in his eyes, on the transitory nature of human pleasures; and
-Torkel, bridegroom as he was, would willingly have postponed his wedding
-if he could have prolonged the expedition,—at least, so Lota had told him
-the evening before, and he did not look as if he was speaking the truth
-when he denied it.
-
-Neither of the friends felt much inclined for conversation. They were
-natives of different parts of the world; their courses from that point
-lay in opposite directions; the chances were very much against their
-meeting again, and, though their acquaintance had not been of very long
-duration, so far as time is concerned, one week’s campaign in the wild
-forest does more towards ripening an intimacy than a year of ordinary
-life.
-
-In the meanwhile the time passed on, and the early peal rang out, and
-the groups began to collect as before in the church-yard, and the lake
-to be dotted with boats, all pulling or sailing from its remoter bays
-and islets to the church, as a common centre. Here and there a party, as
-before, was occupied round a grave, pulling up the overgrown convolvulus
-and trimming the withering leaves of the lilies. By and by a bugle
-sounded a call, and a couple of fiddles from one of the nearest boats
-struck up a polka.
-
-“Here come some of the wedding parties,” said Birger; “there seem to be
-plenty of happy couples in Soberud this year. Well! there is nothing like
-fashion,—in this, as in other things, one fool makes many. Look at that
-leading boat!—that one, I mean, just pulling round the point of the
-island!—there is a crowned bride in her! Holy Gefjon, Mother of Maids!
-such a sight as that is rare in Norway! I should think the chances were
-that she got some one to pull her crown off her head before the day was
-over. She does not seem much afraid, either, and an uncommonly pretty
-girl, too, which makes it all the more wonderful. Well! well! ‘a virtuous
-woman is a crown to her husband;’ I hope he will appreciate his blessings
-as he ought, such blessings as that do not fall to the lot of many in
-this country.”
-
-“What do you mean by that, Birger?” said the Parson, getting up, and
-shading his eyes with his hands as he looked out on the lake.
-
-“Ah, you may well shade your eyes before beauty and innocence,” said
-Birger; “you do not often see them combined, in this country.”
-
-“Well, the fact is this,” said he, dropping his bantering tone, “what you
-commonly call virtue—that is to say, chastity,—is a very rare article
-indeed, I am sorry to say, either in Norway or Sweden; the manners of
-the people do not tend to foster it. Their promiscuous way of living in
-the winter, and the sœter life in summer, makes it absolutely necessary
-for a girl either to have a very great respect for herself, or to be
-forbiddingly ugly; and whatever the case may have been in earlier and
-better times, certain it is that beauty is now much more common among us
-than self-respect. Then, again, the laws which prevail in Sweden, and
-the customs, which the Udal tenures in Norway make as stringent as laws,
-forbid any to marry who are not householders (whence your word husband,
-which simply means huus bonde—a peasant with a house), and at the same
-time forbid the erection of more than a specified number of houses on
-any land. All this renders early marriages almost impossible. The result
-may easily be imagined. And to make this the more certain, our wise
-laws enact that a woman, having any number of children by any number
-of fathers, who at any time of her life shall marry any one whatever,
-by the simple act of marriage affiliates all the children she may ever
-have had on her unhappy husband; and wherever the Udal law prevails,
-he is obliged to share his land equally among them. The consequence of
-this is, that unchastity is no sort of disgrace. It is the commonest
-thing in the world for a noble to live with a woman all his life, under
-promise of marriage to be performed on his death-bed, and the woman is
-all the while received much like the Morganatic bride of a German prince.
-Frederika Bremer, herself as exemplary a woman as ever lived, has made
-the plot of one of her novels to hinge on a man living in such a manner,
-and dying suddenly, without being able to perform his promise. She does
-not attach the shadow of disgrace to any one, except the relatives of the
-deceased, who refused to acknowledge the woman merely on account of this
-‘unfortunate accident,’ as she calls it. And so it is. Had she written
-otherwise, she would have been out of costume; there is no disgrace in
-the matter. I do not mean to say that this girl is not proud of her
-crown—of course she is, just as I am proud of this blue and yellow ribbon
-of mine,” pointing to the Order of the Sword with which he had decorated
-his uniform-coat for the occasion; “but look how she is kissing that girl
-in green, who has just landed from that other boat,—that is another bride
-who cannot claim the distinction; she no more thinks her disgraced, than
-I should think a brother officer disgraced to whom his gracious Majesty
-had not been pleased to give the same distinction that he has to me.”
-
-“There seem to be plenty of brides,” said the Parson, “for there is
-another green lady, of damaged fame; she seems to be a rich one, by the
-number of her fiddlers before, and followers after.”
-
-“They generally have one wedding-day for the district,” said Birger,
-“and a good plan too; it diminishes the expense when they all have their
-festivities together, and diminishes the drunkenness very considerably,
-both on the day and on its anniversaries, for the whole district get
-drunk together at once, and get it over, instead of inviting one another
-to help them to on their several wedding-days.”
-
-“But what are the ‘crowns?’” said the Parson.
-
-“An ancient custom, by which they challenge any imputation on their
-fair fame; any one who has anything to say against the chastity of the
-wearer, is privileged to pull off the crown and to drive the lady out of
-the church, only the accuser is bound to prove his allegations.”
-
-“It seems a pretty expensive affair, at least, to judge of it at this
-distance.”
-
-“O yes, far too expensive to be the property of any individual; they hire
-it for the occasion, and, I will be bound, pay five or six dollars for
-the pleasure of wearing that and the rest of the costume. Just look at
-her as she comes into the light; that dress of black bombazine, with the
-short sleeves and white mittens, is probably her own,—very likely it was
-her mother’s before her, only fresh dyed for the occasion; but that gay
-apron, with the ribbons, and beads, and the silver chains and necklaces,
-I should think were hired; the dollars round her neck are her dowry in
-all probability, and, consequently, her own; so is the muff, and the
-handkerchiefs of various colours that hang from it; and possibly, also,
-those yellow kid gloves. But look at the crown itself! why it is silver
-gilt!—and that scarf, which hangs down from the spray on the top of it,
-is covered with satin lappets, three-quarters long! now do you think a
-peasant would buy that? A green bridal, you see, is a much more modest
-affair; they wear their silver chains over their green bodices like the
-others, but on their heads, instead of the crown, they have the ordinary
-wimple of married women, made of fine white linen, and above it the
-triangular snood of unmarried girls.”
-
-“Here come our party at last! What a host they have collected! the church
-will not hold them all. And there is pretty Lota, with her bridesmaids
-after her. Well, I hope no one will pull her crown off; how pretty she
-looks in it.”
-
-“Not half so pretty as that little fresh-looking, innocent, Lilla
-Nordlingen,” said Birger. “Upon my word I am half inclined to make love
-to her myself.”
-
-“You had better not, Mr. Guardsman, you do not stand the ghost of a
-chance; how she would turn up that innocent little Norwegian nose of hers
-at a brute of a Swede. Besides, do you not see how she is making love to
-the Captain, how uncommonly smart the Captain has turned out in his red
-uniform! to which the moustache he has been growing ever since he has
-been here, forms so appropriate an appendage. Your blue and yellow would
-look dingy to eyes that have been dazzled with such scarlet magnificence.”
-
-“Ah, well, we will see. The Captain looks as if he were saying to her,
-‘_Aimez moi vite, car je pars demain._’”
-
-“That’s your best chance,” said the Parson, maliciously; “but come,
-the bells are ringing in, and we had better get into the ranks of the
-procession. Here comes Nordlingen, with his long-legged Candidatus at his
-heels.”
-
-While the Pfarrherr went in to array himself in his robes, the different
-marriage parties, warned by the bells, had begun to arrange themselves
-into one grand procession; while their respective musicians, who together
-formed a pretty numerous band, laid their heads together about the tune
-to be played on this grand occasion, and tuned their fiddles into concord.
-
-The party had by this time increased considerably, and when at last the
-band, having settled their harmonious differences, marched up the nave of
-the church playing, somewhat incongruously, a jolly polka, there marched
-after them no less than six happy couples, with their followers, each
-bride and each bridegroom having a silver ort (ninepence) tied up under
-their respective garters, for luck. Only two of the six were crowned
-brides, and that, Birger whispered, as they took their places, was a
-wonderfully large proportion.
-
-First after the fiddlers came the Candidatus in his gown, who had gone
-out to marshal the procession; then came the married men related to the
-parties, in their short blue jackets and white-fronted shirts, some
-of which were clean; then came the bridegrooms with their bridesmen,
-dressed something in the same fashion, except that they affected buckskin
-breeches and white stockings: each bridegroom, by way of distinction, had
-a fine white handkerchief (cambric, if he could possibly come by it),
-tied round his right arm; then came the bridesmaids in green, (which
-there is not an unlucky colour as it is with us), with bare heads, and
-their hair, which was plaited with many coloured ribands, hanging down
-their backs in two tails; then the bride-leaders, married women, who
-are supposed to encourage the brides during the ceremony, and lastly,
-the brides themselves, in all their splendour. The chancel was as full
-as it could hold, the principals disposing themselves round the altar,
-kneeling, while the bridesmaids held canopies of shawls and handkerchiefs
-over their heads, and the congregation craned in through the chancel
-rails, while the priest proceeded with the service.
-
-Scarcely was the benediction pronounced, when the fiddlers again struck
-up their polka, and the happy couples, now arm-in-arm, marched down after
-them, (the wedding-party forming a sort of escort), and proceeded with
-great ceremony to the præstgaard meadow, where the marriage feast—an
-enormous pic-nic—was prepared for them, and where the wedding presents,
-many of them of considerable value, were set out for public inspection.
-
-These were not exactly the expensive sort of trumpery which forms the
-staple of bridal presents in England,—silver vessels that no one ever
-drinks out of, and dressing cases far too expensive for ordinary use. The
-presents here were real honest implements of house-keeping or farming;
-pots and pans, and plates and dishes, and chairs and tables,—spades,
-pickaxes: a tonne of rye-meal was the offering of one,—a sack of potatoes
-of another; here was a pile of oderiferous salt-fish,—there a flitch
-of bacon, at which one of the Captain’s best jokes missed fire—bacon
-having no allegorical value whatever in Norway; here again was a good
-milch cow, tethered to a tree, or half-a-dozen sheep or pigs folded with
-hurdles, while the bride’s feather-beds would have borne a high value in
-England. Lota’s were something quite magnificent. With such hunters in
-her train, as Torkel and poor Svensen, and her own brother Jan, (who in
-his younger days and before he had found out some one to whom to transfer
-his youthful allegiance, had contributed largely to his sister’s stores),
-it was not to be wondered at if she easily eclipsed all the brides of the
-season.
-
-At a comparatively early hour, Torkel and his wife took their leave,
-as they had that evening to reach Lönvik, a pretty little farm in the
-interior, on the banks of a small lake of the same name, which Torkel’s
-father had given up to him on his marriage. But this by no means put a
-stop to the festivities, which were carried on to a late hour in the
-night, and at which, Sunday though it was, Nordlingen himself presided.
-Sunday in Norway begins at six o’clock on Saturday night, when invariably
-preparations are commenced for the next day, in the way of looking up
-Sunday clothes, and brushing up or washing out the house,—sometimes,
-in religious families, by special prayer, though that is not very
-common,—sometimes even by washing their own persons, though this, it must
-be confessed, is rarer still,—for all of them have a very great horror of
-the personal application of soap and water. Sunday, therefore, even as
-a day of worship, legitimately ceases at the same hour on the following
-day, and, as Nordlingen himself remarked,—what was a more fitting time
-for enjoyment than just after they had been admitted to their Lord’s
-presence, and had had their sins forgiven them. It was surely much more
-congruous than the English way of “making a Saturday night of it,” with
-all their sins yet upon their shoulders.
-
-If, however, there was dancing, there was no visible drunkenness; the
-Pfarrherr was a man of sufficient influence to make a stand against the
-national vice, and if any of the guests did feel a little the worse for
-liquor, he quietly took himself, or was taken by his friends, beyond the
-glare of the great bonfire, where no one could see him,—for Nordlingen
-was wise enough not to look too closely into what was not intended for
-his inspection.
-
-It was this idea, or perhaps the recollection that the _Haabet_ was to
-sail the next day, that induced him to close his eyes to the fact that
-that innocent little Lilla had danced with no one but the Captain the
-whole evening, on the plea that no girl of the party, except herself,
-was able to talk to him in English. Whatever it was that they had to
-say to one another, there was a good deal of it, and it took a good
-while saying, and as Birger, who was outrageously jealous remarked
-spitefully,—“they, as well as the drunkards, preferred evidently the
-light of the moon to that of the great wedding bonfire,” and thinking,
-probably, how he would make up for lost time after the _Haabet_ had
-tripped her anchor, whistled pensively the Swedish song—
-
- “Hence on the shallows our little boat leaving,
- On to the Haaf where the green waves are heaving,
- Causing to Thyrsis so much dismay.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-HOMEWARD BOUND.
-
- And, now, my good friends, I’ve a fine opportunity
- To obfuscate you all by sea terms with impunity.
- And talking of “caulking,”
- And “quarter-deck walking,”
- “Fore and aft,”
- And “abaft,”
- “Hookers,” “barkeys,” and “craft,”
- (At which Mr. Poole has so wickedly laught);
- Of “binnacles,” “bilboes,” the boom called the “spanker,”
- The best “bower cable,” the “jib,” and “sheet anchor;”
- Of “lower-deck guns,” and of “broadsides and chases;”
- Of “taff-rails” and “top-sails,” and “splicing main braces,”
- And “shiver my timbers,” and other odd phrases
- Employed by old pilots with hard-featured faces;
- Of the expletives sea-faring gentlemen use,—
- The allusions they make to the eyes of their crews.
-
- _Ingoldsby._
-
-
-The _Haabet_ did not sail that night, which indeed was hardly possible,
-her Captain being employed in dancing, and making love, and singing, in
-the words of Karl Bellman,—
-
- “Awake, Amaryllis! my dearest, awaken,—
- Let me not go to sea by my true love forsaken,—
- Our course among dolphins and mermaids is taken:
- Onwards shall paddle our boat to the sea.”
-
-Neither did the _Haabet_ sail on the morrow, for the wind had chopped
-round to the south-west; neither did she sail the next day, for there
-was a dead calm;—there was plenty of time for leave-taking, and a
-leisurely journey to Christiansand besides, which was accomplished in
-the carioles—their last journey, as Tom feelingly remarked. The Captain
-arrived at Ullitz’s, a good hour behind the rest, who would not wait for
-the end of his last conference with Lilla Nordlingen.—They were, besides,
-a little anxious about the weather, for the season was somewhat advanced,
-and everything was so deadly calm, that it was quite evident a change of
-some sort was at hand.
-
-What that change was, the next morning made manifest enough, for the wind
-was roaring round the house, and the rain pattering furiously against the
-windows long before the sun was up.
-
-However, the old copper lion that surmounted the church had veered
-round again, and was turning his battle-axe towards England, and Jan
-Torgensen—Captain Torgensen we should call him now in virtue of his
-new command, and in truth he was not a little proud of the title
-himself,—came in just as a very sulky breakfast was completed, and
-announced, “that as the wind was fair, he did not care the scale of a
-herring how much there was of it, and that this night should be spent at
-sea.”
-
-No one was sorry for this announcement, not even Birger, who was going
-back to Nordlingen’s, as he said, “in order to console Ariadne for
-the desertion of her faithless Theseus.” The pleasures of the summer
-had departed, and it was useless to linger over the scenes of past
-enjoyments. At Nordlingen’s perhaps the time might have passed pleasantly
-enough, notwithstanding the change of weather, but Christiansand has
-but few resources for a rainy day; and besides this, the very idea
-of a prolonged parting is depressing. Torkel was gone, and Tom was
-much too low for a story or a joke. There were, however, some marine
-difficulties—there always are; papers are never ready, and agents are
-always behind time, and thus, though every one was anxious to be off, and
-none less than Torgensen himself, who grudged every blast of the fair
-wind, it was full five o’clock before the anchor broke ground; and a
-cake, the last token of Marie’s affection, having been previously placed
-on the taffrail for Nyssen, the _Haabet_ turned her stern to the blast,
-and set her fore-sail, and hoisted a couple of double reefed top-sails to
-receive it. The rain redoubled—certainly if Gammle Norgé had received
-them with smiles, she honoured their departure with tears.
-
-The first thing that met the Captain’s eye, as he turned from waving the
-last farewell to Birger’s receding boat, was the pilot, roaring drunk
-already, and the mate supplying him with no end of additional brandy. He
-went forward to draw Torgensen’s attention to this apparently dangerous
-breach of naval discipline.
-
-“Be quiet,” said Torgensen, in broken English, “the mate knows very well
-what he is about, I supplied him with the brandy myself. That drunken
-rascal is sure to get us into a scrape, if he has sense enough left
-in his drunken body to fancy he can take charge of the ship; and I am
-obliged, by law, to take him drunk or sober. As soon as he gets too drunk
-to interfere, which I am happy to say will be the case very shortly, I
-shall pilot my own ship, and I should think I ought to know how to take
-her out of Christiansand by this time—we all do that; in fact, these
-drunken pilots are nothing but an incumbrance.” And an incumbrance in
-this instance he proved, for, Torgensen having safely carried his brig
-to the mouth of the fjord, they were obliged to heave to for the pilot’s
-boat, which kept them waiting for a good hour more. The Parson suggested
-taking him to sea; but Torgensen swore he had had too much of him already.
-
-It was long after dark, therefore, when they passed the lighthouse, which
-they did in a furious squall of wind and rain, and stood out to sea under
-close reefed top-sails and reefed fore-sail, with two men at the helm,
-the brig steering as wild as if the Nyssen were blowing on both quarters
-at once, but dashing away through it for all that, and heaping up the sea
-under her bluff bows.
-
-The whole surface was one vast blaze of phosphoric light—the ship’s
-ragged wake was a track of wavering flame, the water that broke from her
-bows was a cataract of fire, a rope that was towing under her counter
-(Torgensen was not at all particular about these little matters), was ten
-times more visible than it would have been by broad daylight, for every
-strand in it was clearly defined by lines of delicate blue flame, while
-each breaking wave was a flash of brightness. The wind was as fair as
-it could be, and as they drew out from under the lee of the land, seemed
-enough to tear the sails from their bolt ropes.
-
-“Hurrah for Nyssen!” shouted Torgensen; but he shouted a little too soon,
-for not an hour afterwards they were close hauled with a south-west wind,
-dead foul, dancing like a cork in a mill pond, on the top of a tumbling
-cross sea, and plodding along at barely three knots; not even looking up
-within four points of their course.
-
-And the next day, and the next night, and the next, the same monotonous
-story; only as the wind settled to the south-west, the bubble went down,
-and it was not so difficult to walk the three steps and a half, which
-formed the _Haabet’s_ quarter-deck.
-
-Still the only answer to the anxiously repeated morning question of “How
-is her head,” was, when most favourable, “half a point southward of
-west,—think we shall weather the Naze, please God.”
-
-Torgensen was always in high spirits, and was as proud of his new
-command, the Captain said, as a peacock with two tails; and she
-really had qualities of which a commander might well be proud, as a
-sea-boat,—but these did not comprehend either beauty, or comfort, or
-speed.
-
-There is no between decks in a Norwegian timber brig, the whole space
-being occupied with its bulky cargo, much of which lumbers up the waist,
-and forecastle besides; the crew inhabited a small hurricane-house just
-abaft the mainmast; a very small slip of this was bulk-headed off for the
-mate,—while the remainder—and a very small remainder it was—served the
-crew for parlour, and kitchen and all, for there was no other cookery
-place in the ship; in one sense this was an advantage, for they could
-cook in the worst of weathers, and this is not always practicable in a
-merchant ship; but if they did get this advantage over the wind and rain,
-it was, as the Captain remarked, a very dirty advantage indeed. All that
-there was of cover below the deck, was a very small sail-room aft, also
-used as a bread-room; before this was the Captain’s cabin, measuring
-exactly eight feet by six, which served for Torgensen and his two
-passengers, and for a purser’s store-room into the bargain, with all its
-indescribable stinks. After a very little practice, the Captain declared
-he could always tell the tack they were on, by the particular description
-of stink that was uppermost, and used to say that they had got their
-starboard or port stinks on board, as the case might be.
-
-The bread alone of the ship’s provisions was under cover; the beef
-and pork was stored in harness casks, lashed to the bulwarks, thus
-diminishing still more the very diminutive quarter-deck. In fact, a
-quarter-deck walk was what none of them ever thought of.
-
-Hurrah!—the Naze bearing N.N.E., and all dangers of a lee-shore past: a
-lee-shore in timber ships is no joke; they never sink—they cannot, for
-the Norwegian deals and baulks being of less specific gravity than water,
-the ship that carries them would be buoyed up even if water-logged, but
-their very want of specific gravity is the cause of their danger on a
-lee-shore; besides being full below, the whole deck is lumbered up for
-six feet or more, and the centre of gravity is so high that they are all
-crank to the most ticklish degree; and, though invariably carrying very
-low sail, require every attention to keep them on their legs; for this
-reason, if caught on a lee-shore in anything like a breeze, they can
-never claw off, for they can carry nothing without tumbling over on their
-beam ends. For this reason, every Norwegian is very careful of an offing,
-it is the only thing he seems to care much about. When the wind changed,
-every ship that the fair breeze had tempted out of Christiansand that day
-had put back, and Torgensen only had held on, partly because he knew the
-comparatively weatherly qualities of his brig, but principally because he
-was young and foolish.
-
-Toward evening the wind drew round to the northward, and the brig was
-able, first to lie her course, then to shake out the reefs from her
-topsails, and lastly, having brailed up her fore and aft mainsail, to
-display a very ragged suit of studding-sails, which together got a fathom
-or two over six knots out of her—the very top of her speed,—and the Naze
-slowly sank below the horizon, fading into blue as it sank.
-
-But this good luck was not to hold; fine weather returned, but with it
-calm and light baffling breezes, with the ship’s head looking every
-way except that which she was wanted to go. Singular as anything of
-cleanliness seems among people who personally rejoice in dirt, there was
-more fuss in cleaning decks than is to be seen in many a man-of-war;
-the very cabin-deck was holy-stoned every morning, as well as the
-quarter-deck; though so far as the latter was concerned, this was
-rendered absolutely useless by the abominable habit of spitting, for
-which the Norwegians deserve as much notice as the Americans themselves,
-and which they do not yet only “_quia carent vate sacro_,” because
-they have not a Mrs. Trollope to write about them. In the present
-instance this was the more inexcusable, because the northern style of
-ship-building pinches in their ships so much aft, that a man with strong
-lungs might set on the weather bulwark, and with ease spit over the
-lee-quarter.
-
-As for seamanship, there are no smarter seamen in the world than the
-Norwegians when there is need, or more slovenly when there is not; but
-how they contrive to navigate their ships is a mystery which none but a
-Norwegian can solve. The whole of it is done by dead reckoning, with, in
-the North Sea at least, a pretty liberal use of the lead: besides the
-deep-sea lead, their only nautical instruments are the log, and what they
-call the “pein-compassen.” This last is a compass-card made of wood, and
-marked with thirty-two lines corresponding to the points, and drawn from
-the centre to the circumference, on which centre revolves freely a brass
-needle of equal length with the lines.
-
-On starting, the true bearing of the destined port, or of some remarkable
-point or headland which must be sighted during their voyage, is taken,
-and the “pein-compassen” is fixed to the binnacle, with that part set
-towards the head of the vessel. This, for that particular voyage, is
-called “the steering line;” and so long as the true compass tallies
-with its wooden brother—that is to say, so long as the ship looks up for
-her port,—the whole run is given her at the end of each watch; but, in
-traverse sailing, the two compasses must of course point different ways.
-In this case, at the end of the watch if the wind has been steady, or
-whenever the ship, from tacking, or any other cause, alters her course or
-her rate of sailing, the brass needle on the “pein-compassen” is turned
-to that point of the compass to which the ship’s head has actually been
-lying, and a line is drawn from that point with chalk, intersecting the
-“steering line” at right angles. The part cut off between the centre
-of the compass and the point of intersection gives the actual gain in
-distance to the port towards which she is bound, and answers to the
-cosine of our more scientific nomenclature. This, with some corrections
-for lee-way, is given to her, while the chalk line drawn from the point
-of the moveable needle to the point of intersection, which answers to
-our sine, gives the number of miles which the adverse wind has compelled
-her to diverge from her course, and which must be compensated for by a
-corresponding deviation on the other tack.
-
-Thus it is that, day after day, the ship’s reckoning is kept, not by
-calculation, but by actual measurement, performed by a pair of compasses
-on a graduated scale; and, clumsy as this contrivance may seem, they do
-navigate their ships with an accuracy that might put some of our merchant
-skippers to shame,—to say nothing of the masters in Her Majesty’s
-Navy.[64]
-
-So far as the North Sea goes, which is the principal scene of Norwegian
-navigation, this mode of reckoning is considerably assisted by the
-lead,—indeed, it would be hardly too much to say that these timber ships
-are navigated by the lead alone. The soundings of the whole North Sea are
-accurately marked, and it so happens that there is considerable variety
-in the sand which the arming brings up; besides which there are a good
-many “pits,” as they are called—that is to say, small spaces, some of
-them not a mile across, in which, for some unexplained reason, the depth
-is suddenly increased. Should the ship be so fortunate as to strike one
-of these, they are so accurately noted in the charts, that it is as good
-as a fresh departure.
-
-It was about a week or ten days after the Naze—the last point of
-Norway—had faded from their sight, like a dim blue cloud, that the
-Parson was sitting or lying at the foot of the foremast in a soft niche,
-which he had arranged for himself among the deck timber, and had called
-his study. He was reading, for the books which they had brought with
-them, and which, hitherto, they had had neither time nor inclination
-to look into, were now very acceptable indeed. The Captain, sitting on
-the bulwark abreast of him, and steadying himself by the after-swifter,
-was watching the proceedings of some visitors who had come on board the
-preceding evening—a kestrel and half-a-dozen swallows. The swallows
-were so tired when they came on board, that they readily perched on the
-fingers that were held out to them, and one of them had passed the night
-on the battens in the mate’s cabin. The hawk did not seem a bit the worse
-for his journey; he was seated very composedly on the quarter of the
-top-gallant yard close to the mast, where he was pleasantly occupied in
-preparing his breakfast off one of the swallows, who had risen earlier
-than his companions, and who did not exactly realise the proverb about
-the “early bird finding the worm,”—on the contrary, he had been found
-himself, and was thus ministering to the wants of the hungry, while his
-brethren, having now recovered their strength by their night’s rest, were
-flitting unconcernedly about the masts and yards, just as on shore they
-had flitted round the church steeple, and were wondering, no doubt, what
-had become of all the flies.
-
-“As this is only the middle of September,” said the Parson, looking up
-at the birds, “it is evident that the migration of swallows must begin
-in the North first, and that previous to their leaving our shores, the
-English swallows must receive a large addition to their numbers; a fact
-which, so far as I know, naturalists have not noticed.”
-
-“Or else,” said the Captain, “that they shift their quarters, like a
-regiment that has got its route, and march by detachments—one relieving
-the other. Ah!”—with a long sigh—“I wish I had wings like a swallow!”
-
-“Pooh! nonsense!” said the Parson; “we shall get on shore some time or
-other; everyone does, except the ‘ancient mariner.’ ‘Good times, bad
-times, all times pass over.’”
-
-“So they do; but all this is so much waste of life. Here am I, sitting
-dangling my legs over the sides of this cursed brig, knowing all the time
-that my friends are knocking the partridges about. Who can give me back
-my 1st of September? Besides,” he added, in a grumbling tone, “I want a
-clean dinner, if it is only by way of a novelty; I can rough it as well
-as anyone for the time, as you know, but a course of such living as this
-will poison a man.”
-
-The Parson laughed.
-
-“It does, I assure you! I have often seen it in the West Indies; when a
-nigger takes to eating dirt, he always dies, and I should think a little
-of that would go a great way with a white man.”
-
-“Well, you know it is said that ‘every man must eat his peck of dirt in
-the course of his life.’”
-
-“That’s exactly the thing; we are allowed a peck of dirt, as you say, to
-last our lives, but you see if we stay here much longer, we shall soon
-get to the end of our allowance. What do you think I saw yesterday? When
-I went below, I could smell the cook had been there; you say yourself
-that you are always obliged to open the skylight whenever he comes near
-the cabin. You know what a beastly miserable day it was, and as I had
-nothing to do, I thought I would turn in and try to sleep away a little
-time, and get a little warm. I felt the pillow rather too high, and,
-putting my hand under it, I found the dish of plok fiske we were to
-have for dinner stowed away there to keep it warm! Bother that skipper,
-he is going about again,” as the Norwegian equivalent for “raise tacks
-and sheets” came grumbling on his ear, and the men lounged lazily to
-their stations; “he’s as frightened at the shore as if it was Scylla and
-Charybdis, and the Mäelström into the bargain. If he would only hold on
-three or four hours more, we might sight Flamborough Head, and get on
-board an English collier and enjoy a little cleanliness.”
-
-“Ah! you will not enjoy that luxury for this voyage,” said the Parson;
-“the English ships always keep inside the line of sandbanks on the
-Norfolk coast; almost all we have met outside, as you may have remarked,
-are foreigners.”
-
-“Outside barbarians!” said the Captain, who was not in a good humour.
-
-By this time the clue-garnets had been leisurely manned, one at a time,
-and the mainsail was hanging in festoons from its yard; Torgensen himself
-steering, as, indeed, he had done for the last hour, and also giving the
-word of command. The wind was as light as could be, so that it really did
-not signify, except for fidgettiness, on which tack she was.
-
-The helm had been a-lee for about a minute, and the men were at their
-stations for “mainsail haul,” while the brig went creeping and creeping
-into the wind. The men began sniggering and joking to one another,
-but their jokes being Norwegian, were for the most part lost on the
-passengers.
-
-“What is that young fool about?” said the Parson, who had not risen from
-his recumbent posture; “he will have the brig in irons before he can look
-round. Jump up and see what is the matter.”
-
-The Captain scrambled on to the forebitts, so as to look over the
-hurricane-house, and burst out laughing. “Bother the fellow! if he is
-not reading ‘Peter Simple,’[65] and jamming his helm hard a-lee with his
-hinder end. Why, Torgensen! Torgensen! what the Devil are you about? the
-brig has been in the wind this half-hour!”
-
-Torgensen started up, flinging his book on the deck, righted his helm,
-and bellowed out his next command. It was loud enough to startle the
-mermaids in their coral caves; but noise will not compensate for
-slackness; the brig was already nearly head to wind, and there she
-hung—she would not go an inch farther for any one, and at last fell off
-again. Torgensen was obliged to wear her, after all.
-
-He swore, however, he did it on purpose, in order to get a cast of the
-lead, as he had not got one for the whole watch. This did not seem to the
-Parson so very indispensable, seeing that in the whole of that forenoon
-watch they had not shifted their position four miles; nevertheless, to
-suit the action to the word, Torgensen did lay his main top-sail aback,
-and armed his lead with as much gravity as if he really expected that the
-sand and shells brought up by this cast would be different from the sand
-and shells brought up by the last.
-
-“I tell you what, though, ‘it is an ill wind that blows nobody good,’—we
-may get a cod while Torgensen is sending his note to the mermaids; jump
-below and get up the lines. The rind of that ham we had for breakfast
-will be a dainty such as Tom Cod is not likely to meet with often in the
-haaf, and it will be a pleasing variety to that eternal plok fiske, if
-we can get one. By the way, that salt fish has got desperately hard; I
-saw the carpenter pounding our dinner with the back of his axe yesterday,
-before the cook could do anything with it.”
-
-Whether Tom Cod would have been duly sensible of the honour that was done
-him, and would have accepted the line of invitation which the Captain
-had sent him for the next day’s dinner, it is impossible to say, for,
-unfortunately, he never received it. The whole bank abounded with hungry
-dog fish, and the bait never got a dozen fathoms over the side before
-it was seized by them. However, it was all fish that came to net; dog
-fish are not esteemed on shore, but place the diner on board ship, give
-him three weeks of calms and foul winds, short provisions, and those
-provisions principally dried fish, with a piece of salt horse for a
-luxury on Sunday, and even dog fish will come to be appreciated at their
-just value.
-
-It was about the middle of the dog watch in the same day—when, according
-to the theory of the Norwegian marine, everybody is supposed to be on
-deck for his own pleasure, and, according to matter of fact, everybody is
-below, sleeping, or talking, or cooking, or mending his clothes,—when the
-Parson, whose time began to hang a little weary on his hands, was yawning
-about the _Haabet’s_ quarter-deck, with his hands in his pockets.
-
-The Norwegian dog watch must not be confounded with the English watches
-of the same name. In the Swedish or Norwegian navy, the twenty-four
-hours are divided into five watches instead of seven, as with us. These,
-beginning at 8 p.m., are called the first watch, the night watch, the
-morning watch, the forenoon watch, and the dog watch, respectively, of
-which the first four consist of four hours each, and the last of eight.
-The dog watch comprehends the time from noon to 8 p.m. It is, of course,
-impossible for human strength and human endurance to keep it properly,
-but it is permitted to be kept in a slack sort of way by the whole ship’s
-company conjointly, one watch being indeed responsible for the duty, but
-not being forbidden to go below, provided their place, for the time, be
-taken by amateurs.[66] The natural effect of this is, that the whole
-watch is kept very slackly indeed, even in men-of-war; in fact, at the
-particular time specified, there was no one whatever on the deck of the
-_Haabet_, except Torgensen, who, as before, was steering, and the Parson,
-who had come on deck because the Captain was snoring so loud, and who, as
-luck would have it, was looking over the bulwarks to windward.
-
-The day had continued calm and hot, as September days often are, and the
-ship was not many miles from the place in which she had missed stays in
-the morning. She was close hauled, but carrying everything that would
-draw.
-
-“Torgensen,” said he, “I think you had better look out; there is
-something coming down upon us, that looks very like an invitation from
-your friends the mermaids.[67] I should like to send an excuse.”
-
-“O, The Thousand!” said Torgensen: “God forgive me for swearing, at
-such a time;” and shoving the helm into the Parson’s hands, he seized a
-handspike, and began to belabour the deck.
-
-On all ordinary occasions there had been a good deal of republican
-slackness on board the _Haabet_, the men doing what they were told, but
-doing it leisurely, and in a _nonchalant_ sort of way. It did not much
-signify, for in blue water and calm weather, it makes little difference
-whether the manœuvres are performed smartly or not.[68] But assuming
-the handspike was like taking up the dictatorship; there was no want of
-smartness now; the men buzzed out from their hurricane-house, like bees
-out of a hive, some half dressed, some stuffing a handful of plok fiske
-into their mouths, but all rushing to their stations, as if the very
-tautest-handed boatswain in the British service was at their heels.
-
-It so happened that Torgensen had been fitting up a fore-sail of his
-own, which he called a fok; a stoutish spar held the place of foot rope,
-which, though it diminished the area of the sail, certainly had the
-effect of making it stand better when close hauled; but that which he
-prided himself most upon, was his substitute for clue-garnets, which
-consisted of two ropes, which, rove through blocks at the quarter of
-the yard, led before the sail through a block at the clue, then to the
-yard-arm, and then along the yard; thus, embracing the sail, acting as
-spilling-lines and clue-garnets at once, and hauling it up, as it were,
-like a curtain in a theatre.
-
-The square main-sail was by this time clewed up, and, had not
-Torgensen’s head been full of this invention, he probably would have seen
-the necessity of casting off the sheet of the fore and aft main-sail, as
-he passed, supposing he had not time or hands to man the brails; as it
-was, the fore-sail came in most sweetly, and Torgensen, forgetting his
-captainship, skipped up the rigging, and was out at the weather earring,
-like a monkey up a cocoa-nut tree.
-
-Just then the squall struck her. Naturally the brig carried a lee helm,
-but at this moment, relieved of her fore-sail, and at the same time
-pressed upon by the whole force of the squall in her main-sail, she
-griped obstinately,—a propensity which the Parson had originated by
-steering as near as he could, in order to shake the wind out of the
-top-sails while the men were reefing. Things began to look serious; not a
-soul was on deck, every man being out on the yards, which, so soon as the
-sails began thrashing in the wind, jumped and jerked so furiously, that
-it was as much as any of them could do to hold on; the brig lay over, so
-that the water not only bubbled through her scuppers, but came pouring
-in over her bulwarks, and the Parson, with both hands clutching the
-bulwarks, was driving the helm a-weather with his stomach, while his feet
-were slipping one after the other on the wet and slanting deck.
-
-Just at that moment the Captain—his coat and shoes off, his head tied
-up in a pocket handkerchief, and his eyes scarce opened, just as he had
-roused up from his slumbers,—showed an astonished face above the hatchway.
-
-“Hallo! what’s the matter now? who spilt the milk?”
-
-“Jump! and let go that main-sheet! cut it if you can’t get at it any
-other way! but take the sail off her at any rate, or in two minutes we
-shall be at Fiddler’s Green.”
-
-The Captain was wide enough awake to see that things were rather too
-serious for a joke, and scrambled up to windward as well as he could.
-Round rattled the sheaves, as if they would set fire to their blocks;
-away flew the sheet through them, the slack of it whipping the deck right
-and left, and barely missing the Captain, while the end of the main boom
-plunged into the water, wetting the sail half way up. The brig, eased
-of the strain, slowly and reluctantly paid off, while Torgensen, still
-seated at the weather yard-arm, with his legs twisted round it, holding
-on by the earring with both hands, with his breast straining against the
-lift to which he seemed to be holding on with his chin, and his hat, the
-while, which had been secured round his neck by a lanyard, fluttering and
-dancing to leeward, just nodded down on deck, as if to say, “all right my
-boys, I knew you would do the needful,” and then went on with his work as
-if nothing particular had happened.
-
-The squall, however, was only the prelude to a change of wind; in less
-than an hour’s time she was able, not only to shake out her reefs again,
-but to lie her course, and to jog along it merrily.
-
-Towards the close of the next day they were looking out sharp for the
-Outer Garboard Buoy, which, out of sight of land, marks the mouth of the
-Thames, and, strange to say, after a cruise of three weeks’ traverse
-sailing, hit it to a nicety,[69] and on the following morning, when the
-fishermen came on deck, they had the satisfaction of seeing, for the
-first time since the Naze had sunk in the horizon, not only land, but
-land on both sides of them, of which that on their starboard beam bore a
-very strong resemblance to the old South Foreland.
-
-“England again!” said the Captain. “Hurrah for England and
-partridges!—what the deuce are you squinting at on the French coast,
-Parson?”
-
-“A very interesting sight for us,” said the Parson, putting the telescope
-into his hands, “though not on the French coast; look at that sail, and
-tell me what you make of her.”
-
-The Captain took a long view. “A lugger I think, coming down before the
-wind, wing-and-wing.”
-
-“The very thing, and of course bound for England: if all goes right, we
-shall nearly cross her, and that in less than an hour.”
-
-“Then hurrah for a leg of mutton!”—for it should be said the _Haabet_ was
-bound for Bordeaux, to exchange her timber for the light St. Julien’s
-claret, of which so much is drunk in the north, and the fishermen had
-taken their passage in her on the chance, which amounted to almost
-a certainty, of meeting with an English coaster that would put them
-on shore somewhere. This they had not been able to meet with on the
-east coast, for foreigners are too much afraid of the shoals to allow
-themselves to go near a track which, by English vessels, is as well
-beaten as a turnpike road.
-
-“A leg of mutton!” said the Parson; “you are as bad as a Swede,—always
-thinking of your dinner.”
-
-“Upon my word, I have eaten such a lot of trash in that country that it
-is very excusable to long for the sweet simplicity of English roast and
-boiled; we have not had one single wholesome, unsophisticated meal since
-we got there; it was all grease, and sugar, and gravy, and preserves,
-except, indeed, where we boiled our own salmon on the Torjedahl, or
-toasted our own ‘mutton,’ as Moodie calls it, at the skal.”
-
-“Ah, poor Moodie! I wonder whether he has found out yet that mutton is
-not made out of elk’s meat? But that lugger is nearing us fast; I think
-we had better talk to Torgensen about it, and get our traps on deck.”
-
-Torgensen was sorry to part with his passengers, and they, though to a
-certain extent reciprocating his grief, were much more sorry to part
-from Torgensen than from the _Haabet_. But, sorry or glad, it was all
-the same, the brig and the lugger, on their respective courses, rapidly
-approached each other; a weft hoisted by the former was answered by the
-latter, and, in a few minutes, her mast-heads were seen bobbing about
-over the brig’s lee quarter.
-
-Less than half a minute sufficed to transfer the fishermen and their
-belongings from one deck to the other, and then, hands shaking,—caps
-waving,—hoist away the lugs,—and up-helm for merry England.
-
-Away flew the lugger, “her white wings flying,”—it could not be added
-“never from her foes,” for she turned out afterwards to be a noted
-smuggler that no revenue cutter could ever catch. Up rose the white
-cliffs,—plainer and plainer grew the objects on shore: now the white
-houses of Dover came in view,—then the sheep on the downs, and the men on
-the piers,—then the rising sunbeams flashed back a merry welcome from the
-windows,—then the pier-heads opened, with the tide bubbling up against
-them like a river in flood, which, taking the lugger under the counter,
-gave her a final slew, as she rushed between them,—then through the inner
-harbour, and down sails, carrying on with the way already acquired,—then
-run up alongside the Custom-house quay.
-
-“Home at last!” said the Captain, as he leaped on shore.
-
-_Hic longæ finis chartæque viæque._
-
-
-THE END.
-
-PRINTED BY COX (BROS.) AND WYMAN, GREAT QUEEN STREET.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] The families of Lejonhöved and Svinhöved were conspicuous in the wars
-of Gustavus Vasa, at which time Sweden threw off the yoke which Denmark,
-with the concurrence of Norway, had fixed on them, by taking undue
-advantage of the conditions stipulated in the Union of Calmar. The head
-of the former family perished in the treacherous massacre at Stockholm,
-generally spoken of by the name of the “Bloodbath.” Both families derive
-their names from their armorial bearings, as at that time there were no
-surnames in Sweden. These signify Lion-head and Boar-head, or Pig-head,
-respectively. Hence the Parson’s sarcasm.
-
-[2] Långref—a poaching method of catching fish.
-
-[3] Tjäder—the capercailzie. Taking him in his lek—that is to say, during
-his play, a very singular method which both the tjäder and the black-cock
-has of calling together the females of their respective species, is
-strictly contrary to law.
-
-[4] Fjeld Ripa—The mountain grouse; a bird something like our ptarmigan,
-the pursuit of which is always attended with toil, and sometimes danger.
-
-[5] According to ancient Scandinavian mythology, the earth, which is flat
-and surrounded by water, is continually guarded by Jörmungard the Sea
-Serpent, the daughter of Loki; who is so large that she encircles the
-whole earth, holding her tail in her mouth. She is sometimes called the
-Midgard Serpent;—Midgard meaning middle guard half way between the earth
-and the realms of the Hrimthursar, or Frost Giants, which is her post.
-
-[6] The god Kvasir, or Unerring Wisdom, was the joint offspring of all
-the gods, and was created to aid their negociations with the Vanir.
-His blood, sweetened by mead, forms the drink of Poetic Inspiration,
-which was guarded by Gunlauth, the daughter of Thjassi, the chief of
-the Frost Giants. Odin, who was her lover, prevailed on her to give it
-up to him, and it is at present lodged in the heights of Asgard. That
-Poetic Inspiration should be wisdom, sweetened by honey and guarded by
-love, is in itself a beautiful allegory—and not less beautiful that it
-should be won by the gods and lodged in Heaven;—but the generation of
-Kvasir involves a most curious anomaly, and that is, that the gods should
-be able to create a being more intelligent than themselves,—unless,
-indeed, we interpret the allegory as implying that mutual council is more
-unerring than the unaided intelligence of any individual.
-
-[7] The Indelta has very erroneously been stated, by one or two
-travellers in Sweden, to be the militia of the country. Sweden has
-a militia, and a very efficient force it is; but the Indelta is a
-feudal army raised and maintained by the holders of crown lands. The
-constitution of this force will be explained more fully hereafter; it is
-exclusively a Swedish institution, and does not exist in Norway.
-
-[8] “Come over the river.”
-
-[9] “Quick, here, with the boat! and so you shall have some money for
-drink.”
-
-[10] One of the wild ideas of Scandinavian mythology is, that the sun
-is the eye of Odin, and that he once had two like other people; but,
-that coming one day to the well of Mimiver, the waters of which are pure
-wisdom, he bargained for a draught, and bought the horn gjoll full at
-the price of one of his eyes; no such great quantity either, if gjoll be
-the original of our English gill. However, this fully accounts for the
-fact that the moon is not now so bright as the sun, which it probably
-once was. It must be confessed that the whole of this story is entirely
-inconsistent with the theory of the sun and moon in the prose “Edda,”
-where these are represented as separate and independent divinities, the
-son and daughter of the giant Mundilfari,—the sun being feminine and the
-moon masculine; a tradition contrary to the notions of our poets, but
-fully borne out by our English peasants, who invariably speak of the moon
-as “he,” and the sun as “she.”
-
-[11] Full-grown salmon have two or three ranges of very small teeth,
-whereas grauls (Scoticè, grilse) have only one. It is this distinction
-which, on the Erne, is technically termed “the mask,” and not the size,
-which determines the difference between a graul and a salmon.
-
-[12] An ort, or mark, is the fifth part of a specie-daler, equivalent to
-ninepence or tenpence of our money. A skilling is about the same as an
-English halfpenny; the word, however, is pronounced exactly the same as
-our English word shilling, the _k_ being soft before _i_; a circumstance
-which rather perplexes the stranger in his calculations.
-
-[13] Since the abolition of capital punishment in Norway—a measure
-that does not seem to answer at all—murderers are confined, like other
-criminals, in the castle at Christiania. They may be seen in dresses of
-which each sleeve and leg has its own colour, sweeping the streets and
-doing other public work; and a very disgusting sight it is. The average
-of crime is very high in Norway—perhaps higher than in any country known,
-and particularly crimes of violence. This may be accounted for, partly
-by their wonderful drunkenness, and partly by the very inefficient state
-of the Church, and the almost total absence of the religious element in
-an education which is artificially forced by state enactments. In Norway
-there is a very great disproportion between intellect and religion.
-
-[14] Manchester has its faults, and a good many of them, but among them
-all its Anglo-Saxon virtue of order and capacity for self-government come
-out in strong relief.
-
-“Where are your policemen?” asked the Duke, as he glanced at the masses
-that thronged the streets during the Queen’s visit,—perhaps the largest
-crowd that had ever been collected in England. The streets of the Borough
-of Manchester were not staked and corded off, and guarded by men in blue;
-but thousands of strong, active warehousemen and mechanics formed, by
-joining hands, a novel barricade. And in the evening, when numbers beyond
-computation were assembled in the streets to witness the illumination,
-amidst all the confusion there was nothing but good-humour.—_Fraser._
-
-[15] Alluding to a custom in Norway, of mixing the inner rind of the
-birch tree with their rye meal, during times of scarcity.
-
-[16] The fisherman is very much recommended to tie his own flies for
-the Tay, or to get them at Edmondson’s. The author bought a good many
-pretty-looking specimens in the country, by way of patterns, all of
-which whipped to pieces in half-an-hour’s fishing. The fact is, there
-is a cheap way of tying flies, which it is impossible to detect by the
-eye; and it is just as well that the young fisherman should ask the
-_character_ of his tackle-maker before investing his money in such very
-ticklish wares; the worthlessness of which he will not find out till he
-reaches his fishing-ground. The author, a fisherman of some experience,
-has tied a good many flies in his time, and has had a good many tied
-for him by his attendants and other professionals on the river’s banks;
-but the only tradespeople he has ever found trustworthy, in all points,
-in such matters are, Chevalier, of Bell-yard, London, and Edmondson, of
-Church-street, Liverpool. Their flies have never failed him, whether in
-their hooks, their gut, or their tying. All that the fisherman will want
-in their shops will be a little science, to enable him to choose his
-colours, _and a little money to enable him to pay his bills_.
-
-[17] The real scene of this piscatorial exploit is on the Mandahl river.
-There is a Hell Fall on the Torjedahl also; indeed, the name is common
-in Norway, and in Sweden too, so as to become almost generic for a dark,
-gloomy rush of waters; but the Hell Fall of the Torjedahl is inaccessible
-to salmon, which, notwithstanding all that Inglis says to the contrary,
-are unable to surmount the great falls of Wigeland about a mile below it.
-It is, therefore, worthless as a fishing-place; and, the author suspects,
-altogether too dangerous to be attempted without good reason. When the
-water is low, the fall of the Mandahl may be fished in the ordinary
-manner from a boat, and it is well worth the trial; but if the river be
-full, the birch rope will be found necessary.
-
-[18] The lower part of the Torjedahl is perfectly free from musquitoes,
-which cannot be said of all the rivers in Norway; this probably is owing
-to its rapidity, and to the absence of all tributaries and still water.
-
-[19] It is no inaccuracy to give Birger a Scotch song, for there is a
-considerable infusion of Scotch blood among the Swedes, and Scotch family
-names are by no means uncommon among the nobility. In fact, Scotch names
-are to be met with even in their national ballads: for instance—
-
- It was young Folmer Skot
- Who rode by dale and hill,
- And after rides Morton of Fogelsang,
- Who bids him hear his will.
-
-[20] The thirtieth of April.
-
-[21]
-
- Lie still, my child;
- In the morning comes Fin
- Thy father,
- And gives thee Esberne Snorre’s eyes and heart to play with.
-
-[22] Esberne Snorre is the Danish Faust. In no country whatever was
-the reformation popular among the peasantry, and therefore the popular
-legends invariably assign the leaders and causes of it to the devil, as
-in the case of Faust himself, who, whatever Goëthe may say, really was
-a very respectable tradesman, and had no more to do with the devil than
-is involved in the invention of that art which became so powerful an
-instrument in the hands of reformers—printing. Esberne Snorre was what
-very few of the Danish Reformers were, a really good and conscientious
-man, who might well have built the Church of Kallendborg, or even have
-given his eyes for it. Nevertheless, pre-eminently before all the
-reformers, the devil carries him off bodily in every legend of the time,
-just as he did Faust.
-
-[23] Equivalent to “spoiling a market” in Ireland, or “opening a
-Sheriff’s ball” in England,—“Goth’s garden” being the cant name for a
-place of execution in Stockholm, which is adorned with permanent gibbets,
-and is so called from the name of the first man who was hanged there.
-The saying is Swedish, not Norwegian, not only because it is local, but
-because there are no capital punishments at all in Norway.
-
-[24] Christina, daughter of the great Gustavus Adolphus, a popular
-and able sovereign, abdicated voluntarily,—wearied of the toils of
-government,—and is said to have uttered some such speech as that
-attributed to her by Torkel on crossing the little stream which in those
-days separated her late dominions from those of Denmark.
-
-[25] Between “the two lights,”—that is to say, twilight,—is always the
-time in which all spirits of the middle earth have the greatest power;
-of course the reason is, that seen indistinctly in the doubtful light
-of morning or evening, natural objects take strange forms, and exhibit
-appearances which are ascribed to the supernatural.
-
-[26] A sort of scallop, of very beautiful colour.
-
-[27] In the Swedish Church there used to be a regular private confession
-made to the priest before every Communion, on which occasion an
-offertory, called confession-money, was deposited on the altar. It is,
-indeed, the rule of the Church still, though, since a royal ordinance, in
-1686, forbade penitents to select their own confessors, confining them to
-the priest of their parish, the custom has fallen into disuse; still the
-old expressions are frequently retained.
-
-[28] The mal is said to be a great-headed, wide-mouthed monster, with
-a long beard, of the same colour as the eel; and, like the eel, slimy
-and without any perceptible scales. It is said to grow to the length of
-twelve or fourteen feet, to weigh three or four hundred pounds, and to
-carry on his back fin a strong, sharp lance, which it can elevate or
-depress at pleasure. It is supposed to lie seeking whom or what it may
-devour in the deepest and muddiest holes of rivers or lakes. The author
-has heard this fish talked of very often, but has never seen one, and
-believes fully that it may safely be classed with the Black Horse, the
-Mid-Gard Serpent, and Dr. Clarke’s Furia Infernalis.
-
-[29] The leading fish of each shoal, or school, as it is called,—usually
-a salmon of considerable weight and experience—is so termed by the Irish
-fishermen.
-
-[30] Frue is properly a title of nobility, and is of Danish origin. No
-Norwegian titles date earlier than the Union of Kalmar. These, however,
-have been all abolished by a Storthing, which, consisting mostly of
-peasants, set itself strongly against aristocratical distinctions; and,
-taking advantage of that clause in the constitution which provides,
-that if a bill be carried three times it overrides the king’s veto,
-have succeeded in abolishing them. Habit and custom, however, are
-stronger than parliaments; and the mistress of a wealthy establishment
-is frequently designated, not by her husband’s name, but as Lady Marie,
-Lady Brigetta, or, as in the present case, Lady Christina—for that is the
-meaning of the title Frue.
-
-[31] Not many years ago, the “summer parlour” was the only room in any
-house that had windows that would open.
-
-[32] All livings in Norway have a dowager-house and farm belonging to
-them, for the widow of the late incumbent. At her death, it passes back
-to the present possessor of the living.
-
-[33] Deep water.
-
-[34]
-
- Here the Neck strikes his harp in his city of glass,
- And the Mermaids comb out their bright hair, green as grass,
- And bleach here their glittering clothes.
-
-[35] Those who are drowned at sea, and whose bodies are never recovered,
-are said to have been enticed away to the mermaids’ caves beneath the
-deep water.
-
-[36] Those who are lost and starved to death in the forest—a thing which
-is of perpetual occurrence,—are said to be detained through the love of
-the Skogsfrue.
-
-[37]
-
- “We fly from day’s dazzling light,
- But we joy in the shades of night,—
- Though we journey on earth, our home must be
- Beneath the shell of the earth and the sea.”
-
- _Mathisen._
-
-[38] This legend is taken from the Brage Rädur, which, in the original,
-is obscure enough. Finn Magnussen, however, seems to have hit upon the
-right interpretation of it, which we have followed here. His explanation,
-as given in “Blackwell’s Northern Antiquities,” is this:—“Iduna,
-the ever-renovating Spring-being, in the possession of Thjasse, the
-desolating Winter,—all nature languishes until she is delivered from her
-captivity. On this being effected, her presence again diffuses joy and
-gladness, and all things revive; while her pursuer, Winter, with his icy
-breath, dissolves in the solar rays, indicated by the fires lighted on
-the walls of Asgard.”
-
-[39] Niord and his wife, Skadi, had naturally some disputes about their
-future residence,—he preferring the brightness of his own palace,
-Noatun, she very naturally yearning after Thrymheim, the abode of her
-chilly father. The dispute was referred to Forseti, the son of Baldur,
-the heavenly attorney-general, who decided that they should alternately
-occupy Noatun for three months and Thrymheim for nine,—which is about the
-Norwegian proportion of summer and winter.
-
- “Thrymheim, the land
- Where Thjasse abode,
- That mightiest of giants,—
- But snow-skating Skadi
- Now dwells there, I trow,
- In her father’s old mansion.”
-
- _Elder Edda._
-
-[40] A proof of the authenticity of this legend is to be found in the
-etymology of the word, “gate,” (gatin—the street), being a Norwegian word.
-
-[41] Hermod and Baldur were both sons of Odin. That is to say, Courage
-and Innocence are both children of Heavenly Wisdom.
-
-[42] The moral of this legend is admirable. The Principle of Evil is of
-itself powerless against the Principle of Good, until it is assisted by
-well-intentioned, but blind Prejudice; but that same Prejudice, after its
-enlightenment, becomes its partner and ally.
-
-[43] An attentive reader, who is also a fisherman, will see, by reverting
-to the time which the adventures in the Torjedahl and Soberud-dahl must
-have taken, that this voyage must have taken place much later in the
-year than the 24th of June, and that consequently he could not have seen
-the bale-fires he describes. The fact is, the author made two visits to
-Christiansand; he arrived there in June, but, finding the snow-water
-still in the river, he made a voyage among the islands, to occupy
-the time, and visited the place again at the end of July. To prevent
-unnecessary confusion, the incidents of both these visits are told
-together; but the fisherman must not conclude from this, that anything
-is to be done in any of the Tellemarken rivers before the second week in
-July.
-
-[44] The whole Norwegian navy consists of one frigate, two corvettes,
-two brigs, three schooners, and a hundred and forty of these gun-boats.
-The Swedes, who have upon the whole rather a powerful navy, considering
-the poverty of their country,—that is to say, thirteen line-of-battle
-ships, fourteen frigates, some of them very heavy ones, and twenty-two
-steamers—possess also three hundred of these gun-boats. They carry
-generally one long tomer forward, and sometimes a carronade, sometimes
-a smaller gun aft. They are quite open, except a couple of bunks for
-the officers’ sleeping places, pull from twenty to thirty oars, and are
-generally sent to sea in squadrons, with a frigate or corvette to take
-care of them,—like an old duck with a brood of ducklings. The frigate
-forms a rallying point and place of refuge, as well as a place of rest,
-for the crews are changed from time to time, and in their turns enjoy a
-week’s rest and cover on board of her.
-
-[45] In Sweden there really is an order of the Seraphim, and in Denmark
-one of the Elephant,—for the Goose and Gridiron we will not vouch.
-
-[46] That ancient and distinguished family are said to read Gen. vi.
-4 thus: “And there were Grants in the earth in those days.” The word
-“giants” being, according to the best authorities in that family, a
-modern reading.
-
-[47] Bjornstjerna, a not uncommon name in Sweden, signifies “bear’s star.”
-
-[48] Bör, civilized man,—from _beran_, to bear; the same etymology as
-that of _barn_, a child. Ymir, Chaos,—literally, a confused noise; the
-meaning is, “before civilization had subdued Chaos.”
-
-[49] It must be remembered that the letter o, in Swedish, is pronounced
-like our oo, and that the g before ä e i ö, as well as the final g, is
-pronounced like the English y; the word “Modige,” therefore, will be
-pronounced very like the English word “Moodie.”
-
-[50] _Rubus Chamœmorus_; called in the country, _Möltebär_.
-
-[51] Baldur’s Eye-brow—_Anthemis Cotula._—LINN.
-
-[52] The Puritan Abbott, Archbishop of Canterbury, got into great
-trouble from his sporting propensities. One day, as he was shooting with
-Lord de le Zouch, at Branshill Park, he shot a keeper. According to
-canon law, a clergyman killing a man becomes, from that time forward,
-incapable of performing any clerical function; and three Bishops elect
-refused consecration at his hand,—“Not,” as they said, “out of enmity or
-superstition, but to be wary that they might not be attainted with the
-contagion of his scandal and uncanonical condition.” He was re-instated
-by a committee of Bishops, appointed for the purpose, but never entirely
-recovered his position.
-
-[53] According to Scandinavian mythology, the sacred ash of Yggdrasil,
-which typifies the Vital Principle of the world, has seated on
-its topmost boughs an eagle, bearing perched between his eyes a
-falcon,—emblematic of Energy and Activity.
-
-[54] According to the Prose Edda, the gods had originally no poetry in
-their souls. The mead of Poetic Inspiration was in the keeping of the
-giant Suttung, who entrusted it to his daughter, Gunlauth. Odin made
-love to her,—obtained possession of the mead, and deserted her. He had,
-however, the grace to be ashamed of himself, for these are the words of
-the Hávamál, in which he evidently alludes to this not very creditable
-passage in his life:
-
- “Gunlauth gave me,
- On a golden chair seated,
- A draught of mead delicious;
- But the return was evil
- Which she experienced,—
- With all her faithfulness—
- With all her deep love!
-
- “A holy ring oath
- I mind me gave Odin,—
- Now, who can trust him?
- Suttung is cheated—
- His mead is stolen—
- Gunlauth is weeping!”
-
-[55] A Norwegian slang expression, for “early rising.”
-
-[56] There is a beautiful superstition—if it is not a real religious
-truth—in Norway, that those we have loved best on earth become our unseen
-guardians, and follow us always, to warn us of danger.
-
-[57]
-
- “Then shall brethren be
- Each other’s bane,
- And sister’s children rend
- The ties of kin.
-
- “Hard will be the age,
- And harlotry prevail,—
- An axe-age, a sword-age—
- Shields oft cleft in twain,—
- A storm-age, a wolf-age,
- Ere earth shall meet its doom.”
-
- _The Völuspà._
-
-[58] Stags are not common so far north, but they are to be met with now
-and then. Elks are much more often seen, and are now pretty plentiful.
-In the days of which the author is writing, the Game Laws were, on paper
-at least, very strict about both elks and red-deer. Time was, when
-the former of these were classed with the bear and the lynx, and were
-absolutely outlawed as noxious beasts. At the time the author was in
-Sweden, the laws had gone to the other extreme, and they were absolutely
-protected,—everybody being forbidden to shoot them; a prohibition which,
-though it prevented men from going after them openly, was, in fact, as
-little regarded as most laws are in the fjeld. Now, they may be shot,
-only under certain restrictions.
-
-[59] A cant phrase in Sweden, for “going on foot.”
-
-[60] The only time the author ever did get a sight of one was in the
-fjeld on the right bank of the Gotha, near Trollhättan, when he was
-making his way through some tangled ground in search of a lake, which
-lies at no very great distance from the fall. On leaping down from a
-low ledge of rock, he very nearly pitched upon the top of a filfras, as
-much to his own surprise as that of the beast. He struck at him with his
-spiked fishing-rod—the only weapon he had with him. Fortunately for both
-parties, as he now thinks, he missed him; so they parted, much to their
-mutual satisfaction, and have not met since.
-
-[61] Nalle is the cant name for the bear kind, as with us Reynard is the
-cant name for a fox.
-
-[62] “Rig,” the earthly name of Heimdall, the watcher of Heaven’s gate,
-when he disguises himself to go skylarking on earth. Hence the slang
-expression, “Running a Rig.”
-
-[63] The Sun and Moon are continually pursued by the wolf Fenrir and her
-progeny, who sometimes nearly catch her. Hence the eclipses.
-
-[64] The author will not answer for his orthography in the word
-“pein-compassen.” He can work a reckoning by it, but has never seen it
-spelt.
-
-[65] There is no book so popular in Sweden as what they call “Peter
-Simpel aff Kapten Marrjatt.”
-
-[66] In Preadamite times—that is to say, the times of Drake and
-Raleigh—this was the custom of the English service also; but it having
-been discovered that “what is everybody’s business is nobody’s business,”
-and that accidents and negligences were continually happening during the
-dog watch, a regular afternoon watch was established, and the dog watch
-reduced to four hours, and divided into two; so that the whole ship’s
-company could relieve one another systematically, and not, as before,
-by private arrangement; and that the whole could have two uninterrupted
-hours below, between four and eight in the evening, for their evening
-meal, or any other occupation. The whole afternoon watch was called the
-dog watch, because in the full light,—and Norwegian ships did not go to
-sea in the winter because they were frozen up,—the work was supposed to
-be so easy that the dogs were sufficient to keep it.
-
-[67] Those drowned at sea, whose bodies are never found, are supposed
-to have been invited by the mermaids to their caves, and to have been
-fascinated by the beauty of their entertainers. Homer’s story of the
-Syrens enticing the comrades of Ulysses, has some such foundation.
-
-[68] The words “smart” and “smartly,” which, at sea, have a signification
-very different from their shore-going meaning, are pieces of
-mis-spelling. They are evidently derived from the Norwegian words “snart”
-and “snartlig,” which bear precisely the same nautical meaning as our
-English words.
-
-[69] This is a literal fact. Three weeks after sailing from
-Christiansand, and seventeen days after losing sight of land of any
-kind,—during which time there had been but two days in which the brig
-could lie her course,—the author was in the fore-rigging, on the look-out
-for the Outer Garboard buoy. He had but small hopes of seeing it, he
-admits, for the brig had been navigated by log, lead, and compass
-alone; nevertheless it is true, that within half-an-hour of his taking
-up his look-out place, and precisely in the direction in which he was
-looking, there was the buoy,—a little black speck, like a dancing boat.
-This, considering that the steamer in which he had gone out—a vessel
-commanded by a lieutenant in her Majesty’s navy—was fifty miles out of
-her reckoning, after a straight course of four days, seemed, to say the
-least, remarkable.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOREST SCENES IN NORWAY AND
-SWEDEN: BEING EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF A FISHERMAN ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Forest Scenes in Norway and Sweden: being Extracts from the Journal of a Fisherman, by Rev. Henry Garrett Newland</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Forest Scenes in Norway and Sweden: being Extracts from the Journal of a Fisherman</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Rev. Henry Garrett Newland</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 13, 2022 [eBook #67401]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOREST SCENES IN NORWAY AND SWEDEN: BEING EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF A FISHERMAN ***</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="460" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">BEAR-HUNT.</p>
-<p class="caption-r"><i>Front.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">FOREST SCENES<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">IN</span><br />
-<br />
-NORWAY AND SWEDEN:<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">BEING<br />
-<br />
-<span class="gothic">Extracts from the Journal of a Fisherman.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-THE REV. HENRY NEWLAND,<br />
-<span class="smaller">RECTOR AND VICAR OF WESTBOURNE,<br />
-AUTHOR OF “THE ERNE: ITS LEGENDS AND ITS FLY-FISHING,” ETC. ETC.</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">The Second Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON:<br />
-G. ROUTLEDGE &amp; CO. FARRINGDON STREET;<br />
-<span class="smaller">NEW YORK: 18, BEEKMAN STREET.<br />
-1855.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">TO MY MUCH-ESTEEMED FRIEND,
-THE PUBLIC.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">My dear Public</span>,—</p>
-
-<p>I have frequently heard you remark, in that
-quaint and pithy manner so peculiarly your own, that “all
-work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” If you should
-happen to find the book which I here present to your notice
-to be really of such a character as your friend Jack might
-have written under these distressing circumstances, I am
-afraid I cannot plead this very sensible observation of yours
-as my excuse; for I must confess, which I do with thankfulness,
-that in my time I have enjoyed quite as much play
-as is good for me, or for any one, in this working-day world
-of ours. On this point, therefore, my book must stand on
-its own merits.</p>
-
-<p>But, as I am extremely solicitous of your good opinion,
-and should be very sorry to see you err on the opposite
-extreme, imagining, as indeed you might, that mine has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span>
-been “all play and no work,” I must request you to look
-at the Parson at home as well as the Parson abroad,—in
-short, to read my “Confirmation and First Communion,”
-as well as my “Forest Life;” a proceeding which, if it
-does not benefit you, my dear Public (and I sincerely hope
-it may), will, at all events,—through the medium of his
-Publisher,—benefit, and that materially,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Your faithful Servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE AUTHOR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Westbourne Vicarage</span>,<br />
-<i>July 7th, 1854</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#INTRODUCTION"><i>Page</i> 1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter I.</span>—Preparations</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter II.</span>—The Voyage</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">18</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter III.</span>—The Shipwash Sand</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter IV.</span>—The Landfall</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter V.</span>—Christiansand</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter VI.</span>—The Torjedahl</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter VII.</span>—The Encampment Mosse Eurd</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter VIII.</span>—Making a Night of it</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter IX.</span>—The Hell Fall</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter X.</span>—Departure from Torjedahl</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XI.</span>—The Mountain March</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">141</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XII.</span>—The Homestead</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XIII.</span>—The Church</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XIV.</span>—Breaking up the Encampment</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XV.</span>—Eider Duck Hunting</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XVI.</span>—The Coasting Voyage</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">220</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XVII.</span>—Gotheborg</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XVIII.</span>—Trollhättan</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XIX.</span>—Gäddebäck</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">267</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XX.</span>—Wenern</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXI.</span>—The Meet</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">295</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXII.</span>—The Commencement of the Skal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">305</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXIII.</span>—The Satterval</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">318</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXIV.</span>—Making another Night of it</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">333</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXV.</span>—The Watch Fire</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXVI.</span>—Beating out the Skal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">367</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXVII.</span>—The Ball</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">377</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXVIII.</span>—The Wedding</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">389</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Chapter XXIX.</span>—Homeward Bound</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">402</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h1>FOREST LIFE:<br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smaller">A</span><br />
-FISHERMAN’S SKETCHES IN NORWAY AND<br />
-SWEDEN.</span></h1>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sketches in Norway and Sweden! Are they fact or fiction?
-are they to be instructive or simply entertaining? These are
-questions which the public has a right to ask, and which the
-author means to answer as truly as he can. He hopes there
-will be a little of both. At least, in making this selection
-from his own and his friends’ journals, he has had both these
-objects in his eye, and he trusts he has been able to keep his
-eye upon them both at the same time, and that without any
-very great amount of squinting. The framework which he
-has adopted is that of a very popular description of authors—the
-historical romancers, and, if he might venture to say so,
-of a certain equally popular historian: that is to say, fiction
-founded upon fact. He has laid down absolute facts, or what
-he believes to be facts, for his groundwork, and has dressed
-them up to suit his fancy.</p>
-
-<p>These Northern Sketches are, in truth, a continuation of a
-former work, “The Erne, its Legends and its Fly-fishing;”
-as the expedition which gave rise to them was in every respect
-the same as the old Belleek fishing-association, with a simple
-change of scene. They are therefore written upon the same
-plan, which the author has found extremely convenient and
-very suitable to his purpose.</p>
-
-<p>That purpose was not only to preserve the recollections of
-a most enjoyable time, but also to convey as much real information<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-on the subjects treated on as he could compass; and
-with such an object before him, absolute fiction would have
-been useless.</p>
-
-<p>His descriptions, therefore, in that book were real descriptions,
-his anecdotes, real anecdotes—the incidents of the
-story did actually happen; his instructions in the art of fly-fishing
-and the hydrography of the river were the results of
-his own experience, and the fairy legends were his own
-collections. Unless these things had been true, his book
-would have been merely a book of entertainment,—and he
-was ambitious of something beyond that. Everything of
-this kind, therefore, was recorded accurately; and in the few
-instances in which the requirements of the story compelled
-the author to transplant his incidents, their real localities
-were always given.</p>
-
-<p>All this was important to the public, or, at least, as important
-as the subject itself; but it was of no consequence
-to any one, except for the gratification of mere curiosity, to
-be able to identify the precise Captain A. who broke the
-weirs of the Laune, while such information would not have
-raised Captain A.’s character at the Horse-Guards. The
-Liberal member for B. might enjoy the recollection of the row
-he got up at Kildoney, but might not find it convenient to
-be reminded of it on the hustings. Attorneys might look
-askance at Barrister C., who for a whole summer had directed
-his studies to the practice of Club-law; while Parson D., who
-had passed three months of his life waist-high in the Erne,
-might possibly expect, were he identified, to have cold water
-thrown upon him by his Bishop for the rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p>With all these matters, interesting enough to the characters
-themselves, the public had nothing whatever to do: it
-was sufficient for them that they had their information and
-their story; and, provided the incidents of that story happened
-to some one, it signified little to them, which, of all
-the letters of the alphabet, composed his name. The public
-should feel grateful to any fisherman who has truly revealed
-the silks and feathers of his favourite fly; it is what very
-few fishermen will do: let them be satisfied with that: they
-shall never know—they have no right to know—which of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span>
-all the “Squires” that haunted the Erne it was who landed
-the “Schoolmaster” on the “Bank of Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p>In the present sketches the author has not so much reason
-to conceal the names of his characters; he can hurt no one.
-He has no rows or “ructions” to record; more’s the pity,
-for there is nothing so interesting to read about. Still, there
-are advantages in carrying out the same plan: first, it makes
-the continuation obvious—some of the Erne characters are
-again introduced: and this is not a fiction; for when rail-roads
-began to multiply, and sporting cockneys began to
-infest the innocent Erne, frightening its salmon and exacerbating
-its proprietors, that pleasant coterie of fishermen,
-who, in earlier and better times, were wont to concoct their
-punch and tell their stories at Mother Johnstone’s fire-side,
-and hang their great two-handed rods upon her hospitable
-brackets, actually did betake themselves to the exile of
-foreign lands.</p>
-
-<p>But, in the second place, it conveys the same information
-in a more entertaining manner: the author is able to piece
-his characters; making them, like <i>Mrs. Malaprop’s</i> Cerberus,
-“three gentlemen at once,” by combining into one the incidents
-that happened to many. The author has thus availed
-himself of other journals and other note-books besides his
-own, and has been able to appropriate their contents, and to
-distribute whatever was characteristic of the country, into a
-series of connected sketches, instead of perpetually changing
-his locality and introducing new characters. He by no
-means intends to identify himself with his fictitious Parson,
-nor will he even undertake to say, that he was himself in all
-instances personally present whenever the Parson comes
-upon the scene: he will answer for the truth of nothing
-beyond the detached incidents and descriptions.</p>
-
-<p>Neither can these Sketches be used as an itinerary. Now
-and then, though not often, names of places have been even
-suppressed or altered, and incidents transplanted. They
-will, indeed, give glimpses—slight, but true as far as they go—of
-northern scenery, costume, travelling peculiarities, and,
-above all, sport. They will contain practical hints and
-available directions, but it is only in a general way. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-are not at all intended as a guide-book, nor will they at all
-supersede the indispensable Murray.</p>
-
-<p>The traveller, following upon the author’s footsteps, will
-find himself lost at two points of the narrative—the village
-of Soberud, and the locality of the Skal. In the former of
-these the reason is evident enough—the author wishes to
-convey an idea of what sort of men the Norwegian clergy
-are, not to draw the attention of subsequent travellers to any
-individual clergyman. In the case of the skal there is
-another reason. Although Mr. Lloyd, the author of
-“Northern Wild Sports,” being a great hunter, has always
-contrived to get a shot at the bear, it is, nevertheless, true,
-that an ordinary man sees about as much of a skal as a
-regimental officer does of a battle—that is to say, he sees
-about a dozen men on each side of him: and, it may well
-happen, that the share of any given individual in the most
-successful of skals, will amount to hearing a great deal of
-firing, and, at the end of three or four days’ hard work, seeing
-five or six carcasses paraded at the nearest village. In
-order, therefore, to give his readers a graphic sketch of a
-skal, without violently outraging probability, it was necessary
-for the author to <i>make his ground</i>, that is to say, to imagine
-ground of such a description that it was possible for his
-characters to see what was going on. It is not altogether
-fictitious either, for the traveller will find a good deal of it
-in the Toftdahl Valley, though this was never, so far as the
-author knows, the scene of a summer skal.</p>
-
-<p>Similarly, also, though there is no such village as Soberud,
-that being the name of a district near Larvig in which Sir
-Hyde Parker’s fishing-lodge is situated and where the
-author caught a good many salmon and trout, yet the
-traveller will be able to patch together the fictitious country
-from real and actual elements. The church is Hitterdahl—but
-as there is no lake at Hitterdahl, one has been borrowed
-for it from the country between Larvig and Frederiksvärn—the
-“Lake of the Woods” is, really, about four miles north-east
-of the village of Boen; the little lake where the diver
-was shot, together with the forest about it, about as far to
-the west of the same place; and the dark sombre pine wood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-is, really, situated in the valley of the Nid. This last has
-been slightly altered to suit the locality, for it is next to impossible
-to lose oneself in the Nid forest, the river itself
-being sufficient guide; but the rest is all drawn as accurately
-as the author’s recollections, aided by his journals, will
-enable him to depict it. With respect to the characters,
-Tom, Torkel, and Jacob were attendants on the author and
-his companions, and, though “a little rose upon,” to use a
-nautical expression, are drawn from actual life, and in their
-own proper names. The Captain and Parson, as has been
-said before, are not to be considered actual characters; that
-is to say, characters responsible as having done and said all
-that they are represented to have done and said, but merely
-as pegs upon which to hang the author’s personal experiences,
-or pieces of information which he may have received. The
-same may be said of Birger. It was necessary to associate
-with the party an intelligent Swede, and Lieut. Birger was
-chosen to fill that office. Bjornstjerna is wholly fictitious.
-Hjelmar is a real character; and his adventure in the
-Najaden frigate was related by him exactly as they are conveyed
-to the reader, the steamer following out among the
-islands the precise track of the chase. The author, however,
-will not undertake to say that the actual name of Hjelmar
-will be found on the watch and quarter bills of the frigate,
-though Hulm was actually her captain, and was actually
-buried near Lyngör, where his monument may be seen to
-this day. Moodie is a real character, though his name, also,
-is fictitious; or, rather, it is derived from a nick-name that
-the author understands he has acquired either by his courage
-or his foolhardiness: the appellation Modige, which is
-pronounced very like our English name, Moodie, is translatable
-either way. He does not, however, live at Gäddebäck,
-which is the name of a house formerly occupied by
-the celebrated Mr. Lloyd, the author of “Wild Sports of the
-North,” and “Scandinavian Adventures,” to whose kindness
-the author is indebted for his being able to describe, from
-experience, the fishing of the Gotha, which is drawn as
-accurately as the author’s recollection served him. The
-traveller need not, however, fear the quicksand which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-engulphed poor Jacob; that scene, and a very ridiculous one
-it was, occurred on the Torjedahl just below Oxea. The
-fisherman is cautioned not to be guided in his choice of a
-river by the author’s success on the Torjedahl. It is too
-clear, too much overhung, and too steadily and regularly
-rapid to be a first-rate river under any circumstances. There
-are few shallows in it, for there are no tributaries below the
-Falls of Wigeland, and no salmon can get above them;
-therefore, its breeding-ground is very limited indeed; probably
-the flats of Strei, Oxea, and Mosse Eurd, form the whole
-of it. The author’s success must be attributed to the fact of
-his fly having been the first of his kind that ever floated on
-those transparent waters.</p>
-
-<p>The songs which are put into the mouths of the different
-characters, are really Norwegian or Swedish, and are given
-as specimens. They are translations by Hewitt, Forester,
-Knightley, and others. Scandinavia has always been remarkable
-for its lyrical poetry from the earliest times; and
-the <i>Gammle Norgé</i> of Bjerregaard, which is given in
-chapter viii., would seem to show that the cup of poetic
-inspiration which Odin stole from the keeping of Gunlauth,
-and stored up in Asgard, is not yet empty. By far the best
-of the modern poets of the North is Grundtvig, but his subjects
-are, for the most part, of a nature too solemn for a work
-so light as this; a short specimen from his hymns is given in
-chapter xviii. The Evening Hymn, in chapter xxiii., though
-in common use in Norway, is not Norwegian; it belongs to
-the ancient church, and is said to be as old as the days of
-Ambrose and Augustine.</p>
-
-<p>The legends are collected from all manner of sources:
-many of them from Tom and Torkel, some from the Eddas
-and Sagas, some from Malet and Knightley; they are all,
-however, legitimate Scandinavian legends, believed implicitly
-by some one or other.</p>
-
-<p>One word about the voyage out. It signifies little to the
-public when and where those incidents really happened—whether
-in the North Sea, or in the Bay of Biscay, or in the
-Mediterranean; but it signifies to them a great deal, to know
-that these things actually did happen once, and may happen
-again at any time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<p>The main incidents adapted to that fictitious voyage are
-strictly and literally true. A large steamer was upon one
-occasion in the precise situation ascribed to the <i>Walrus</i>,—and—in
-the absence of its skipper, who for the time had
-mysteriously disappeared—was saved by the promptness of
-one of the passengers, precisely as is described in the narrative.
-And it is also true that the same vessel, after a run
-of not more than five hundred miles, did find herself fifty
-miles out of her course. The compasses, no doubt, being in
-fault, as they always are on such occasions—poor things!</p>
-
-<p>These are important matters for the public to be made
-acquainted with; for the public do very frequently go down
-to the sea in steamers, and therefore any individual reader
-may at any time find himself in the very same situation.</p>
-
-<p>The author has enlarged upon this, in the faint hope of
-drawing attention to these matters. He would suggest that
-some sort of superintendence would not be altogether superfluous,
-and that it is not entirely right that the lives of two
-or three hundred men on the deep sea should be entrusted
-to a skipper not competent to navigate a river, nor be committed
-to a vessel so parsimoniously found as to be unable to
-encounter casualties which might happen any day in a voyage
-to Ramsgate.</p>
-
-<p>On a subject so important as this, the author thinks it his
-duty to state that these incidents, extraordinary as they may
-appear, are in no way fictitious; that they did happen under
-his own eye; and that the mate, the only real sailor on
-board, did request of him, after the escape, a certificate that
-he, at least, had done his duty. If that man should be still
-alive, he possesses a most unique document, a certificate of
-seamanship, signed by a clergyman of the United Church of
-England and Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper’s name the author does not think it necessary
-to record. He is not likely to be employed again; for he is
-one of those who have since immortalised themselves in the
-public prints, by losing his vessel—a circumstance which, it
-will readily be believed, did not excite any very great feelings
-of surprise in the mind of the author.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="smaller">PREPARATIONS.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“In every corner</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Carefully look thou</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere forth thou goest.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is no saying more true than that “he who would
-make a tour abroad, must first make the tour of London.”
-There are miscellaneous articles of appropriate clothing to
-be got together; there are bags, knapsacks, portmanteaus,
-to be fitted. Above all, there are passports to be procured;
-than which no plague more vexatious, more annoying, or
-more utterly useless for any practicable or comprehensible
-purpose, has been devised by modern ingenuity.</p>
-
-<p>But if this is a necessary preliminary on ordinary occasions,
-much more is it necessary when the contemplated
-expedition has for its object sporting, and the northern
-wildernesses for its contemplated locality. In addition to
-the cares of ordinary travel, there are now tents, blankets,
-cloaks, guns, rifles, to be thought of; rods, reels, gaffs, lines,
-to be overhauled and repaired; material-books to be replenished,
-and the commissariat department to be adequately
-looked to. Deep and anxious, yet not without their pleasures,
-are the responsibilities which rest on the shoulders of him
-who undertakes the conduct of such an expedition as this.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the thoughts that crossed the mind of the Parson,
-as—business in his musing eye, care on his frowning
-brow, and determination in his compressed lip—he stood
-under the archway of the Golden Cross; his hands mechanically
-feeling for the pockets of his fishing-jacket, which had
-been exchanged for a clerical frock-coat more befitting the
-locality, and his mouth pursing itself up for his habitual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-whistle, which, had he indulged in it where he then stood,
-might have been considered neither appropriate nor decorous.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think this list rather a long one,” said the
-Captain, who had now joined him from the interior of the
-hotel, holding in his hand a pretty closely-written sheet of
-foolscap. “These are all very good things, and very useful
-things no doubt, but how are we to stow them, and how are
-we to carry them? Yours is anything but light marching
-order.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should it be?”</p>
-
-<p>“My principle is, that no traveller can be too lightly
-equipped.”</p>
-
-<p>“And a very good principle, too,” said the Parson.
-“Heavy and useless incumbrances are the invariable attributes
-of travelling Englishmen. You may know them by
-their endless train of household goods, as you would know a
-snail by its shell.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe,” said the Captain, “that foreign rail-roads are
-regulated precisely so as to tax us English tourists. Travel
-on whatever line you please in England, except that grasping
-Brighton and South Coast, and you may take just exactly
-what luggage you like; while abroad, the fare is so low and
-the charge for luggage so high, that an Englishman generally
-pays double; while the Frenchman, whose three spare collars
-and bottle of hair-oil are in his pocket; and the German,
-whose great tobacco-bag and little reticule of necessaries are
-so constructed as to fit the allowance, are permitted to go
-free.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I do not object to the tax; it is a
-tax upon folly. What can be so absurd as such a miscellaneous
-collection as Englishmen generally carry with them?
-What can a traveller want beyond a dry suit of clothes and
-half-a-dozen shirts and stockings?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a slight incongruity between your words and
-your actions,” said the Captain, holding up the list.</p>
-
-<p>“Tush! put that paper into your pocket, and tell me
-what we are going to do. When I went on my reconnoitring
-expedition to Norway last year, my fourteen-foot<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-rod, my fly-book, and a change of clothes constituted all
-the cares of my life; and I contend, as you do, that no traveller
-whose object is information has any business with
-more. But we are going now more in the character of
-settlers: we are not going to explore, but to enjoy that
-which has been explored for us. Why should we not, therefore,
-take whatever may make life enjoyable?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only for fear we may be called upon to choose between
-leaving them behind or leaving our purpose unaccomplished,”
-said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think I have calculated my ambulances so
-badly? But come along. We must consult Fortnum and
-Mason first. I can explain all that on our road.</p>
-
-<p>“Considering how wild and uninhabited the greater part
-of the country is, both in Norway and Sweden,” the Parson
-resumed, as they crossed the pavement under Nelson’s pillar,
-“it is astonishing how easily you may travel, and how little
-impediment are your <i>impedimenta</i>. The posting regulations
-are admirable. On every road there are posting stations at
-convenient distances, and, by writing to these, the traveller
-may command, at stated prices, every horse and cart in the
-district.”</p>
-
-<p>“And at moderate prices?” said the Captain, whose
-means were not so abundant as to make him indifferent to
-expense.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not at moderate prices; for I do not call a penny
-an English mile a moderate price, and this is what you
-pay in Sweden; and in Norway it is not more than three-halfpence,
-except in favoured spots in the vicinity of towns,
-where they are permitted to charge three-fold. My plans,
-therefore, are these. We are not going to travel, but to
-visit certain fishing stations, most of which are at no great
-distance from the coast; let us take, therefore, everything
-that will make us comfortable at these different
-settlements. As long as we coast, we have always traders of
-some sort or other, and generally as nice and comfortable
-little steamers as you can desire. When our road lies along
-the fjords or lakes, boats are to be had from the post stations
-on the same terms as you get the carts, a rower reckoning<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-the same as a horse; and when we want to take to the
-land, we have but to order as many carts as will hold our
-traps.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how do we travel ourselves?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no carriage in the world so pleasant for fine
-weather as the cariole; and I propose that we each buy
-one. If we have to get them new, they do not cost above
-thirty specie-dalers—that is to say, about seven or eight
-pounds—with all their harness and fittings, in the very first
-style; and you may always sell them again at the end of
-your journey. That is the way the natives manage, and
-they are terrible gadabouts. You always find some jobber
-or other to take it off your hands. But the chances are that
-we shall meet with a choice of second-hand carioles to begin
-with. I gave twenty specie-dalers for mine last year, and
-sold it for fifteen. Drammen is the place for these things, up
-in Christiania fjord: it is the Long Acre of Norway.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of things are these carioles?—Gigs, I suppose,
-to carry two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not they—barely one: and no great room for baggage
-either. A Scandinavian is of your way of thinking, and does
-not trouble himself with spare shirts. One horse draws one
-man, and that is all. If your gig carries two, you are charged
-a horse and a half for it. In Sweden they have a sort of
-light spring waggon, drawn by three horses, which will take
-our followers admirably, with as much luggage as we like to
-stow; and by having the collars of the harness made open at
-the top, they will do for all the variety of horses we may
-meet with on our road. This is better than the Norwegian
-mode of engaging the farm carts; for in this, so much time
-is lost at every stage in restowing luggage, that it becomes a
-serious hindrance. However, in Norway we must do as the
-Norwegians do. The light waggon would make a very unpleasant
-conveyance down some of their mountain roads.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how do you manage crossing the fjords and lakes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Easily enough. Every ferry-boat will take a cariole; and
-as for coasting, a cariole ranks as a deck passenger—that is to
-say, about ten skillings for a sea mile, you paying for your
-own passage in the cabin about twenty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You travellers get so confoundedly technical. What
-the deuce do you mean by a sea mile and a skilling? And
-how am I to compare two things neither of which I know
-anything about?”</p>
-
-<p>“A regular traveller’s fault,” said the Parson. “There is
-not a book written that does not abound with these absurdities.
-Well, a skilling is a halfpenny in our money, and a sea
-mile is four of our miles, and a land mile eight, nearly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty liberal in their measures of length,” said the
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, they have plenty of it, and to spare; as you will
-find when you come to travel from one place to another.
-But their money is not plentiful, and they dole it out in very
-small denominations indeed.”</p>
-
-<p>“But here we are at Fortnum and Mason’s; and now for
-the stores.”</p>
-
-<p>“I observe, you always go to the most expensive places,”
-said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“That is because I cannot afford to go to the cheaper
-ones,” said the Parson. “On such an expedition as this, you
-should never take inferior stores. One hamper turning out
-bad when unpacked at the end of a thousand miles or so of
-carriage, will make more than the difference between the
-cheapest and the most expensive shop in London. But, to
-show you that I do study economy, I will resist the temptation
-of these preserved meats; and, let me tell you, it is a
-temptation, for up the country you will get nothing but what
-you catch, gather, or shoot. This, however, is a necessary,”
-pointing to some skins of portable soup; “there is not a
-handier thing for a traveller; it goes in the smallest compass
-of any sort of provisions; it is always useful on a pinch,
-and some chips of it carried in the waistcoat pocket on a
-pedestrian expedition, make a dinner, not exactly luxurious,
-but quite sufficient to do work upon. This we must lay in a
-good store of; in fact, if we have this, we need not be very
-anxious about anything else. Other things are luxuries:
-this is a necessary of life. Tea we must take: there is
-nothing more refreshing after a hard day’s work, and you
-cannot get it anywhere in the country. At least, what you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-do meet with is altogether <i>maris expers</i>, being a villanous
-composition of dried strawberry leaves and other home
-productions. Oil, too—we must take plenty of that; we shall
-want it for the frying-pan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have they no butter, then?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they have, and in great plenty too; of all varieties
-of quality, from very bad, down to indescribably beastly.
-They call it smör, pronouncing the dotted <i>o</i> like the French
-<i>eu</i>; and I can assure you their very best butter tastes just as
-the word sounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, I vote for some of these sardines, to take off
-the taste.”</p>
-
-<p>“With all my heart,” said the Parson; “they flavour
-anything, when they are not made of salted bleak, as they
-generally are—so does cayenne pepper. We may as well
-have some cocoa paste, and a Bologna sausage or two may
-prove a useful luxury.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you say to a cask of biscuits?” said the Captain.
-“What sort of bread have they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you recollect that old story told of Charles the
-Twelfth, when he said of the bread brought to him, that it
-was not good, but that it might be eaten? No one can tell
-the heroism of that speech who has not eaten the Swedish
-black bread, which is generally the only representative of
-the staff of life procurable. It is gritty, it is heavy, it is
-puddingy; if you throw it against a wall it will stick there—and
-as for sourness, O, ye gods! they purposely keep the
-leaven till it is uneatably sour, and then fancy it becomes
-wholesome.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I suppose it does,” said the Captain. “The Squire
-used to say, that everything that was good, is unwholesome
-or wrong; and I suppose the converse is true. But why not
-take the biscuits?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because we can get that which will answer our purpose
-perfectly when we arrive at the country, and that without
-the carriage, and at a much cheaper rate. There is not a
-seaport town in all the coast where you may not get what
-they call Kahyt Scorpor, a sort of coarse imitation of what
-nurses in England feed babies upon, under the name of tops<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-and bottoms. They are made of rye, and are as black as my
-hat; but they are very good eating, keep for ever, and are
-cheap enough in all conscience, being from four to six skillings
-to the pound, that is to say, threepence. In Norway
-they call them Rö Kovringer.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will take some rice, which very often comes in well
-by way of vegetables in a kettle of grouse soup; and a good
-quantity of chocolate, which packs easily, and furnishes a
-breakfast on the shortest possible notice. And this, I think,
-will do very well for the commissariat department of our
-expedition.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now for arms and ammunition,” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything we are likely to want in that department, we
-must take with us—guns, of course. Shot certainly may be
-got at Christiansand, and the other large towns; up the country,
-though, you will get neither that nor anything else: but
-powder can be got nowhere, at least, powder that does not
-give you an infinity of trouble in cleaning your gun, on account
-of the quantity of deposit it leaves. That little
-magazine of yours, with its block-tin canisters and brass
-screw-stoppers, will hold enough for us two, unless we meet
-with very good sport indeed, and in that case we must put
-up with the manufacture of the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“And for guns?” said the Captain. “I shall certainly take
-that little pea-rifle I brought from Canada. I want to bring
-down a bear.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall be more likely to get a crack at a seal, where
-we are going,” said the Parson. “Bears are not so plentiful
-in Norway as is generally supposed. People imagine that
-they run about in flocks like sheep; however, it is possible
-that there may be a bear-hunt while we are there. As for
-rifles, I own I am partial to our own English manufacture.
-Those little pea affairs are sensible things enough in their
-own country, where one wanders for weeks on end through
-interminable forests and desolate prairies on foot, and where
-a pound of lead more or less in your knapsack is a matter of
-consequence: but where we have means of transport, I see
-no great sense in them. A pea, no doubt, will kill, if it hits
-in the right place; but, like the old Duke, I have myself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-rather a partiality for the weighty bullet. However, each
-man to his fancy. The great merit of every gun, rifle, or
-pistol, lies behind the stock,—a truth that dandy sportsmen
-are apt to forget; a pea sent straight is better than a two-ounce
-ball beside the mark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Captain, laughing, “I think I can hold
-my little Yankee pretty straight; but we shall want shot-guns
-more than rifles. I may as well take that case I had
-from Westley Richards, if you do not think it too heavy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all; you can always leave the case behind,
-and take one gun in a waterproof cover when we go on
-light-armed expeditions. This will furnish us with a spare
-gun in case of accidents. I shall take my own old one,
-and a duck gun—which last will be common property,
-and I think with this we shall be pretty sufficiently armed.
-Pointers and setters are of no great use, unless it is a steady
-old stager, who will retrieve; for you must recollect there is
-no heath, and very little field shooting. The character of
-the country is cover, not very thick anywhere, and in many
-places interspersed with glades and openings. We shall do
-better with beaters: a water-dog, however, is indispensable.
-Lakes and rivers abound, and so do ducks, teal, and snipes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you thought about tents?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “I am not sure that tents are
-indispensable, and they certainly are not a little cumbersome.
-While we are fishing we can do very well without them: by
-the water-side we can never be without a cottage of some
-sort to put our heads under if it should come on bad weather,
-for every house in the whole country stands on the banks of
-some lake or river. I must say, though, when you get up
-into the fjeld after the grouse and the ducks, or, it may be,
-bigger game, it is another affair altogether. You may then
-go twenty or thirty miles on end without seeing a human
-habitation, unless you are lucky enough to meet with a säter,
-and you know what a highland bothy is, for dirt and vermin.
-But, even in the fjeld, I do not know that we should want
-tents; you can have no idea of the beauty of a northern
-summer’s night, and the very little need one has of any cover
-whatever. I remember, last year, standing on one of their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-barrows, smoking my pipe at the foot of an old stone cross,
-coeval, probably, with St. Olaf, and shadowing the tomb of
-some of his followers that Hakon the Jarl thinned off so
-savagely. It was deep midnight, and there was not a chill
-in the air, or dew enough on the whole headland to fill the
-cup of a Lys Alf. The full round moon was shining down
-upon me from the south, while a strong glowing twilight was
-still lighting up the whole northern sky, where the sun was
-but just hid under the horizon. The whole scene was as
-light as day, with the deep solemn stillness of midnight all
-the while. I could distinctly make out the distant fishing-boats;
-I could almost distinguish what the men were doing
-in them, through the bright and transparent atmosphere;
-but at the same time all was so still that I could hear the
-whistle of the wings, as flight after flight of wild-fowl shot
-over me in their course to seaward, though they were so
-high in the air that I could not distinguish the individual
-birds, only the faint outline of the wedge-like figure in which
-they were flying. I remember, that night, thinking how
-perfectly unnecessary a tent was, and determining not to
-bring one; and, that night at all events, I acted up to my
-conviction; for, when my pipe was out, I slept at the foot
-of the old cross till the sun warned me that the salmon were
-stirring.”</p>
-
-<p>“All very pleasant, no doubt,” said the Captain; “very
-enjoyable indeed: but does it never rain at night in this
-favoured land of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, it does not very often,” said the Parson;
-“at least, not in the summer-time. Besides, you cannot conceive
-how well the men tent themselves with pine-branches.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not quite like the idea,” said the Captain. “It is
-all very well to sleep out when anything is to be got by it;
-but, when there is nothing to be got by it but the rheumatism,
-to tell you the honest truth—unlucky, as the old
-women say it is—I rather prefer contemplating the moon
-through glass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I will tell you what we can do,” said the Parson,
-“and that will be a compromise. We can get some canvas
-made up into two lug sails. These will help us uncommonly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-in our passage over lakes and fjords, for their boats are
-seldom well provided in that respect; and when we get to
-our destination, lug sails—being square, or, to speak more
-accurately, parallelogrammatical—will make us very capital
-gipsy tents, with two pairs of cross-sticks and a ridge-pole,
-which we shall always be able to cut from the forest. I
-think we may indulge ourselves so far. As for waterproof
-jackets, trousers, boots, and so forth, I need not tell you
-about that: you have been out before, and know the value
-of these when you want to fish through a rainy day. We
-shall not have so dripping a climate here as we had in
-Ireland, certainly, but we shall have one use for our waterproof
-clothing which we had not there, and that is, when we
-bivouac, vulcanised India-rubber is as good a defence against
-the dew and the ground-damp as it is against the rain. A
-case of knife, fork, and spoon apiece is absolutely necessary,
-for they do not grow in the fjeld. A light axe or two, and
-a couple of hand-bills, a hammer and nails, which are just as
-likely to be wanted to repair our land-carriages as our boats.
-If you are at all particular in shaving—which, by-the-by,
-is not at all necessary—you may as well take a portable
-looking-glass. You will not find it so easy to shave in the
-reflection of a clear pool—a strait to which I was reduced
-when I was there last year. And now, I think, we have
-everything—that is to say, if you have taken care of the
-fishing-tackle, as you engaged to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not taken care of your material-book.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Parson; “but I have taken very good
-care of that myself. Fly-making may be a resource to
-fall back upon, if we meet with rainy weather, and my
-book is well replenished.”</p>
-
-<p>“Everything else,—rods, books, reels, gaffs, and so forth,—I
-have packed in the old black box which we had with us
-at Belleek, with spare line, and water-cord, and armed wire,
-and eel hooks, and, in fact, everything that we can possibly
-want; and a pretty heavy package it makes, I can assure you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “we may go to sleep now with a
-clear conscience. But so much depends upon a good start,
-that a little extra trouble, on the first day, will be found to
-save, in the end, a multiplicity of inconveniences.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE VOYAGE.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hurrah! hurrah! up she’s rising,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stamp and go, boys! up she’s rising,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Round with a will! and up she’s rising,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">Early in the morning.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">What shall us do with a lubberly sailor?—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What shall us do with a lubberly sailor?—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Put him in the long-boat and make him bale her,</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">Early in the morning.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Hurrah! hurrah! up she’s rising.”—</div>
- <div class="verse indent18">&amp;c. &amp;c. <i>ad infinitum</i>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Anchor Song.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Clear and joyous as ever a summer’s day came out of the
-heavens, was the 12th of June, 18—, when the good ship
-<i>Walrus</i>, with her steam up, her boats secured, and everything
-ready for sea, lay lazily at single anchor off Blackwall-stairs.
-The weather was as still and calm as weather might
-be. The mid-day sun, brilliant and healthful, imparted life
-and animation even to the black and unctuous waters, that
-all that morning had, in the full strength of the spring tide,
-been rushing past her sides. The breeze, light and fitful,
-just stirred the air, but was altogether powerless on the glazy
-surface of the stream, which sent back, as from a polished
-and unbroken mirror, the exact double of every mast, yard,
-and line of cordage, that reposed above it. The ships lay
-calm and still. The outward-bound had tided down with the
-first of the ebb, and were already out of sight, and the few
-sails that still hung festooned in their bunt and clew-lines,
-lay as motionless as the yards that held them. Like light
-and airy dragon-flies, just flitting on the surface, and apparently
-without touching it, the river steamers were darting
-from wharf to wharf; while ever and anon a great heavy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-sea-going vessel would grind her resistless way, defying wind
-and tide, and dashing the black wave against the oily-looking
-banks.</p>
-
-<p>Steamer after steamer passed, each steadily bent on her
-respective mission; and the day wore on—yet there lay the
-<i>Walrus</i>, though her sea-signalling blue Peter had hung from
-her fore-truck ever since day-light, and the struggling and
-impatient steam would continually burst in startling blasts
-from her safety-valves. The tide was slackening fast; the
-chain cable, that all that forenoon had stretched out taut and
-tense from her bows, like a bar of iron, now hung up and
-down from her hawsehole, while the straws and shavings and
-floating refuse of the great capital began to cling round her
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a great honour, no doubt, to carry an ambassador,
-with Heaven knows how many stars of every degree of
-Russian magnitude in his train,” said the Parson, who, seated
-on the taffrail, with his legs dangling over the water, had
-been watching the turning tide, and grumbling, as ship after
-ship in the lower reaches began to swing at her anchors,
-while three or four of the more energetic craft were already
-setting their almost useless sails, and yo-ho-ing at their
-anchors, preparatory to tiding up; “it is a very great
-honour, and I hope we are all duly sensible of it; but, like
-most great honours, it is a very particular nuisance. These
-Russian representatives of an autocrat majesty must fancy
-they can rule the waves, when all the world knows it is only
-Britannia that can do that. They have let the whole of
-this lovely tide pass by—(the Parson cast his eyes on the
-greasy water)—and fancy, I suppose, that daddy Neptune is
-bound to supply them with a new one whenever they please
-to be ready for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mate!” said the Captain, as a smart sailor-like
-looking fellow fidgeted across the quarter-deck, with an irregular
-step and an anxious countenance; “is this what you
-call sailing at ten a.m. precisely? Most of us would have
-liked another forenoon on shore, but your skipper was so
-confounded peremptory; and this is what comes of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is one to do, sir?” said the Mate, who seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-fully to participate in the Captain’s grievance. “These
-Russians have taken up all the private cabins for their own
-particular use, and occupy half the berths in the main and
-fore-cabins besides—we cannot help waiting for them. They
-have pretty well chartered the ship themselves—what can
-we do? But,” continued he, after a pause, during which he
-had been looking over the side, as the steamer now began
-evidently to swing in her turn, “I wish we had gone down
-with the morning’s tide.”</p>
-
-<p>“We should have been at the mouth of the river by
-this time,” said the Captain, “if we had started when we
-ought.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Mate, “and we should now be crossing
-the dangerous shoals, with fair daylight and a rising tide
-before us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, surely you are not afraid,” said the Parson; “that
-track is as well beaten as the turnpike road.”</p>
-
-<p>The Mate shrugged his shoulders, and stepped forward,
-giving some unnecessary orders in a tone unnecessarily sharp
-and angry.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Birger, what news? Do you see anything of
-them?”</p>
-
-<p>The individual addressed was a smart, active, little man,
-with a quick grey eye, and a lively, pleasant, good-humoured
-countenance, who was coming aft from the bridge of the
-steamer, on which he had been seated all the forenoon,
-sketching, right and left of him groups of shipping on the
-water and groups of idlers on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything of whom?” said he. “Oh! the Russians.
-No, I don’t know. I suppose they will come some time or
-other; it does not signify—it is all in the day’s work. Look
-here,”—and he opened his portfolio, and displayed, in wild
-confusion all over his paper, the domes of Woolwich, the
-houses of Blackwall, the forests of masts and yards in the
-Pool, two or three picturesque groups of vessels, a foreign
-steamer or two, landing her weary and travel-soiled passengers
-at the Custom-house—and, over leaf, and in the background
-as it were, slight exaggerations of the ungainly attitudes
-in which his two friends were then sprawling. “If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-you had found something as pleasant as this grumbling to
-fill up your time with, you would not be wasting your eyes
-and spoiling your temper in looking for the Russians. They
-are going back to their own country, poor devils! no wonder
-they are slow about it. Did you ever see a boy going to
-school?”</p>
-
-<p>“Birger is not over-fond of the Russians,” said the
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Few Swedes are,” said Birger; “remember Finland and
-Pomerania.”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides, it is not over-pleasant to have a great White
-Bear sitting perpetually at one’s gate, always ready to
-snap up any of one’s little belongings that may come in
-its way. The Russian fleet is getting formidable, and
-Revel and Kronstadt are not very far from the mouth of
-the Mälar.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know anything about that,” said Birger, gallantly;
-“we are the sons of the men who, under Gustaf,
-taught that fleet a lesson.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are a gallant set of fellows,” said the Parson; “and
-Sweden would be a precious hard nut to crack. But your
-long-armed friends over the water know the value of a ring
-fence, and would dearly like a seaboard. Only fancy that
-overpowering country, which is now kept in order by the
-rest of Europe, only because, just at present, it lies at the
-back of creation, and cannot get out of the Baltic, Black, and
-White Seas, to do harm to any one,—only fancy that pleasant
-land, with its present unlimited resources, and Gothenborg
-for its Portsmouth, and Christiania, and Frederiksvärn
-and Christiansand for its outports—a pleasant vision, is
-it not, Mr. Guardsman? Don’t you think it probable that
-something of this sort has soothed the slumbers of the White
-Bear we were speaking of, before this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever hear of Charles the Twelfth? He taught
-that White Bear to dance.”</p>
-
-<p>“He taught that White Bear to fight,” said the Captain,
-“and an apt scholar he found him. There was more lost
-at Pultava than Charles’s gallant army.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There are men in Sweden yet,” said Birger, slightly
-paraphrasing the legend of “Holger.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are,” said the Parson; “and if you could only
-agree among yourselves, you might have hopes of muzzling
-the White Bear yet. Another union of Calmar?”</p>
-
-<p>“O, hang the union of Calmar; there is no more
-honesty in a Dane or a Norseman than there is in a Russ.
-We are not going to have another Bloodbath at Stockholm.
-My mother is a Lejonhöved,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and I am not likely
-to forget that day.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should have thought you more nearly connected with
-the Svinhöved family,” said the Parson; “but depend upon
-it, unless you men of the north can make up your quarrels,
-the White Bear will chop you up in detail, and us after
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger, who, in some incomprehensible way, traced his
-descent from the founder of Stockholm, the great and terrible
-Earl Birger, was a smart young subaltern in the Royal
-Guards, and though his present dress—a modest and unpretending
-blouse—was anything but military, his well-set-up
-figure, firm step, and jaunty little forage cap stuck on one
-side of his head, sufficiently revealed his profession. From
-his earliest youth he had discovered a decided talent for
-drawing, and in accordance with a most praiseworthy custom
-in the Swedish service, he had been travelling for the last
-twelvemonth at the expense of the Government, and was
-now returning to the “Kongs Ofver Commandant’s Expedition,”
-with a portfolio filled with valuable sketches, and a
-mind no less well stored with military knowledge, which he
-had collected from every nation in Europe. The Captain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-had fallen in with him at the Swedish ambassador’s, and,
-being himself something of an artist, had struck up on the
-spot a sort of professional friendship with him. The pleasant
-little subaltern was thus, from that time forward, enrolled
-among their party; and though their acquaintance was not
-yet of twenty-four hours’ standing, was at that moment
-talking and chatting with all the familiarity of old and tried
-friendship.</p>
-
-<p>“Here come those precious rascals at last,” said he,
-breaking off the conversation, as a train of at least half-a-dozen
-carriages rattled down to the landing-place, and counts,
-countesses, tutors, barons, children, dogs, governesses, portmanteaus,
-bags, boxes, and trunks were tumbled out indiscriminately
-on the landing-place. “Heaven and earth! if
-they have not <i>impedimenta</i> enough for an army! and this is
-only their light marching baggage either. All their heavy
-articles came on board yesterday, and are stowed under
-hatches. I’ll be bound we draw an additional foot of water
-for them. Hang the fellows! they are as bad as Junot, they
-are carrying off the plunder of half the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like the Swedes under Oxenstjerna,” said the Parson;
-“but what need you care for that? The plunder—if it is
-plunder—comes from England, not Sweden.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will lumber up the whole cabin, whether it comes
-from the one or the other,” said Birger; “we shall not have
-room to swing a cat.”</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t want to swing a cat,” said the Parson; “that
-is a Russian amusement rather than an English or a Swedish
-one, if all tales be true; and you may depend upon it we shall
-fare all the better for their presence: our skipper could never
-think of setting anything short of turtle and venison before
-such very magnificent three-tailed bashaws.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Birger, “they are going to Petersburgh, too,
-where the chances are, the bashaws will find some good opportunity
-of squaring accounts with the skipper for any ill-treatment,
-before the steamer is permitted to sail.”</p>
-
-<p>All the while this conversation was going on, the illustrious
-passengers were rapidly accomplishing the short
-passage from the shore to the steamer, a whole flotilla of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-boats being employed in the service, while the hurried
-click of the pauls, and the quick revolutions of the windlass,
-as the chain-cable was hove short, showed that in the Captain’s
-opinion, as well as that of the Mate, quite time enough
-had been wasted already.</p>
-
-<p>But the golden opportunity had been lost. English tides
-respect no man, not even Russian ambassadors, and old
-Father Thames was yet to read them a lesson on the text—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">If you will not, when you may,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When you will, you shall have Nay.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">While the vessel was riding to the ebb tide, as she had done
-all the morning, a warp which had been laid out from her port
-quarter would have canted her head well into the stream;
-and the tide, acting on her starboard bow while the after-part
-was in comparatively still water, would have winded
-her downwards, almost before her paddles were in motion, or
-her rudder could be brought to act. But the turn of the
-tide had reversed all this. The vessel had indeed swung to
-the flood, which by this time was rattling up at the rate of
-five or six miles an hour, and thus her bowsprit was looking
-the way she wanted to go; but a strong eddy was now bubbling
-up under her starboard bow, and pressing it towards
-the left bank, while a great lumbering Indiaman lay just
-ahead of her, and a Hamburgh steamer, which had anchored
-a little higher up on her starboard quarter, forbade all
-reversing of the engine and thus getting out of the mess
-stern foremost.</p>
-
-<p>The moment the anchor broke ground the helm was put
-hard a-port, and the paddles were set in motion; but though
-from the tide alone the rudder had some effect, the
-strength of the eddy was too much for her; round came
-her head to port, as if she were going to take a leap at the
-embankment.</p>
-
-<p>“Hard a-port!—hard a-starboard!—ease her!—stop her!—turn
-her a-head!” were the contradictory orders bawled out
-almost simultaneously. If noise and shouting could have got
-the steamer out of the scrape, there was no lack of it; but
-all these cries, energetic as they were, produced no effect
-whatever, beyond exciting a little suspicion in the mind of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-our travellers (some of whom having been at sea before,
-knew the stem of a ship from the stern) that the skipper was
-not altogether a “deacon in his craft;” and thus giving a point
-to the Mate’s silent but expressive shrug when the Parson
-had alluded to the shoals at the river’s mouth. At last, an
-indescribable sensation of grating, and a simultaneous volley
-of heterogeneous oaths, such as sailors shot their guns with
-on grand occasions, announced the fact that she had taken the
-ground abaft.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, as it turned out, was about the best thing
-that could have happened, for it gave the skipper time to
-collect his senses; or, what was more to the purpose, gave
-the Mate time to whisper in his ear; and the rising tide was
-sure to float her again in ten minutes. By this time a warp
-had been got out to a ship anchored upon the Surrey side,
-an expedient which any sailor would have thought of before
-tripping his anchor in the first instance. The end of it was
-passed round the windlass and hove taut, and as the rising
-water slowly lifted the unlucky vessel from her sludgy bed
-and a few turns brought a strain upon her, she gradually
-slewed her head outwards. The steam was turned on, the
-paddles went round; the black water began to fizz under her
-counter, as if a million of bottles of stout had been poured
-into it—she was at last a-weigh and fairly on her course, only
-about six hours after her proper time.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you what,” said the Parson, as he dived down the
-companion to inspect the submarine arrangements of the
-cabin, “I leave this vessel at Christiansand, and I wish we
-were fairly out of her. This fellow knows no more of sea-craft
-than a tailor. Kind Providence shield us, or we shall
-come to grief yet!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE SHIPWASH SAND.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent26">“Our ship,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which but three glasses since we gave out split,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is tight and yare and bravely rigged, as when</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We first put out to sea.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Tempest.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One by one the travellers crept down to the cabin. It was
-as uncomfortable as cabins usually are, perhaps more so, as
-being more lumbered and more crowded; and the ordinary
-space for locomotion had been miserably curtailed by a large
-supplementary table, which the steward was lashing athwart
-ship for the dinner accommodation of the supernumerary
-passengers. These were standing about here and there, as
-helpless and uncomfortable as people always are on first
-starting, and were regarding one another with looks of suspicion
-and distrust, as people who start by a public conveyance
-always do regard one another.</p>
-
-<p>In this the English part of the community was prominently
-conspicuous. Denizens of a free land, it would seem as if
-they considered it as their bounden duty to be continually exhibiting
-their Magna Charta in the eyes of foreigners, and
-to maintain their just rights to the very death against all
-comers.</p>
-
-<p>No rights, however, were invaded—there was no opportunity
-of asserting the Magna Charta; all were equally shy
-and equally miserable; till, by degrees, as the steamer crept
-slowly down the river against the tide, they shook into their
-places, and the ladies began to smile, and the ladies’ maids to
-look gracious.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson was an old stager. Knowing full well the
-value of light and air in the present crowded state of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-cabin, he had very willingly assented to the apologetic invitation
-of the steward, and had established himself comfortably
-enough on the transom itself, upon which was spread for his
-accommodation a horsehair mattress. There was no great
-deal to spare in the height of his domicile, for it was as much
-as he could conveniently manage to sit upright in it; but
-it was, at all events, retired, airy, and not subject to be suddenly
-evacuated by its occupant under the overpowering
-influence of a lee lurch or a weather roll.</p>
-
-<p>Totally disregarding the bustle and confusion in the cabin
-below him, he was occupied in arranging and beautifying his
-temporary home. The sill of one window formed his travelling
-library, the books of which he had been unpacking from
-his stores, and securing by a piece of spun yarn from the
-disagreeable consequences of any sudden send of the ship in
-a rolling sea. The next formed his toilet-table and workshop,
-exhibiting his reels and fly-books, and the huge and well-known
-“material book,” the replenishing of which had occupied
-so much of his attention. The third was left empty, so
-as to be opened and shut at pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Stretched on his mattress, with a guide-book in his hand,
-and the map of Norway and Sweden at his side, he looked
-from his high abode on the turmoil of the cabin deck,
-with all the calmness and complacency with which the gods of
-the Epicureans are said to regard the troubles and distresses
-of mortals below.</p>
-
-<p>And thus wore on the day. Dinner, tea, had been discussed—some
-little portion of constraint and shyness had
-been rubbed off—small knots of men were formed here and
-there, discussing nothings and making conversation. Night
-sank down upon the steamer as she ploughed her way across
-the Nore, and the last of the talkers rolled himself up in his
-bedclothes, and tried, though for a long while in vain, to
-accustom himself to public sleeping.</p>
-
-<p>It was still dark—for the time was hardly three in the
-morning—when the Parson—who, accustomed to all the
-vicissitudes of travel, had been making the most of the
-hours of darkness, and had been for some time fast asleep—was
-suddenly startled from his dreams by a furious concussion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-on the rudder-case against which his head was
-pillowed. The vessel became stationary, and the fresh
-breezey hissing of the water in her wake and the tremulous
-motion everywhere suddenly ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“By George, she’s hard and fast!” said the Captain; who,
-taking hint from the comfortable appearance which the
-Parson had given to his own berth, had occupied the same
-position on the starboard side, and was now invading the
-Parson’s territories from abaft the rudder-case.</p>
-
-<p>“What the devil is to be done now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at all,” said the Parson; “it is no business of
-ours; and I am sure it is not time to get up yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but she has certainly struck on a sand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that as well as you,” said the Parson; “but you
-can’t get her off. Besides, there is not a bit of danger yet,
-at all events, for the sea is as smooth as a mill-pond. There
-they go, reversing their engine: much good that will do.
-If there was any truth in that bump I felt, she is much too
-fast aground for that. And the tide falling too!”—he continued,
-striking a lucifer and looking at his watch. “Yes, it
-is falling now, it has turned this hour or more.”</p>
-
-<p>By this time the hurried trampling and stamping on deck
-had roused up the passengers, few of whom could comprehend
-what had happened, for there was no appearance of
-danger, and the ship was as steady and firm as a house.
-But there is nothing more startling or suggestive of alarm
-than that rushing to and fro of men, so close to the ear,
-which sounds to the uninitiated as if the very decks were
-breaking up.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it houraccan storrm?” shouted Professor Rosenschall,
-a fat greasy-looking Dane, whom Birger had been hoaxing
-and tormenting all the day before, partly for fun, and
-partly because he considered it the bounden duty of a
-true Swede to plague a Dane—paying off the Bloodbath by
-instalments.</p>
-
-<p>“Steward!” shouted the Professor, above all the din and
-confusion of the cabin, “Steward, vinden er stærkere? is it
-houraccan storrm?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Professor, I am sorry to say it is,” said Birger, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-had rolled himself up in a couple of blankets under the
-table, upon which was reposing the weight of the Professor’s
-learning. “It is what we call an Irish hurricane—all up
-and down.”</p>
-
-<p>“All up! O what will become of me—and down! O,
-my poor wife. Hvilken skrækelig storrm,” he screamed out,
-as half-a-dozen men clapped on to the tackle falls over his
-head, with the very innocent purpose of lowering the quarter-boat,
-and began clattering and dashing down the coils of rope
-upon the deck. “Troer de at der er fore paa Færde?—do
-you think there is any danger?”</p>
-
-<p>What with the Professor’s shouting, and what with the real
-uncertainty of the case, and the natural desire that every one,
-even the most helpless, has to see their peril and to do something
-for themselves, every passenger was by this time astir,
-and the whole cabin was buzzing like a swarm of bees.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson’s idea of sleeping was altogether out of the
-question; and, the Captain having gone on deck, he very
-soon followed him; for, notwithstanding his assumed coolness,
-he was by no means so easy in his mind as he would
-have his friends to understand. He had been at sea before
-this, and was, at least, as well aware as they, that grounding
-out of sight of land, is a very different thing from grounding
-in the Thames.</p>
-
-<p>The scene on deck was desolate enough. The steamer had
-struck on the Shipwash, a dangerous shoal on the Essex
-coast, distant about twenty miles from land; and a single
-glance was sufficient to tell that there was not a chance of
-getting her off for the next twelve hours, though the Skipper
-was persisting in trying a variety of absurd expedients.
-The crew were looking anxious—the passengers were looking
-frightened; while the Skipper himself, who ought to have
-been keeping up every one’s spirits, was looking more
-wretched and more frightened than any one.</p>
-
-<p>The day was just breaking, but a fog was coming on, and
-the wind showed every symptom of freshening. The vessel,
-indeed, had begun to bump, but the tide leaving her, that
-motion left her also, and she began now to lie over on her
-bilge. From some unfortunate list she had got in her stowing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-(Birger declared it was the weight of the ambassador’s
-despatch boxes), she fell over to windward instead of to
-leeward, thus leaving her decks perfectly exposed to the run
-of the sea, if the wind should freshen seriously.</p>
-
-<p>When the Parson came on deck, the boats had just returned
-from sounding. The Skipper had, indeed, endeavoured
-to lay out an anchor with them—an object in which
-he might possibly have succeeded, had he tried it at first and
-before there was any great rush of tide, for the steamer had
-struck at the very turn of the flood; but he had wasted his
-time in reversing his engines and in backing and taking in
-sails which there was no wind to fill; and thus, before he
-had got his anchor lashed to the boat, which, like all passage
-steamers’ boats, was utterly inadequate for the work, the
-stream was strong enough to swamp boat, anchor, and all,
-and it was fortunate indeed that no lives were lost.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared from the soundings that the ship had not
-struck on the main shoal, but on a sort of spit or ridge, the
-neck of a submarine peninsula projecting from the S.W.
-corner of it. Almost under her bows was a deep turnhole
-or bay in the sand about two cables across, communicating
-with the open water, beyond which, right athwart her hawse,
-lay the main body of the shoal, so that the beacon which
-marked its northern extremity, and which was now beginning
-to show in the increasing light of the morning, lay broad on
-her port bow, while the other end of the shoal was well on
-her starboard beam; at half a cable length astern, and on her
-port quarter and beam was the deep water with which the
-turnhole communicated,—this being, in fact, the channel she
-ought to have kept.</p>
-
-<p>It was perfectly evident that nothing could be done till
-the top of the next tide, and whether anything could be done
-then was extremely problematical with the wind rising and
-the sea getting up; experience having already shown that
-there was not a boat in the steamer fit for laying out an
-anchor.</p>
-
-<p>However, for the present the water was smooth enough;
-they were for the time perfectly safe and comfortable, lying,
-as they did, under the lee of the shoal, patches of which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-were now beginning to show just awash; while the seas
-were breaking heavily enough certainly, but a full half-mile
-to windward of them. The passengers, seeing nothing to
-alarm them, and feeling their appetites well sharpened by
-their early rising, began to lose their fears and to be clamorous
-for breakfast; and the meal was served with a promptness
-which, under the circumstances, was perfectly astonishing.</p>
-
-<p>Those who know nothing fear nothing, and the jokes which
-were flying about and the general hilarity which pervaded the
-whole meeting, conveyed anything rather than the idea of
-shipwrecked mariners; though, truth to say, this feeling did
-not seem to be fully participated in by the Skipper, who presided
-at what might very fairly be called the head of the table,
-for it was many feet higher than the foot; he looked all the
-while as if he was seated on a cushion stuffed with bramble
-bushes.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, by way, he said, of utilising his moments, was
-preparing for fishing—calculating, and rightly too, that the
-whiting would congregate under the lee of the stranded ship.</p>
-
-<p>He had made his preparations with characteristic attention
-to his own comfort and convenience. The dingy, which was
-hanging at the stern davits, formed at once his seat and his
-fishing-basket; and as he had eased off as much of the lee
-tackle fall as brought the boat to an even keel, the taffrail
-itself afforded him a shelter from the wind, which was now
-getting high enough to be unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p>There he sat, hour after hour, busily and very profitably
-employed, heeding the gradual advance and strengthening of
-the tide only so far as its increasing current required the use
-of heavier leads.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and Birger had been trying to walk the
-sloping deck, a pursuit of pedestrianism under difficulties,
-for it was very much as if they had been trying to walk
-along the roof of a house. Time hangs heavily on the hands
-of those who have nothing to do, and there was nothing to
-do by the most active of sailors beyond hoisting the ensign
-union downwards, and that might just as well have been left
-undone too, for all the notice that was taken of it. Ship
-after ship passed by—the foreign traders to windward, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-English through the shorter but more dangerous channel that
-lay between them and the main land. Many of them were
-quite near enough for anxious passengers to make out the
-people in them reconnoitring the position of the unfortunate
-<i>Walrus</i> through their telescopes. But if they did look
-on her, certainly they passed by on the other side; it never
-seemed to enter into the heads of one of them to afford assistance.</p>
-
-<p>“Pleasant,” said Birger, “very. Is this the way your
-sailors help one another in distress?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid so,” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Gayer insects fluttering by</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ne’er droop the wing o’er those that die;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And English tars have pity shown</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For every failure but their own.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“You do not mean to say that they will not help us if
-there really is danger?” said the Swede.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I hope there will not be any real danger;
-for if you expect any help from them, I can tell you
-that you will not get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not get it!” said Birger, who did not at all seem to
-relish the prospect before him.</p>
-
-<p>“That you will not. Sink or swim, we sink or swim
-by our own exertions. Those scoundrels could not help
-us without losing a whole tide up the river, a whole
-day’s pay of the men, and so much per cent. on the cargo,
-besides the chance of being forestalled in the market: do
-you think they would do that to save the lives of half-a-hundred
-such as you and me? Why, you have not learned
-your interest tables; you do not seem to understand how
-much twenty per cent. in a year comes to for a day. A
-precious deal more than our lives are worth, I can tell
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger looked graver still; drowning for a soldier was
-not a professional death, and he did not relish the idea
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain continued his words of comfort. “I was
-very nearly losing a brother this way myself,” he said. “He
-was invalided from the coast of Africa, and had taken his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-passage home in a merchant vessel. They had met with a
-gale of wind off the Scillies; the ship had sprung a leak, and
-when the gale had subsided to a gentle easterly breeze dead
-against them, there were they within twenty miles of the
-Longships, water-logged, with all their boats stove, and their
-bulwarks gone. Timber ships do not sink very readily, and
-incessant pumping had kept them afloat, but it was touch
-and go with that—their decks awash, and the seas rolling in
-at one side and out at the other. While they were in this
-state, the whole outward-bound fleet of English ships passed
-them, some almost within hailing distance, and all without
-taking more notice of them than those scoundrels are taking
-of us. They would, all hands, have gone to the bottom
-together, in the very midst of their countrymen, if a French
-brig had not picked them off and carried them into Falmouth.
-It was so near a thing, that the vessel sank almost before
-the last boat had shoved off from her side.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “if there is a selfish brute upon
-earth, it is an English sailor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Natural enough that you should say so, just at present,”
-said the Captain; “though, as a Swede, you might have recollected
-the superstition that prevails in your own country
-against helping a drowning man. But the fact is, the fault
-lies not so much with the sailors as with the insurance regulations
-at Lloyds’. Likely enough, every one of these fellows
-has a desire to help us; but if they go one cable’s length
-from their course to do so, or if they stay one half-hour by
-us when they might have been making their way to their
-port, they vitiate their insurance. Man is a selfish animal,
-no doubt—sea-going man as well as shore-going man—and it
-is very possible that some of them would rather see their
-neighbours perish than lose the first of the market; but laws
-such as these render selfishness imperatively necessary to
-self-preservation, and banish humanity from the maritime
-code.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish all Lloyds’ were on the Shipwash,” said Birger,
-“and had to wait there till I picked them off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Captain; “or that the House of Commons
-were compelled to take a winter’s voyage every year<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-in some of these company’s vessels. I think, then, they
-might possibly find out the advantage of certain laws and
-certain officers to see them put in force, in order to prevent
-their going to sea so wretchedly found. There is nothing
-like personal experience for these legislators. This vessel
-has not a boat bigger than a cockle-shell belonging to her.
-Did you not hear how nearly the Mate was lost last night,—and
-he is the only real sailor in the ship—when they were
-trying to lay out an anchor—a manœuvre which, I see, they
-have not accomplished yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo! this is serious,” said Birger, as a heavy sea struck
-the weather paddle-box, and broke over them in spray: for
-the tide had been gradually rising, without, as yet, raising
-the ship; and, as she lay over to windward, the seas that now
-began to break upon her starboard bow and side, deluged her
-from stem to stern.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my soul,” said the Captain, “I don’t like this,
-myself; and there sits the Parson, fishing away, as quietly as
-if he were on the pier at Boveysand. By Jove, Nero fiddling
-while Rome was burning, is a fool to him! Why, Parson,
-don’t you think there is some danger in all this?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Er det noget Færde?’ as your friend the professor
-would say,” said the Parson, laughing. “I do not think it
-improbable that the <i>Walrus</i> will leave her bones here, if you
-mean that.—Stop, I’ve got another bite!”</p>
-
-<p>“Confound your bite! If she leaves her bones here, we
-shall leave ours too; for she has not boats for the fourth of
-us, the devil take them! and as for expecting help from
-these rascally colliers——”</p>
-
-<p>“You may just as well fiddle to the dolphins,” said the
-Parson. “I know that; but do you see that little cutter,—that
-fellow, I mean, on our quarter, that has just tacked?
-and there beyond her is another, that is now letting fly her
-jib-sheet. I have been watching those fellows all the morning,
-beating out from Harwich. They are having a race, and
-a beautiful race they make of it: you cannot tell yet which
-has the best of it. If those cutters were going over to the
-Dutch coast, you may depend upon it they would not make
-such short boards. There—look—the leading one is in stays<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-again. Those fellows are racing for us, and with our ensign
-Union down, as we have it, we shall make a pretty good
-prize for the one that gets first to us. Those two are pilot-boats.
-You may depend upon it, we are not going to lay
-our bones here, whatever comes of the <i>Walrus</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson’s anticipations were realised sooner than he
-expected, for a long low life-boat, that nobody had seen till
-she was close alongside, came up, carrying off the prize from
-both competitors—and preparations were begun, which
-ought to have been completed hours before, for laying out
-an anchor.</p>
-
-<p>Before long, the cutters also had worked up and anchored
-on the lee edge of the shoal, to the great relief of every one
-on board; for the seas were by this time making such a
-breach over her, that no one could be ignorant of the
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, and without preparation, she righted, throwing
-half the passengers off their legs, and very nearly precipitating
-the Parson into the sea; who took that as a hint to
-leave his seat in the dingy. Soon afterwards she began to
-bump, first lightly, and then more heavily, and the paddles
-were set in motion. The windlass was manned and worked;
-but the shifting sand afforded no good holding-ground for
-the anchor, which had not been backed—nor, indeed, had
-any precautions been taken whatever—and as soon as there
-was any strain upon it, it came home and was perfectly
-useless.</p>
-
-<p>The ship now was hanging a little abaft the chess-tree, on
-the very top of the spit; but the stern was free, and the
-bows were actually in the deep water of the turnhole, while
-at every bump she gained an inch or two: just then, the
-anchor coming home, and the tide taking her under the port
-bow, she ran up in the wind, and pointed for the very centre
-of the shoal.</p>
-
-<p>“Why the devil don’t you set your jib?” bellowed out
-the Captain, who had begun to get excited. “Where the
-deuce is that know-nothing Skipper of yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my soul, sir, I do not know,” said the Mate, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-was standing at the wheel, and was looking very anxiously
-forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why don’t you go forward and set it yourself? We
-shall be on the main shoal in two minutes, if she floats.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it, sir,” said the Mate; “but I dare not leave
-my post. We shall all have to answer for this; and if I am
-not where the Skipper has placed me, he will throw the
-blame upon me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, by George, I don’t care <i>that</i> for your Skipper.
-Come along, boys, we’ll run up the jib ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>And away he rushed, pushing and shouldering his way
-along the crowded decks, among idlers, and horses, and carriages,
-followed by his own party, and a good many of the
-foreigners also; till he emerged on the forecastle, when,
-throwing down the jib and fore-staysail hallyards from the
-bitts and clattering them on the deck, while the Parson
-went forward to see all clear, he called out to the Russian
-servants, who, wet and frightened, were cowering under the
-carriages—</p>
-
-<p>“Here, you slaveys, come out of that—<i>clappez-vous sur
-ceci</i>—clap on here, you rascals—<i>rousez-vous dehors de ces
-bulwarks</i>. What the devil is Greek for ‘skulking?’”</p>
-
-<p>Whether the Russians understood one word of the Captain’s
-French, or whether they would have understood one word
-of it had they been Frenchmen, may be doubted; but his
-actions were significant enough; and the men, who only
-wanted to be told what to do, clapped on to the jib and fore-staysail
-hallyards as well and as eagerly as if they had known
-what was to be done with them; here and there, too, was
-seen a blue-jacket, for the seamen had no wish to skulk, if
-there had been any one to command them.</p>
-
-<p>“Gib mig ropes enden!” shouted Professor Rosenschall, who
-had caught the enthusiasm, and was panting after them,
-though a long way astern.</p>
-
-<p>“Birger will do that for you,” said the Parson, laughing,
-but without pausing for one moment from his work—“Birger!
-the Professor wants a rope’s-end.”</p>
-
-<p>“Vær saa artig!” said Birger, tendering him the signal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-hallyards, the bight of which he had hitched round a spare
-capstan-bar on which he was standing. For Birger, like most
-Swedish soldiers, had passed a twelvemonth in a midshipman’s
-berth, where, whatever seamanship he had picked up,
-he had, at all events, learned plenty of mischief.</p>
-
-<p>“Away with you!” roared the Captain. “Up with the
-sails—both of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Skynda! Professor, Skynda!” echoed Birger, leaping off
-the capstan-bar as he spoke, and thus causing the Professor
-to pitch headlong among the trampling men.</p>
-
-<p>“Up with it! up with it, cheerily! look there, she pays
-off already!” as the two sails flew out; the jib, which was
-not confined by any stay, bagging away to leeward and hanging
-there, but still drawing and doing good service. “Up
-with it, boys—round she comes, like a top! Hurrah, that’s
-elegant!” as a sea struck her full on the quarter, which, by
-her paying off, had now become exposed to it. On it came,
-breaking over the taffrail and deluging the idlers on the
-poop, but at the same time giving her the final shove off the
-ridge. “Off she goes! Shout, boys, shout! and wake up
-that Skipper, wherever he is!”</p>
-
-<p>And amid the most discordant yells that ever proceeded
-from heterogeneous voices—Danish, Dutch, Swedish, German,
-and Russ, above which, distinct and ringing, rose the
-heart-stirring English cheer—the steamer, once more under
-command of her rudder, buzzed, and dashed her way into the
-open sea.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE LANDFALL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Bewilderedly gazes</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On the wild sea, the eagle</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When he reaches the strand:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So is it with the man;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In the crowd he standeth</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And hath but few friends there.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Nothing gives one so lively an idea of eternal, irresistible
-progress—of steady, inexorable, unalterable fate, as the
-ceaseless grinding of these enormous engines.” Thus moralised
-Birger, as, two days after the events recorded in the last
-chapter, he stood with his brother officer, the Captain, on the
-grating that gave air into the engine-room. “In joy or in
-sorrow, in hope or in fear, on they go—grinding—grinding,
-never stopping, never varying, never hurrying themselves:—the
-same quiet, irresistible round over and over again: we
-go to bed—we leave them grinding; we get up—there they
-are, grinding still; we are full of hope, and joy, and expectancy,
-looking out for land and its pleasures—they go no
-faster; they would go no faster if we went to grief and
-misery. If you or I were to fall dead at this moment, the
-whole ship would be in an uproar, every man of them all
-showing his interest, or his curiosity, one way or other—but
-still would go on, through it all, that eternal, everlasting
-grinding.”</p>
-
-<p>“Everlasting it is,” said the Captain, who was not at all
-poetical, and who was anxious to be at his journey’s end.
-“This steamer is the very slowest top I have ever had the
-misfortune to sail in. By every calculation we should have
-made the coast of Norway ages ago; I have been on the look<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-out for it ever since daylight; but six, seven, eight, nine, and
-no coast yet. Breakfast over, and here are your everlasting
-wheels of fate grinding away, and not one bit nearer land, as
-far as I can see, than they were before. I’ll be hanged if the
-wind is not getting northerly too,” he said, looking up, as the
-fore and aft foresail over their head gave a flap, as if it would
-shake the canvas out of the bolt-ropes. “I thought so.
-Look at them brailing up the mainsail! wind and steam
-together, we never got seven knots out of this tub; I wonder
-what we shall get now—and the sea getting up too?”</p>
-
-<p>Several consecutive pitches, which set the horses kicking,
-and prostrated one-half of the miserable, worn-out, dirty-looking
-deck passengers, seemed fully to warrant the Captain’s
-grumbling assertion, and they scrambled back to the poop;
-upon which most of the passengers were by this time congregated,
-for the sun was shining out brightly, and the wind,
-though there was plenty of it, was fresh and bracing.</p>
-
-<p>They had evidently by this time opened the north of
-Scotland, for the slow, heaving swell of the Northern Ocean
-was rolling in upon them; and this, meeting the windwash
-knocked up by the last night’s south-easterly breeze, was
-making a terrible commotion in the ship, and everything and
-everybody belonging to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Land! land!” shouted the Parson, who had climbed upon
-the weather bulwarks, and was holding on by the vang to
-steady his footing. “Land, I see it now; where could our
-eyes have been? There it is, like blue clouds rising out of
-the water.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a general move and a general crowding towards
-the spot to which he was pointing, but just then the ship
-pitched bowsprit and bows under, jerking the Parson off his
-legs; upsetting every passenger who had nothing to hold on
-by, and submerging half-a-dozen men on the jib-boom, who
-were occupied in stowing the now useless jib. They rose
-from their involuntary bath puffing and blowing, and shaking
-the water from their jackets, but continuing their work as
-if nothing had happened.</p>
-
-<p>There, however, was the land, beyond a doubt. No Cape
-Flyaway, but land—bold, decided, and substantial. Whether<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-it was that people had not looked for it in the right direction,
-or had not known what to look for; or whether, as was most
-likely, a haze had hung over the morning sea, which the sun
-had now risen high enough to dispel; whatever was the
-cause, there stood the hitherto invisible land, speaking of
-hope and joy, and quiet dinners, and clean beds, and creating
-a soul under the ribs of sea-sickness.</p>
-
-<p>Long, however, it was before they neared it,—hour after
-hour; and Birger’s everlasting wheels went grinding on, and
-the mountains seemed no higher and no plainer than they
-were when the Parson had first descried them. But the day
-had become much more enjoyable, the wind had moderated,
-and the swell was less felt, as the land began to afford some
-protection.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and his friend Birger had by this time established
-themselves on the break of the poop, with their
-sketch-books in their hands, nominally to sketch the outline
-of the land, really to caricature the Russian magnates during
-their hours of marine weakness. While Monsieur Simonet,
-one of the numerous tutors, a venturesome Frenchman,
-climbed warily up the main shrouds to get a better view,
-creeping up step by step, ascertaining the strength of each
-rattlin before he ventured his weight upon it, and holding on
-to the shrouds like grim Death. Quietly and warily stole
-after him the Mate, with a couple of stout foxes hitched
-round his left arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith,” said Birger, “they are going to make a spread-eagle
-of him. Well, that is kind; it will prepare him for
-his new country; it is in compliment to Russia, I suppose,
-that they turn him into the national device.”</p>
-
-<p>But the Mate had reckoned without his host. The Frenchman
-made a capital fight for it, and in the energy of his
-resistance, entirely forgot his precarious position; he kicked,
-he cuffed, he fought gallantly, and finally succeeded in seizing
-his adversary’s cap, a particularly jaunty affair with gold
-lace round it, in imitation of her Majesty’s navy, of which
-the Mate was especially proud. This, the Frenchman swore
-by every saint the Revolution had left in his calendar, he
-would heave overboard; and before the Captain had completed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-the little sketch he was taking of the transaction, a
-capitulation was entered into by the belligerents upon the
-principle of the <i>statu quo</i>, and the discomfited Mate descended,
-leaving his adversary to enjoy at once his position
-and his victory.</p>
-
-<p>By this time sails, unseen before, had begun to dot the
-space which still intervened between the steamer and the
-iron-bound coast before it, which now rose stern and rugged,
-and desolately beautiful, clothed everywhere with a sort of
-rifle-green, from the dark hues of the fir and juniper, for
-none but the hardy evergreens could bear the severe blasts
-of even its southern aspect; few and far between were these
-sails at first, and insignificant did they seem under the
-abrupt and lofty mountains which rose immediately out of
-the sea, without any beach or coast-line, or low-land whatever;
-but, as they neared the land, the moving objects
-assumed a more conspicuous place in the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>There was the great heavy galliasse with pigs from Bremen
-or colonial produce from Hamburg—a sort of parallelogram
-with the corners rounded, such as one sees in the
-pictures of the old Dutch school two hundred years ago—not
-an atom of alteration or improvement in its build since
-the days of old Van Tromp; the same flat floor and light
-draft of water—the same lumbering lee-boards—the same
-great, stiff, substantial, square-rigged foremast, with a little
-fore and aft mizen, which looked like an after-thought; she
-might be said to be harrowing the main instead of ploughing
-it, according to our more familiar metaphor, with a great
-white ridge of foam heaped up under her bows, and a broad,
-ragged wake like that of a steamer.</p>
-
-<p>And there was the Norwegian brig returning from Copenhagen
-with a cargo of corn for Christiansand; rough and
-ill-found, nine times in ten not boasting so much as a foretop-gallant
-sail, yet tight and seaworthy, and far better than she
-looked; built after the model of a whale’s body, full forward
-and lean aft, with a stern so narrow that she looked as if she
-had been sailing through the Symplegades, and had got
-pinched in the transit.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a fleet of a dozen jagts from the north, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-tainted breezes advertising their fishy cargo, as they came
-along. These were the originals of the English yacht, which
-unspellable word is merely the Norwegian <i>jagt</i>, written as it
-is pronounced in the country, for Norway is the only nation
-besides England that takes its pleasure on the deep sea.
-With their single great unwieldy sails, their tea-tray-shaped
-hulls, and towering sterns, they looked like a boy’s first essays
-in the art of ship-building.</p>
-
-<p>But Bergen furnishes a far more ship-shape description of
-craft—sharp fore and aft vessels are the Bergeners, looking
-as if they had all been built on the same lines, with little, low
-bulwarks, and knife-like cutwaters, as if they were intended
-to cut through the seas rather than to ride over them, sailing
-almost in the wind’s eye, and, when very close hauled indeed,
-a point on the other side of it—at least, so their skippers
-unanimously assert, and they ought to know best,—at all
-events, ensuring a wet jacket to every one on board, be the
-weather as fine as it may, from the time they leave the port
-to the time they return to it.</p>
-
-<p>Then came, crowding all sail and looking as if they were
-rigged for a regatta, with their butterfly summer gear and
-tapering spars, the lobster smacks from Lyngör, and Osterisö,
-and Arendahl, and Hellesund: and a regatta it was on a
-large scale, with the wide North Sea for a race-course, omnivorous
-London for the goal, and its ever-fluctuating markets
-for a prize. These were sharp, trim-looking vessels, admirably
-handled, and not unworthy of a place in the lists of any
-Royal Yacht Club for beauty or for speed; somewhat less
-sharp, perhaps, than the Bergeners, but scarcely less
-weatherly or sitting less lightly on the seas.</p>
-
-<p>The near approach to the land, which had been for so
-many hours looked for in vain, seemed to bring no great
-comfort to the unfortunate Skipper, who kept fidgetting
-about the decks with a perplexed and anxious countenance.
-Glasses were brought on deck, and rubbed and polished over
-and over again, and directed in succession to every mountain
-peak that showed itself, and every inlet that opened before
-them. Then, little mysterious consultations were held
-between the Skipper and his First Mate; then, one man was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-sent for, then another; then more whispering, and more
-mystery, more shaking of the heads and examination of
-charts; then an adjournment to the bridge, on which the
-Parson was then standing, taking his survey of the craft in
-sight, and enjoying the sunshine. At last, the whispering
-took a more objurgatory tone; more in the way of a growl,
-with now and then a short, emphatic sentence of eternal
-condemnation on somebody’s eyes, or blood, or other personalities,—as
-is the custom of those who “go down to the sea
-in ships.”</p>
-
-<p>The first distinct words which met the Parson’s ear, came
-from the lips of the Skipper, pronounced in a sharp, acid,
-querulous sort of tone; such as superiors sometimes indulge
-in, when they are fixing on the shoulders of an inferior the
-blame they shrewdly suspect all the while, ought, if justice
-had its due, to rest on their own.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not worth your salt, sir,” he said; “you are not
-worth your salt—you ought to be ashamed of wearing a
-blue jacket, you know-nothing, lubberly ...” and so
-forth; expressions by no means unusual at sea, certainly,
-but sounding somewhat misplaced in the present instance,
-inasmuch as if there was any one in the whole ship not
-worth his salt, the speaker certainly was the man, in his own
-proper person.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my soul, sir,” said the man addressed, “if I tried
-to tell you anything about it, I should be only deceiving you.
-I know the coast about Christiansand as well as any man. I
-have traded to that port for years, and taken the old brig in
-and out twenty times; but the land before us is all strange
-to me. I never saw those three hummocky hills before in
-my life. This is not Christiansand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but if it is not, does Christiansand lie east or west
-of us—which way am I to steer?”</p>
-
-<p>The man raised his glass again, and took a long and
-anxious survey, but apparently with no better result.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, sir, I cannot say. I cannot make it out at all;
-there is not one single sea-mark that I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what the devil did you ship for as a pilot, if you
-knew nothing of your business?” Here followed another
-strong detachment of marine expletives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I shipped as a pilot for Christiansand, sir; and, for the
-Sound, and for Copenhagen; and can take the steamer into
-any one of them, if she drew as much as a first-rate; but this
-place is neither one nor the other of them, and I never called
-myself a coasting pilot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “this seems to me sad waste of
-breath and temper; if you are a couple of lost babes, why
-do you not ask your way? There lies a pilot-boat, as you
-may see with your own eyes,” pointing to a little cutter exhibiting
-in the bright sunshine a single dark cloth in a very
-white mainsail, which, with her foresheet to windward, lay
-bobbing about in the swell right ahead of them. “That is a
-pilot-boat, and I suppose she knows the way, if you do not—why
-do you not hail her?”</p>
-
-<p>The Skipper looked askance at the Parson, as if he meditated
-some not very complimentary reply about minding
-one’s own business; for, conscious of the estimation in which
-he was himself held by the fishing party, who were in no
-way chary of their remarks, he regarded them with anything
-but friendly feelings. But the advice was too obviously
-sound to be neglected, and the Skipper was not by any means
-anxious that the magnates on the poop should become
-acquainted with the fact that he was at sea in more senses
-than one.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the steamer was alongside the little
-shrimp of a cutter, taking the wind out of her sails by her
-huge unwieldy hull.</p>
-
-<p>A short conversation passed between them, which as one-half
-was sworn down the wind in very loud English, and the
-other half came struggling up in broad Norske, was not
-attended with any very satisfactory results.</p>
-
-<p>Birger offered his services.</p>
-
-<p>“You may as well ask them what they will take us into
-Christiansand for,” said the Skipper; “that will soon make
-them find their English.”</p>
-
-<p>A few more unintelligible words were exchanged, and
-Birger burst out laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“They cannot do it,” he said: “they cannot take us into
-Christiansand: not only they are not able, but they are not
-licensed to ply so far.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why! where are we, then?” said the astonished Skipper.</p>
-
-<p>“Off Arendahl!” said Birger.</p>
-
-<p>“Arendahl!” broke in the Parson, “why, that is fifty miles
-to the westward of your course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I cannot conceive how that can be,” said the
-Skipper. “Something wrong, I am afraid, with the compasses.
-We ought not to be so far out; we steered a straight
-course, and—”</p>
-
-<p>“That did you not,” said Birger, “whatever else you did;
-the Captain and I have been studying the theory of transcendental
-curves from your wake.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you how it is,” said the Parson; “you have
-steered your course as you say, and have not allowed for the
-easterly set of the current, and you imagine how this must
-have acted upon us under the influence of these rolling swells
-which we have had on our port bow ever since daylight,
-every one of which must have set us down a fathom or two
-to leeward. Don’t you recollect that we lost three line-of-battle
-ships coming home from the Baltic by this very
-blunder. Compasses!” he continued, <i>sotto voce</i>, “a pretty
-lot of blunders are thrown on those unfortunate compasses,
-in every court-martial. However,” he continued, aloud,
-“there is no help for it,—thankful ought we to be it is no
-worse; there is but one thing to be done now, and what that
-one thing is, you know as well as I.”</p>
-
-<p>This the Skipper did know. A close survey of the remaining
-coals took place, and it was decided that notwithstanding
-the expenditure that took place on the day on the
-Shipwash, there might, with economy, be enough for six
-hours’ consumption, Birger inquiring innocently, “whether
-the Skipper had not anything that would burn in his own
-private stores?”</p>
-
-<p>The steamer’s course was accordingly altered nine or ten
-points, for the coast from Arendahl to Christiansand trends
-southerly, and she had actually overshot her mark, and gone
-to the northward as well as to the eastward of her port, so
-that land which had hitherto lain before them, was thus
-brought abaft the starboard beam.</p>
-
-<p>To those who, like our fishermen, were not exactly making<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-a passage, but exploring the country, and to whom it was a
-matter of indifference whether they dined at five or supped
-at eleven, the Skipper’s blunder was anything but an annoyance.
-It afforded them an opportunity, not often enjoyed,
-of seeing the outside coast of Norway; for in general, almost
-all the coasting trade, and all the passenger traffic, is carried
-on within the fringe of islands that guard the shores. An
-absolute failure in the article of fuel, and a week or so of
-calm within a few miles of their port, might have been a
-trial to their tempers; but there was no such temptation to
-grumbling on the present occasion; and, besides, the afternoon
-and evening were bright and warm, the wind had sunk
-to a calm, and though the ever restless sea was heaving and
-setting, the swells had become glassy, soft, and regular.</p>
-
-<p>Cape after cape, island after island of that inhospitable
-coast was passed, and not a sign of habitation, not a town,
-not a village, not even a fisherman’s cottage, or a solitary
-wreath of smoke was to be seen. The land seemed utterly
-uninhabited, and, as they drew out from the stream of trade,
-the very sea seemed tenantless also.</p>
-
-<p>The fact is, that the whole coast of Norway, and of Sweden
-also, is fringed with islands, in some places two or three deep,
-which are separated from the main and from each other by
-channels more or less broad, but always deep. Of these
-islands, the outer range is seldom inhabited at all, never on
-the seaward sides, which, exposed to the first sweep of the
-southwester, are either bare, bold rocks, or else nourish on
-their barren crags a scanty clothing of stunted fir or ragged
-juniper, but afford neither food nor shelter, and where that
-necessary of life, fresh water, is very rarely to be met with.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the coasting trade passes within this barrier,
-and the houses and villages, of which there are many, lie
-hidden on the sheltered shores of the numerous channels; so
-that, however well peopled the coast may be—and in some
-places population is by no means scanty—neither house, nor
-boat, nor ship, except the foreign trade as it approaches or
-leaves the coast, is ever seen by the outside coaster.</p>
-
-<p>The shades of evening were already falling, and that at
-midsummer in Norway indicates a very late hour indeed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-when the glimmer of a light was seen through the scrubby
-firs of a cape-land island, occasioning a general rush of expectant
-passengers to the bridge, for some had begun to doubt
-the very possibility of discovering this continually retreating
-port, and to class it with the fairy territories of Cloudland
-and Cape Flyaway; while others, with more practical views
-and less poetical imaginations, had been contemplating with
-anxiety the rapidly decreasing coals in the bunkers. Both
-parties, poets and utilitarians alike, had their fears set at rest
-when, on rounding the point, the long-lost lighthouse of
-Christiansand hove in sight—tall, white, pillar-like, looking
-shadowy and ghost-like, against the dark background behind
-it. The poets might have thought of the guardian spirit of
-some ancient sea king, permitted to watch over the safety of
-his former dwelling-place, for Christiansand is renowned in
-story. To the utilitarians it might, and probably did, suggest
-visions of fresh vegetables, and salmon, and cod, and
-lobsters, for all of which that town is famous.</p>
-
-<p>A bare, low, treeless slab of rock forms its site, a mere
-ledge, about a quarter-of-a-mile long, and sufficiently low, and
-sufficiently in advance of the higher islands, to form in itself
-a danger of no small magnitude during the long winter
-nights. It maintains on its withered wiry grass half-a-dozen
-sheep and a pig or two, the property of the lighthouse-keeper,
-which being the first signs of life and vestiges of
-habitation which had greeted the travellers during the afternoon’s
-steaming, were regarded with an interest of which
-they were not intrinsically deserving.</p>
-
-<p>In a very few minutes, the heaving of the outside sea was
-exchanged for the perfect calm and deep stillness of the
-harbour, with its overhanging woods, its long dusky reaches,
-its quiet inlets, and mysterious labyrinthine passages, among
-its dark, shadowy islands. These became higher and more
-wooded as the steamer wound her way among them, deepening
-the gloom, and bringing on more rapidly the evening
-darkness. All, however, looked deserted and uninhabited,
-till suddenly, on opening a point of land, high and wooded
-like all the rest, the town of Christiansand lay close before
-them, dark and indistinct in the midnight twilight, without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-the twinkle of a solitary lamp to enliven it, or to indicate the
-low houses from the rocks which surrounded and were confused
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” said the Parson, as the plunge of the anchor
-and the rattle of the chain cable broke the stillness of
-the night. “Some of us are not born to be drowned, that
-is certain.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="smaller">CHRISTIANSAND.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Dark it is without,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And time for our going.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Skirnis Fär.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the time the <i>Walrus</i> dropped her anchor, all seemed as
-still and lonely as if no sound had ever awakened the silence
-of the harbour. The chain cable, as it rattled through the
-hawse-hole, had even a startling effect, so solitary, so unusual
-was the sound. The place seemed as if it had been uninhabited
-since creation; for though the town lay close before
-it, the houses, low and lightless, looked like a collection of
-fantastic rocks; but scarcely had she felt the strain of her
-cable, when her stern swung into the middle of a group of
-boats, which seemed as if they had risen from the depths of
-the sea, so sudden and unexpected was their appearance, and
-crowds of earnest, business-like, trafficing Norsemen were
-clambering up her sides at every practical point. Norway
-has no inns, and Norway is said to be a place of universal
-hospitality, where every one is delighted to receive the wandering
-guest—and so every one is, and delighted to receive
-the wandering guest’s money also, with two or three hundred
-per cent. profit on the outlay. The real fact is, every house
-in Norway is an inn, to all intents and purposes, except the
-license; and in places like Christiansand, every man is his
-own touter. Whatever is the noise and confusion of a vessel
-arriving at a French or Flemish port, on this occasion it was
-doubled, not only from the number and assiduity of hospitable
-hosts, but also from the unusual quantity and quality of
-the passengers. It was not every day that a Russian ambassador
-graced with his august presence, and his distinguished<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-suite, an obscure trading town of Norway; and its
-citizens, inferior to no nation in the world in the art of
-turning an honest penny, were in two moments as well aware
-of the fact, and as fully determined to profit by it, as the
-Dutch landlady, who, having charged our second George the
-value of ten pounds sterling English for his two eggs and his
-bit of toast, informed him that though eggs were plentiful in
-her country, kings were not.</p>
-
-<p>The confusion which pervaded the <i>Walrus’s</i> decks and
-cabins, the cries, the calls, the screams that were flying
-about unheeded; the extraordinary oaths that jostled one
-another, out of every language of Saxon, Russian, or
-Scandinavian origin; the obtrusive civilities of the touters;
-the officiousness of volunteering porters; the mistakes
-about luggage; the anxieties, the rushings to and fro, in
-which everybody is seeking for everybody, may easily be
-imagined; and none the less was the confusion of tongues;
-that night had thrown her veil over this floating Babel of
-the North.</p>
-
-<p>But through it all the three friends sat on their carpet
-bags of patience, smoking the cigar of peace, now and then
-making a joke among themselves, as the steward’s lantern
-flashed upon some face of unusual solicitude, but totally
-unconcerned amid the fluctuating hubbub that surrounded
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Captain, “I have had enough of this fun,
-and am hungry besides; I vote we go on shore. I suppose
-your man is here?”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson got up, and, putting his head over the side,
-shouted in a stentorian voice, through his hand, which he
-used as a speaking trumpet—“Ullitz! Ullitz!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloh!” returned a voice from the dark waters, in the
-unmistakably English man-of-war’s fashion—“Hulloh!” repeated
-the voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Shove alongside here, under the quarter,” said the Parson.
-“Who have you got in the boat along with you? Tom
-Engelsk for one, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only Tom and Torkel; I thought that would be enough,”
-said a voice from the waters below, in remarkably good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-English, in which the foreign accent was scarcely perceptible.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite enough,” said the Parson; “look out there!” as
-he hove the slack of the quarter-boat’s after-tackle fall,
-which he had been making up into coils as he was speaking.
-“Tell English Tom to shin up that, and come on board: it is
-nothing for an English man-of-war’s man to do, and one of
-you hold on by the rope.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom, active as a cat, and delighted at being spoken of as
-an English man-of-war’s man before so many English people,
-scrambled up the side and stood before them, with his shallow
-tarpaulin hat in hand, as perfectly an English sailor, so
-far as his habiliments were concerned, as if he had dressed
-after the model of T. P. Cooke.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s real name was Thorsen, and his birthplace the
-extreme wilds of the Tellemark; but having served for five
-years on board an English man-of-war, he had dropped his
-patronymic, and delighted in the name of English Tom; by
-which, indeed, he was generally known.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom,” said the Parson, “you see to this luggage; count
-all the parcels; see that you have it all safe; pass it through
-the custom-house, and let us see you and it to-morrow
-morning. And now, he who is for a good supper, a
-smiling hostess, a capital bottle of wine, and clean sheets,
-follow me.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, he dropped his carpet bag over the side
-which Ullitz caught, and disappeared down the rope by
-which Tom had ascended, followed implicitly by his two
-companions.</p>
-
-<p>“Shove off, Ullitz,” said he, as the Captain sat himself
-down and poised Tom’s oar in his hands, pointing it man-of-war
-fashion as Tom himself would have done, and when Ullitz
-had got clear of the steamer, seconding ably the sturdy
-strokes of Torkel. In a few moments the boat touched the
-quay of the fish market, and the party sprang on shore with
-all the glee that shore-going people feel when released from
-the thraldom of a crowded vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Ullitz and Torkel remained behind, in order to secure the
-boat in some dark nook best known to themselves; for there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-were several idlers on the fish-market quay, who, except
-for want of conveyance, would have been at that moment
-unnecessarily adding to the crowd on board, and were
-not very likely to be over-scrupulous about Torkel’s private
-property.</p>
-
-<p>The three friends, in the meanwhile, in order to extricate
-themselves from two or three groups of drunken men
-(drunkenness, the Parson remarked, was the normal state of
-Norway, at that time of night), pressed forward, and walked
-ankle-deep through the sandy desert, which, in Christiansand,
-is called a street, the Captain stuffing the little
-black pipe which, as was his wont, he carried in his waistcoat
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “no one can appreciate a blessing
-until he has been deprived of it. I declare, it is a luxury in
-itself to be able to go where one pleases, after having been
-cribbed and cabined and confined as we have been, and to
-plant one’s feet on the solid earth once more, instead of
-balancing our steps on a dancing plank.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty well, to call this solid earth,” said the Captain;
-“I should call it decidedly marine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something like the Christiansanders themselves,” said
-Birger, “who, as all the world knows, are neither fish nor
-flesh, nor good red-herring; but I dare say Purgatory
-would be Paradise to those who arrived at it from the
-other way. Well, what is the matter? what are you
-stopping about?”</p>
-
-<p>These last words were addressed to the Parson, who having
-been sent forward on the previous summer to spy out this
-Land of Promise, had volunteered to act as guide.</p>
-
-<p>“If there is one thing more puzzling than another,” said
-he, “it is this rectangular arrangement of streets. I wish
-those utilitarian Yankees, who claim the invention, had it all
-to themselves. It is fit only for them.”</p>
-
-<p>“The English of that is, you have lost your way,” said the
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not lost my way,” said the Parson, who piqued himself
-on his organ of locality; “but the fact is, I cannot
-remember, in the dark, which of all these rectangular crossings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-is the right one. I wish I could see that great lump of
-a church they are so proud of. I say, Birger, knock up some
-one, and ask ‘if Monsieur Tonson lodges there.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I,” said Birger. “You are the guide; besides, they
-must be coming ashore, some of them, from the steamer by
-this time; and, in good truth, here are a couple of them.”</p>
-
-<p>This couple, much to their relief, turned out to be Ullitz
-and Torkel, who pointed out the road at once, but looked
-rather grave at the Captain’s pipe, which was now sending
-forth a bright red glow through the darkness, and occasionally
-illuminating a budding moustache which he was cultivating
-on the strength of being a military man.</p>
-
-<p>Had the acquaintance been of longer standing, they possibly
-would have spoken out; as it was, they contented themselves
-with a muttered dialogue in their own language, in which the
-Parson soon made out the words, “Tobacco” and “Police,”
-both of which being modern inventions, bear nearly the same
-name in every language in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>“By the by, I had forgotten that,” said he. “Captain, I
-am sorry to put your pipe out; but the fact is, you must not
-smoke.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not smoke! why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“For fear you should set fire to the town,” said the Parson,—“that
-is all. You need not laugh; the law is very strict
-about it, I can tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain did burst out laughing; and, in truth, where
-they were standing, it seemed a ridiculous law enough, though
-it is pretty general both in Norway and Sweden. The street
-was one of unusual width, being one expanse of sand from
-side to side, and the houses, none of which boasted a storey
-above the ground floor, seemed absurdly distant,—almost
-indistinct in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, however, obediently put his pipe into its receptacle,
-and resumed his route, muttering something about
-Warner and the long range—his estimate of the Norwegian
-legislative capacity being in no way raised by the sight of
-certain small tubs of very dirty water standing by the side of
-every house door, which the Parson informed him was
-another precaution against fire.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Whether there really is to be found any one, well authenticated
-instance of a town being set on fire by a pipe of
-tobacco,” said Birger, “I will not take it upon myself to say,
-nor whether legislating upon pipes and leaving kitchen fires
-to take care of themselves, be not like guarding the spigot
-and forgetting the bung; but the fires here, when they do
-occur, are really awful. You talk in your country of twenty
-or thirty houses as something; we burn a town at a time.
-Everything here is of deal, every bit of this deal is painted,
-and in a season like this, everything you meet with is as dry
-as tinder, and heated half-way to the point of combustion
-already. Hark to that!” as a sharp, startling crack sounded
-close by them; “that is the wood strained and expanded by
-the roasting heat of a long summer’s day, yielding now to
-the change of temperature; we shall have plenty of these
-towards morning. Light up but one of these little bonfires
-of houses in a moderate breeze, and see how every house in
-the town will be burning within half-an-hour. Six months
-ago, the capital of my own province, Wenersborg, contained
-10,000 inhabitants, and I believe now the church and the
-post-house are the only two buildings left in it.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Ullitz, who was leading, came to a dead halt before
-a substantial porch containing wood enough to build a ship,
-from the open door of which a bright light was streaming
-across the street. Taking off his hat—every Norwegian
-is continually taking off his hat to everybody and everything—he
-made a profound bow to the party in general,
-and with the words, “Vær saa artig,” ushered them into the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>The room into which they entered was long and low, the
-ceiling supported by a mass of timbers like the decks of a
-ship; every part of it was planked with bright deal,—floor,
-walls, and roof alike,—putting one something in mind of the
-inside of a deal box. It was, however, well furnished with
-birchen tables, birchen sofas chairs and cabinets (for birch
-is a wood that takes a high polish), the whole having rather
-a French look. The floor was uncarpeted, as is the case in
-almost all Norwegian houses, for they have no carpet manufactory
-of their own, and the duty upon English woollens is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-so enormous that it is impossible to import them; but it was
-strewed with sprigs of green juniper, which diffused a pleasant
-fragrance; and these, in token that the family were
-keeping holiday, were spangled with the yellow heads of the
-<i>trollius europæus</i>, which the pretty Marie, the daughter of the
-house, had been gathering all the morning, and had scattered
-over them in honour of the expected guests.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Marie nor her mother could speak one word of
-English—few of their women can—but their deeds spoke for
-them; for the hospitable board—and in this case it was
-literally a board, placed upon trestles, and removed when the
-supper was over—groaned under the weight of the good
-cheer. There were fish, not only in every variety, but in
-every variety of cookery; there was lobster-soup, and plok
-fiske, and whiting cakes, and long strips of bright red
-salmon, highly dried in juniper smoke and served up raw;
-enormous bowls of gröd,—a name which signifies everything
-semi-liquid, from rye-stirabout to gooseberry-fool;—with
-cream, as if the whole dairy was paraded at once,—some of it
-pure, some tinged with crimson streaks, from the masses of
-cranberry jelly that floated about it.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were the liquors forgotten, which, in Norway, at least,
-are considered indispensable to qualify such delicacies. There
-was the corn brandy of the country, diffusing round it a
-powerful flavour of aniseed, without which no meal of any
-kind takes place; there, too, was French brandy, freely partaken
-of, but so light both in colour and taste, that it suggested
-ideas of a large qualification of water; there was
-English beer, and a light sort of clarety wine, that was
-drunk in tumblers. Madame Ullitz, indeed, presided over a
-marshalled array of tea-cups, of which she was not a little
-proud, for it is not every house that can boast of its tea
-equipage; but this was as an especial compliment to the
-English strangers. The tea-cups and saucers might be
-Staffordshire,—they had a most English look about them;
-but the tea was unquestionably of native growth, being
-little else than a decoction of dried strawberry leaves, not
-at all unpleasant, but by no means coming up to English
-ideas of tea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Vær saa artig,” said the lady of the house, with an inviting
-smile and a general bow, intimating that supper was
-ready; and the whole household and guests of various degrees,
-including Torkel the hunter, and Jacob the courier,
-and two or three stout serving-girls, and half-a-dozen
-hangers-on of one sort or other, placed themselves round the
-table, as indiscriminately as the viands upon it.</p>
-
-<p>The house of Ullitz made a feast that day.</p>
-
-<p>“Vær saa artig,” said Marie, handing to the Captain
-a plate heaped up with brown, crisp, crackling whiting
-cakes.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain did his best to look his thanks as he took
-the plate. “What on earth do they all mean by that eternal
-‘Vær saa artig?’” said he to the Parson, aside. “I have
-heard nothing else ever since we dropped our anchor. First,
-I thought it meant ‘Get out of the boat,’ or ‘Go up the
-street,’ or ‘Come in-doors,’ or ‘Sit down to supper,’ or something
-of that sort; but then those drunken porters on
-board were shoving and elbowing one another about with
-the very same words in their mouths; and, now I recollect,
-this was the very speech Birger made to the Professor on
-the day of the wreck, when he gave him that slippery
-hitch.”</p>
-
-<p>“In that case,” said the Parson, laughing, “‘vær saa artig’
-must mean two black eyes and a bloody nose, for that, as you
-know, is what the Professor got by it. But the fact is, ‘Vær
-saa artig,’ with variations, is the general passport throughout
-all Scandinavia. Some writers ascribe a mystic force to the
-words, ‘Vackere lilla flycka’—pretty little girl; and I am
-sure I am not going to deny the force of flattery. But among
-the natives, certainly, no one ever thinks of telling you what
-they want you to do. ‘Have another slice of beef?’ ‘Come
-in?’ ‘Take off your hat?’ ‘Take a seat?’ or whatever it
-is; all that is dumb show, preceded by the universal formula,
-‘Vær saa artig,’ ‘Be so polite.’ All the rest is understood.”</p>
-
-<p>“Vær saa artig,” said Ullitz, unconsciously, from the other
-end of the table, holding up a bottle of claret, from which he
-had just extracted the cork.</p>
-
-<p>“Jag har äran drikka er till,” replied the Parson, who had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-picked up some of the formularies during his former visit.
-“There,” he said, “that is another instance: an Englishman
-would have said, ‘Take a glass of wine,’ in plain English.
-He holds me a bottle, and tells me to ‘be polite.’ My belief
-is, that when Jack Ketch goes to hang a man in Norway, he
-is not such a brute as to tell him to put his head into the
-halter; he merely holds it up to him, and, with a bow, requests
-him ‘Att være saa artig.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Birger, breaking in, “that is very true; it
-used to be the case; but the Storthing has abolished that
-piece of politeness, and capital punishment along with it.
-The fact is, the Norwegians are so virtuous now, as everybody
-knows, that they never want hanging.”</p>
-
-<p>This sarcasm, which was spoken in a little louder tone
-than the conversation which preceded it, threatened rather
-to interfere with the harmony of the evening, which it probably
-would have done had the language been generally
-understood. But the Parson acted as peace-maker.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Ullitz,” said he, not giving that worthy time to
-reply, “tell us what arrangements you have been making for
-us. Shall we be able to start to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have done everything according to the instructions
-transmitted to me,” said Ullitz, speaking like a secretary of
-state, and with the solemnity warranted by the importance
-of his subject. “There are two boats now lying at the
-bridge quay, with their oars and sails in my porch, and we
-can easily get another for the foreign gentleman” (so Ullitz
-designated his Swedish fellow-countryman—a little trait of
-Norske nationality at which Birger laughed heartily). “As
-for boat furniture, we have everything you can possibly want,
-in the shop; you have but to choose. And as for provisions,
-we may trust Madame Ullitz for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Parson, “I know Madame Ullitz and her
-provision-baskets of old.”</p>
-
-<p>Madame smiled, and looked pleased; making a guess that
-something was said about her, and that that something must
-be complimentary.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, as for attendants, I made bold to detain this most
-excellent and well-born Gothenburger, Herr Jacob Carlblom”—(with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-a polite bow to Mr. Jacob, returned by a still more
-polite bow from that illustrious and well-born individual).
-“Herr Jacob is a traveller of some celebrity by sea and land”—(the
-Parson afterwards found out that he was a Gothenborg
-smuggler)—“and would be happy to attend the gentlemen
-in the capacity of courier, cook, interpreter, and commissary,
-for the remuneration of a specie-daler per diem, with
-his food and travelling expenses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the Parson; “I suppose we must have
-a cook, so we will try your friend Mr. Jacob in our expedition
-up the Torjedahl, and see how we like him. And what
-says Torkel? are we to have the benefit of his experience?”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel looked as if earth could afford no higher pleasure,
-for, in his way, he was a mighty hunter—he was not only
-great at the Långref,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and skilled in circumventing the
-Tjäder<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> in his lek, but he had followed the Fjeld Ripa<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> to
-the very tops of the snowy mountains, had prepared many a
-pitfall for the wolf and fox, and had been more than once in
-personal conflict with the great Bruin himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Torkel shall be my man, then,” said the Parson, who had
-a pretty good eye to his own interest.</p>
-
-<p>“And English Tom, who speaks the language so well, will
-be just the man for the highborn Captain,” said Ullitz.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” said the Parson, “so be it; and whenever
-we have to do with lakes and sailing, Tom shall be our admiral,
-and shall put in practice all the science he has learned
-in the British navy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tom is as proud of belonging to the English navy, as if
-it were the Legion of Honour,” said Ullitz, whose father had
-belonged to the French faction, and who was rather suspected
-of holding French politics himself.</p>
-
-<p>“It <i>is</i> the Legion of Honour,” said Birger, “and I give<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-Mr. Tom great credit for his sentiments. Well, you must look
-me out a man, too. This will not be so very difficult, as I
-speak the language pretty well for a foreigner.”</p>
-
-<p>In fact, Birger had been practising the language a good
-deal already, and not a little to the Captain’s envy, by making
-fierce love to the daughter of the house; an amusement with
-which guardsmen, Swedish as well as English, do occasionally
-beguile their leisure moments; and, to the Captain’s infinite
-disgust, Marie did not seem to lend by any means an unfavourable
-ear to his soft speeches.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Ullitz, “we shall have no difficulty whatever
-in finding a man; if there is anything these people love
-better than gain, it is pleasure, and here we have both combined.
-My only difficulty lies in making the selection. I
-have reckoned that each of the highborn gentlemen will want
-a boatman besides his own man; but I have engaged these
-only for the trip to Wigeland, as you will no doubt like to
-change them there for men who are acquainted with the
-upper river; but you can keep them if you like, they will be
-but too happy to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, then, we will start to-morrow afternoon, and
-get as far as Oxea before we sleep. The morning, I suppose,
-must be devoted to hearing Tom’s report from the Custom-house,
-making our selections for the trip, arranging our heavy
-baggage that we are to leave here, and seeing that our outfit
-is all right. I like to make a short journey the first day,
-in order that if anything is forgotten, it may be sent back
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all a bad general maxim,” said the Captain: “and
-now to bed; for the broad daylight is already putting out the
-blaze even of Madame Ullitz’s candles.”</p>
-
-<p>“With all my heart,” said the Parson, “it is high time;”
-and rising from his seat and going round to where Madame
-Ullitz sat, he took her hand, and bowing low, said, “Tak for
-mad”—thanks for the meal.</p>
-
-<p>“Vel de bekomme,” said the lady,—well may it agree
-with you.</p>
-
-<p>In this ceremony he was followed by the whole party,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-who, shortly after separating, sought their respective sleeping-places.</p>
-
-<p>The beds were queer concerns, certainly: beautifully clean,
-and fragrant with all manner of wild herbs; but as unlike
-the English notion of a bed (which in that country is always
-associated with ideas of a recumbent position), as is well possible.
-A thick, straw mattress, shaped like a wedge, occupied
-the upper half. Upon this were placed two enormous
-pillows, fringed with lace. The rest of the bed was simply a
-feather-bed placed on the ticking, and so much lower, that
-the sleeper takes his rest almost in a sitting position. The
-whole, including the quilt, was stuffed luxuriously, not with
-feathers, but with the very best eider-down; for Madame
-Ullitz, in her maiden days, had been at least as celebrated a
-beauty as her daughter was now, and unnumbered had been
-the offerings of eider-down made by her hosts of admirers,
-who had braved wind and wave to procure for her that most
-acceptable of all presents to a Norwegian girl—at once the
-record of her past triumphs, and the glory of her future home.
-The prudent traveller in Norwegian territories will always
-do well, if he has the chance, to choose for his residence the
-house of a <i>ci-devant</i> beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Little, however, did the travellers reck of mattress or
-feather-bed, Madame Ullitz’s past conquests, or her daughter’s
-present bright eyes—a sea-voyage, four or five restless nights,
-a long day’s work, and a plentiful supper at the end of it,
-equalize all those things; and, though the sun was shining
-brightly through the shutterless and curtainless windows,
-five minutes had not elapsed before it was indifferent to them
-whether they had sunk to rest on eider-down or poplar
-leaves; or whether their beds had been strewed for them by
-the fair hands of the bright-eyed Marie, or by those of the
-two lumps of girls who had assisted at the grand supper.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE TORJEDAHL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Foresight is needful</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To the far traveller:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each place seems home to him:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Least errs the cautious.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“And now for work,” said the Parson, as, somewhat late
-on the following morning they rose from a breakfast as substantial
-and plentiful as had been the supper of the night
-before. The ordinary meals of a Norwegian are, in fact,
-three good substantial dinners per diem, with their proportionate
-quantity of strong drink: one at nine or ten, which
-they call “Frökost”; one at two or three, which is termed
-“Middagsmad”; and one in the evening, called “Afton.”
-But, whatever they call them, the fare is precisely the same
-in all; the same preliminary glass of brandy, the same very
-substantial hot joints, the same quantity of sweetmeats, and,
-at Christiansand at all events, the same liberal supply of
-fish. Tea and coffee are not seen at any of them, but generally
-form an excuse for supernumerary meals an hour or so
-after the grand ones.</p>
-
-<p>The strangers were not yet acclimated; they lounged over
-their morning’s meal as if the recollections of their yesterday’s
-supper were yet green in their memories. Not so the natives.
-No one would suppose that they had supped at all—they ate
-as if they had been fasting for a week.</p>
-
-<p>All things, however, come to an end,—even a Norwegian’s
-breakfast; and the Parson stood in the porch receiving
-English Tom’s report from the custom-house, and cataloguing
-the packages as they arrived. These included two dogs; one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-a very handsome brindled bay retriever, called “Grog,”
-belonging to the Captain; the other an extremely accomplished
-poaching setter, his own friend and constant companion.
-These, wild with joy at their newly regained
-liberty and restoration to their respective masters, from whose
-society they had been separated during the whole voyage,
-were grievously discomposing the economy of Madame
-Ullitz’s well-ordered house.</p>
-
-<p>A small assortment of necessaries was packed in deal
-covered baskets or boxes,—for they looked as much like the
-one as the other. This manufacture is peculiar to the
-country, and is equally cheap and convenient. These, with
-the rods, guns, ammunition, and boat furniture, including the
-sails which were to form tents on the occasion, together with
-Madame Ullitz’s liberal supply of provisions (among which
-the rö kovringer were not forgotten), were arranged in the
-porch, and one by one were transferred by the boatmen to
-the bridge quay, where the boats were lying. The weightier
-articles were consigned to the keeping of Ullitz, and were
-lodged in his ample store rooms.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Captain,” said the Parson, as they stood on the
-bank of the noble river, “do you take a spare boat and a
-couple of hands, and pull as far as the first rapids; let Torkel
-be one of them, and he will show you the place. There is on
-the left bank of the river, a sort of rude boat canal, which is
-not always passable. If we can contrive to get through it,
-we will sleep at Oxea to-night: but, if the boats require to
-be hauled over land, we must be satisfied with that for one
-day’s work, return here to sleep, and carry our things over
-land to-morrow morning. It will take me a couple of hours,
-at the least, to fit these things, but I shall be ready for you
-by the time you return. And, to tell you the truth,” he
-added, in a whisper, “I wish you could take Birger with
-you. He is doing nothing but laugh and joke; and he
-makes the men so idle, that I shall get on twice as well
-without him. Set him to harl for salmon—anything, to get
-rid of him. It will be of use, too; for if he meet with anything
-down here we may be sure that Wigeland is alive
-with fish. You will see a reef of rocks on the right bank, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-quarter of a mile above the town: it is not a bad throw—set
-him to work there.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger was delighted at the idea, and, as the Parson would
-spare none of the boats or boatmen, he took a small praam
-that belonged to one of the men, and prepared to accompany
-the Captain on his expedition.</p>
-
-<p>Birger certainly was no fisherman: he could but just
-throw a clumsy fly, and had never caught a salmon in his
-life, or seen one, except at table: but harling is a science
-open to the meanest capacity. It is the manner in which
-cockney sportsmen catch their salmon in the Tweed, and
-consists of traversing and re-traversing the width of the river,
-with a rod and twenty yards of line hanging out of the stern
-of the boat. The fly thus quarters the water backwards and
-forwards without any exertion of the fisherman, and even the
-salmon that seizes it effectually hooks itself before the rod
-can be taken in hand. On the Tweed, the fisherman has
-actually nothing to do, but to pay his boatmen, who, by
-choosing their own course, perform the very little science
-which this operation requires. In the present case, Birger,
-having to manage his own boat, was far more the artificer of
-his own fortune; but his success depended on his skill, not
-as a fisherman, but as a boatman—an accomplishment in
-which no Northman is deficient,—rather than on his science
-and dexterity as a fisherman.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the exploring party had left, the Parson, with
-his lieutenant and interpreter, Tom, and the remaining three
-boatmen, addressed himself seriously to work. Every Norseman
-is a carpenter; indeed, every Norseman may be set
-down as a Jack-of-all-trades; and under Tom’s interpretership
-they very soon began to understand what was wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Under the starboard gunnel of each boat, and close to the
-right-hand of the sitter, were screwed two copper brackets
-for the gun, protected by a short curtain of waterproof. On
-the opposite side was a sort of shelf or ledge for the spare
-rods; and in the stern-sheets a locker for books, reels, powder-flasks,
-odds and ends, and, above all, any little store of
-brandy that they had,—an article which it was very dangerous
-indeed to have loose in the boat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>Norwegian boats are built like whale boats, with both ends
-alike, which is not altogether a convenient build for harling—a
-mode of fishing, which, however much to be deprecated in
-known rivers, is very useful, indeed almost indispensable, to
-explorers. To remedy this, a ring and socket was fixed on
-each quarter of the boat, in order to receive the butt of the
-rod, and to hold it in an upright position when the fishermen
-should be otherwise engaged. Under the thwarts of each
-boat were strapped an axe, a handbill, a hammer, and a bag
-of nails; and several coils of birch rope were stowed forward.
-Birch rope, which is a Swedish manufacture from the tough
-roots of the birch tree, is peculiarly adapted to these purposes,
-since it has the property of floating on the water,
-which hempen ropes have not.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the principle of “business first and pleasure afterwards,”
-so long as anything remained to be done, the Parson
-had scarcely raised his eyes from his work, or thought of
-anything else; and so well and so ably had he been seconded,
-that everything was completely fitted, provisions brought
-down and stowed, and all ready for starting, a full half-hour
-before the time specified. His friends were, however, still
-absent; and thus, having nothing to do, he left the men to
-take care of the boats, and lounged across the beautiful
-bridge that connects the town with the opposite shore.</p>
-
-<p>The bridge of Christiansand may well be called beautiful;
-not, indeed, as a piece of architecture, for it is built, like
-almost everything in the country, of wood, though with a
-solidity that would put to shame many of our buildings of
-far more durable materials. Its beauty lies in its situation,
-spanning as it does with its eleven broad flat arches, the
-clear swift stream of the Torjedahl. The depth was such
-that ships of some burthen were lying on each side of the
-bridge, the centre compartment of which was moveable; but
-so clear was the water, that the very foundations of the piers
-could be seen as the Parson looked over the parapet; and
-among them a beautiful school of white trout, as clearly defined
-as if they had been swimming in air, which, much to
-his satisfaction, he discerned working their way up from the
-sea. This sight was doubly satisfactory, for he had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-ominously shaking his head at the peculiar ultra-marine tint
-of the waters,—a sight in itself abundantly beautiful, as any
-one who has seen the Rhone at Geneva can testify, but far
-from welcome to the eyes of a fisherman, as indicating, beyond
-a doubt, the presence of melted snow.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson had reached the last arch, and was sitting on
-the parapet, on the look-out for the returning boats; admiring
-in the meanwhile the quiet little amphitheatre which forms
-the last reach of the Torjedahl after its exit from its mountain
-gorge, and scanning the quaint, old-fashioned town, with
-its dark-red wooden houses, overtopped by its heavy cathedral,
-on the tower of which the Lion of Norway, and the
-Axe of St. Olaf, were glittering in the sun; and occasionally
-peering into the gabled sheds of its dockyard, from each of
-which peeped out the bows of a gun-boat,—that formidable
-flotilla which, during the late wars, had hung on our Baltic
-trade like a swarm of musquitos, perpetually dispersed by our
-cruisers, and as perpetually re-united on some different and
-unexpected point. Beyond this was the island citadel, a
-place of no strength, indeed, for the strength of Norway does
-not lie in its fortifications, but a point of considerable beauty
-in the eye of an artist. The whole of this picture to seaward
-as well as to landward, was set in by a frame of miniature mountains—not
-hills, nor anything like hills, but real fantastically
-shaped mountains, with peaked heads, some of them showing
-their bare rocks, with little splashes of mica slate sparkling
-like diamonds, but most of them covered with dark fir to
-their very summits, only shooting out occasionally a bare cliff,
-so arid and so perpendicular that no tree could find root
-on it.</p>
-
-<p>So intently was the Parson gazing on the scene, that it
-was some time before he caught sight of Birger’s praam,
-which was rapidly approaching the place where he was sitting,
-and some time longer before he made out the very uncomfortable
-position in which his friend was placed. Birger,
-dexterous enough in the management of a boat, even that
-most ticklish of boats, the Norwegian praam—a dexterity
-which any one will appreciate who has ever attempted the
-navigation of a Welsh coracle, or can picture to himself what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-it is to be at sea in a washing-tub—had proved an apt scholar
-in the science of harling; and the Captain, having seen him
-make two or three traverses without upsetting his boat or
-entangling his flies, had proceeded on his mission and left him
-to his own devices. The boat was hardly out of sight when
-a heavy fish rose at the fly. Birger seized his rod, as he had
-been directed, but in his agitation forgot to secure his paddles,
-both of which dropped overboard, and, unseen and unheeded,
-set out on an independent cruise of their own,—and
-thus the salmon, of course, had it all his own way. It so
-happened that he headed to seaward, and the light praam
-offering very little resistance, and the stream, which was
-sweeping stilly and steadily at the rate of three or four miles
-an hour, forwarding him on his way, there was every probability
-of his reaching it.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had the Parson realised the true state of things,
-than he rushed across the bridge for his boat; but the bridge
-was by no means a short one, and the Parson was at the
-farthest end; and long before he reached it, salmon, Birger,
-praam, and all had disappeared under one of the centre
-arches.</p>
-
-<p>The boatmen had, of course, lounged away from the quay,
-probably to the nearest brandy shop; but the Parson sprang
-into a boat, cut the painter, seized the paddles, and shoved
-off furiously into the stream.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, this had been seen by the Captain, who was
-at that moment returning; and he, though of course perfectly
-unaware what was the matter, changed his course, and dashed
-through the nearest arch, in pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the praam was fairly at sea; but the boats
-were nearing her fast, and the Captain, having the advantage
-of oars, passed the Parson’s boat, and then, checking his
-speed, lest he should capsize the friend he meant to aid,
-grappled the praam with his boat-hook, and, winding his
-own boat at the same time, towed her quietly and steadily
-to a little sandy beach. Upon this, both he and Birger
-landed. The latter, whose arms were aching as only a
-salmon-fisher’s arms can ache, was glad enough to transfer
-his rod to the Captain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Parson calling in vain for a gaff, which implement in
-the hurry had been left in one of the other boats, threw himself
-into the water, which there was not much over his knees.
-But the salmon, seeing his enemies on every side, collected
-his energies afresh, as that gallant fish will do, and rattled
-off fifty yards of line into the deep blue sea before the Captain
-could turn him. He had, however, a practised hand to deal
-with. Slowly and carefully did the Captain reel him up,
-guiding him to the spot a little above where the Parson was
-standing as still and motionless as the rocks around him.
-There was as yet a considerable current, arising from the
-flow of the river, and the Captain, taking advantage of this,
-let the fish tail down quietly and inch by inch, to where the
-Parson was standing motionless and stooping so that his
-hands were already under water. Slowly, and without effort,
-the fish came nearer and nearer, till at last, gripping firmly
-with both hands the thin part just above the insertion of the
-tail, the Parson, half-lifting the fish from the water, dragged
-him to land, and, despite his struggles, threw him gasping on
-the snow-white beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Well done, Birger!” said the Captain, laying his rod
-against a rock, and running down, steelyard in hand;
-“there is the first fish of the season, and you are the
-prize-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah,” said Birger, admiring his own handiwork,—for
-the steelyard had given a full two-and-twenty pounds,—“this
-is the first salmon I ever caught in my life; and upon my
-word, when I had him, I thought I had got hold of Loki
-himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“And upon my word,” said the Parson, “it looked as if
-Loki had got hold of you; I thought he was taking you off
-to his own realms. If we had not come up, you would have
-been by this time half way to the Midgard Serpent!”<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “it took all the Œsir together to
-land the aboriginal salmon; and, I must say, Thor himself
-could not have handled him better than you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is your story?” said the Captain; “sit down there
-and tell it us. You will lose no time,” he added—for Birger,
-having once tasted blood, looked very much as if he wished
-to be at work again—“you will lose no time, I tell you, for
-I must crimp this fish for our dinners. Who can tell if we
-are to catch another to-day? Parson, lend me your crimping-knife;
-I left mine in the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson produced from his slip-pocket that formidable
-weapon, called by our transatlantic brethren a bowie knife;
-and the Captain, having first put the fish out of his misery,
-proceeded to prepare him scientifically for the toasting-skewers.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Birger, for the story. So much I know, that it is
-something about diabolical agency. Loki, I believe, is the
-Devil of Scandinavian mythology.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly,” said Birger; “though we must admit that
-he and his progeny, the Wolf Fenrir and the Midgard
-Serpent, are the origin of evil, and will eventually cause the
-destruction of the world. But Loki really was one of the
-Œsir, or gods, and had sworn brotherhood with Odin himself;
-and thus, though he often played them mischievous tricks,
-they seem to have associated with him, as one is in the habit
-of doing with a disreputable brother-officer—not exactly
-liking him, far less approving of his ways, but still consorting
-with him, and permitting him to be a participator of
-their exploits. At last, however, when he had gone so far
-as to misguide poor blind Hodur, so as to make him kill
-Baldur, they determined that this really was too bad. Baldur
-was a general favourite; everything good or beautiful,
-either in this world or in Asgard, was called after him; and
-the unanimous vote was, that Loki should be brought to
-justice, and made to suffer for this. Loki, however, who
-rather suspected that he had gone too far, himself, was no
-where to be found. He had quitted Asgard in the form of
-a mist,—whence, I presume, we derive the expression ‘to
-mizzle,’—and had betaken himself to the great fall called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-Fränängars Foss, where he lived by catching salmon;—for
-Loki, it is said, was the first inventor of nets.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not a doubt of it,” said the Captain. “I always
-did think that those stake nets must have been invented by
-the Principle of Evil himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so it was, at all events,” said Birger. “Odin,
-however, one day, while sitting upon his Throne of Air,
-Hlidsjälf, happened to fix his eye upon him—I say eye,
-for you know Odin had but one, having left the other in
-pledge at the Mimir Fountain. No sooner did he see
-him, than he called to Heimdall, the celestial warder, to
-blow his horn, and summon the gods to council at the Well
-of Urdar.</p>
-
-<p>“Loki, perceiving that something was suspected, burnt his
-nets, and, changing himself into a salmon, took refuge under
-the fall; so that, when the gods arrived at Fränägngar, they
-found nothing but the ashes of the nets. It so happened,
-however, that the shape of the meshes was left perfect in the
-white ash to which it was burnt, and the god Kvasir, who, I
-presume, must be the god who presides over the detective
-police of Heaven, saw what had happened, and set the gods
-weaving nets after the pattern of the ashes.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p>“When all was ready, they dragged the river; but Loki
-placed his head under a stone—as that clever fish, the salmon,
-will do,—and the net slipped over his smooth, scaly back.
-The Œsir felt him shoot through, and tried another cast,
-weighting the net with a spare heap of new shields, which
-the Valkyrir had brought the day before from a battle-field,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-in order to mend the roof of Valhalla. Loki, however, leaped
-the net this time gallantly, and again took refuge under the
-foss.</p>
-
-<p>“This time the gods dragged down stream; Thor wading
-in the river behind the net. Thor did not mind wading; he
-was obliged to do that every day that he went to council, for
-the bridge of Bifrost would not bear him. In the meanwhile
-Vidar, the God of Silence, in the form of a seal, cruised about
-at the river’s mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Loki had thought to go to sea and take refuge with his
-daughter, Jörmungard the Serpent, but, in assuming the form
-of a salmon, he had assumed also, of necessity, the natural
-antipathies and fears of the fish. He turned at a sight so
-terrible to a salmon, and again sprang over the net. But
-Thor was ready for him, and while he was in the air, caught
-him in his hand, just above the insertion of the tail; and you
-may observe that salmon have never yet recovered from that
-tremendous squeeze, but are finer and thinner at the root of
-the tail than any fish that swims.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Captain, “that is quite true; it is a fact
-that every salmon-fisher knows; and he knows also that the
-root of the tail is the only part of the salmon by which it is
-possible to hold him, and that it <i>is</i> possible to hold him by
-that the Parson showed you just now practically. But it is
-very satisfactory to find out the reason of such things, particularly
-when the reason is such a very good one. What did
-the gods do with Mr. Loki when they had got him; crimp
-him, and eat him?”</p>
-
-<p>“They could not kill him,” said Birger, “because of the
-oath of brotherhood which Odin had one day incautiously
-sworn with him (I presume, when they were both drunk);
-so they laid him on his back on three pointed rocks in a
-cave, and bound him with three cords which they afterwards
-transformed into iron bars; and there he will lie,
-shifting himself, every now and then, from side to side, and
-producing what mortals call earthquakes, until that day,
-known only to the Nornir, when the twilight shall
-fall upon Asgard, and the conflagration of the world is at
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Serve him right, too,” said the Captain; “I am delighted
-to hear that the inventor of salmon-nets perished—like Perillus
-and other rascals—by his own invention. I hope the
-gods will keep him purgatory, or whatever they call it, as
-long as rivers run toward the sea. However, here is our
-Loki (holding up, by the tail, the scored salmon), and, as we
-have not been geese enough to swear brotherhood with him,
-he will do for our dinner. What shall we do, in the
-meanwhile, to crimp him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Make him fast to the boat, and tow him a-stern for ten
-minutes,” said the Parson; “the water of the Torjedahl is
-cold enough to crimp a live fish, let alone a dead one. And,
-I will tell you what: let Torkel go with the praam for the
-other boats, and meet us on the left bank, just above the
-bridge. I want to show you a view of our route to-day that
-is worth seeing.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, he led the way up a steep, rugged path, just
-discernible among the rocks of the rugged ridge which
-divides the amphitheatre in which Christiansand is situated
-from the wild coasts of the Fjord; and, passing through a
-sort of natural opening cut in the summit ridge, pointed to
-the scene before them. “There,” said he, “what do you
-think of that?”</p>
-
-<p>Birger was an artist; and, anxious as he was to begin his
-career as a fisherman, his ever-ready sketchbook was drawn
-out of his pocket; nor did he express a wish to move till
-the rugged foreground upon which they stood, the luxuriant
-park-like middle distance, with its clumps of trees, and
-dark-red houses, and neat English-looking church, and the
-background of fir-clad mountains, range beyond range, and
-the deep narrow gorge through which their journey lay,
-which the blue lake-like river seemed to fill from side to side,
-were transferred to the paper.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes’ walk brought them to where the boats
-were waiting, with the whole house of Ullitz, handmaidens
-and all, who had come to see them off. Hand-shaking
-all round—the fishermen took their places—the boats
-shoved off—Marie threw after them her kid slipper, for
-luck, (for that custom is of Scandinavian origin)—English<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-Tom gave three cheers, after the manner of her Britannic
-Majesty’s navy—and the expedition started on its voyage up
-the Torjedahl.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, who was anxious to reach the proposed
-encampment at Oxea, while there was yet light to pitch the
-tents, would suffer no harling, notwithstanding Birger’s remonstrances,
-until the first rapids had been safely passed;
-and, indeed, with the exception of the single throw where
-the Lieutenant had hooked his fish that morning, that part
-of the river was scarcely worth the trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The rapids, however, which had been surveyed beforehand
-by the Captain, were passed, under his skilful pilotage,
-in much less time than had been allotted for the operation,
-and then, with one consent, the flies were thrown upon
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>Above the rapids, the river forms what is technically
-called a “flat;” a spot carefully to be sought out by the exploring
-fisherman, as the likeliest to reward his search. A
-flat is where the water rolls on with its acquired velocity and
-the pressure of that which is behind it, rather than on
-account of any declivity in the bed through which it flows.
-In the present instance, indeed, the bed of the river actually
-rose instead of sinking, for the ridge of rocks which form the
-head of the rapids, had retained the stones and loose earth
-washed down in the winter floods. This gradually shallowed
-the whole river, spreading it out, at the same time, like a
-lake, so as to fill the level of the valley from mountain to
-mountain. These rose abruptly on either hand, in bare, inaccessible
-cliffs, as if they had been forced asunder by some
-convulsion of Nature, to make room for the rush of waters,
-and exhibited a bare splintered face of rock.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of an hour—for the Parson would allow no
-more—all fears were at an end for that night’s supper;
-no other salmon, indeed, had risen, but trout after trout
-had been handed into the boats, some of them, too, of a very
-respectable size: even Birger had not been without his share
-of success.</p>
-
-<p>But the stream was strong, the day was waning, many
-miles intervened between them and their camping-ground,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-the Parson was inexorable; so the casting-lines were exchanged
-for harling-tackle, and the squadron formed in order
-of sailing.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between a common casting-line and the
-harling-tackle which one rod in each boat should carry in
-every exploring expedition, consists principally in the length
-of the gut. The harling line carries five or six flies, in order
-to show, at once, as great a variety as possible of size and
-colour, and is joined to the reel-line by a swivel, in order to
-prevent it from kinking—while two, or, at the most, three,
-flies will be found quite sufficient for casting.</p>
-
-<p>The order of march was this:—Birger led, with his gun
-in his hand, ready for a stray duck or teal, many of which
-would whistle over their heads, as evening drew on. He was
-directed to keep, as near as possible, to the middle of the
-stream; while, on either flank, and about twenty yards behind
-him, came his two friends, with one rod in each boat
-for harling, while, with the other, they whipped into the
-likely ripples. Shooting and fishing, however, were made
-altogether a secondary condition to progress: they might
-catch what they could, and shoot what they could, but the
-rowers were to pull steadily forward.</p>
-
-<p>And thus they opened reach after reach of the beautiful
-river, for the most part pent in by inaccessible cliffs, on
-which the birch trees seemed to grow on each other’s heads,
-and to support above them all a serrated crest of spruce and
-fir. But, now and then, they would come to little semicircular
-coombs, where the mountain wall would recede for a
-space, leaving flats of twenty or thirty acres, which were
-carefully cultivated to the very water’s brink, and planted at
-the roots of the mountains with white poplar, the dried
-leaves of which were to serve for beds in the summer and
-hay in the winter. Here would be dark-red wooden houses
-with overhanging eaves, and tidy, compact, little farmsteadings,
-with their granaries, and store-rooms, and cattle-sheds,
-all complete in themselves: and they had need be, for they
-were completely isolated from the rest of the world. There
-was no road, not even a footpath; no possibility of ingress
-or egress, except that which the river afforded. The mountains,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-except here and there, were inaccessible; and at every
-turn of the river, seemed to beetle over it, shutting out each
-little amphitheatre from its neighbour. The winter is the
-Torjedahler’s time of liberty: then it is that their vehicles
-are put into requisition; then it is that their corn and cattle,
-if they produce any beyond their own consumption, are
-brought to market; for the river, which has hitherto been
-their boundary, forms now their railroad and frost-constructed
-channel of communication.</p>
-
-<p>The shadows were darkening on the clear river, and the
-arms of even Norwegian rowers were beginning to ache,
-when the last point was rounded; and the Parson’s joyous
-shout gave notice that their camping-ground was at last
-reached; and at the welcome signal, the lines were reeled
-up with alacrity, and the boats’ heads were directed to the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>The spot had been selected by him and Ullitz the year
-before, partly as lying conveniently near to Mosse Eurd, their
-proposed head-quarters, which it was considered expedient to
-reach before noon on the morrow, in order to afford time for
-their men hutting themselves and foraging out the resources
-of the place; but principally from its own beauty and convenience.</p>
-
-<p>So precious is level land by the banks of the river, that it
-is rare to find any portion of it uncultivated of sufficient
-extent for such an encampment as they required. But here,
-at the foot of a winter torrent, whose dry bed gave access to
-the uplands in summer, and brought down rocks and uprooted
-trees in the winter, was a rough plain, formed, no
-doubt, originally from the debris brought down by the torrent,
-but now covered with short turf and cranberry-bushes, with
-a few thick, bushy, white poplars, the leaves of which had
-not yet been stripped for hay; while here and there a
-graceful birch-tree formed a natural tent with its weeping
-branches.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom, bring the sails with you,” said the Captain, who
-had leaped ashore to reconnoitre the ground; “we will have
-our tent under this rock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Capital place!” said Birger; “and bring the axe with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-you, Tom, as well: that fir will make a first-rate ridge-pole,
-and it blocks up the place where it stands.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, not accustomed yet to the trifling value put
-upon timber, hesitated to chop up a very promising young
-tree,—which, indeed, was unnecessarily large for the purpose,
-and which stood but very little in the way, after all.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said Birger, “the very best fir-tree that ever
-grew is not worth a specie daler here; and as for that
-stick——” substituting the action for the word, he struck
-deep into its side, and in a dozen strokes or so it came crashing
-down among the under-stuff.</p>
-
-<p>There was no lack of fuel: there never is in Norway,
-where outsides of timber float down the rivers unheeded;
-and trees, uprooted by the winter storms and land-slips, rot
-where they fall. Before half the things were out of the
-boats, three or four fires were throwing round their cheerful
-light, some for cooking, some for wantonness, for the evening
-was anything but cold. Birger, however, who, as a Swedish
-soldier, had had a good deal of experience in bivouacking,—an
-exercise to which they are all regularly drilled,—set his
-own two men to gather and pile fuel enough to last through
-the night; observing that they would all find it cold enough
-before morning, when those scamps had burned up the fuel
-at hand.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and the Parson were occupied in collecting
-and weighing the fish, and apportioning them and the other
-provisions among the men, while Jacob, the courier, seated
-on a stone, apart, was plucking and preparing half-a-dozen
-teal that Birger had shot during the passage. These, to the
-Parson’s surprise, he deliberately cut in pieces, and consigned
-to the great soup-kettle, along with a piece of salt-beef from
-the harness cask, and various condiments which he made a
-great secret of.</p>
-
-<p>It may be observed that in Norway fresh meat is seldom
-eaten, unless it be on grand occasions, or by those who are
-well to do in the world. October is called in the north the
-Slaughtering Month, and every family there is occupied in
-salting, not only for winter, but for the rest of the year. A
-harness cask, therefore,—that is to say, a small cask with a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-moveable head, containing salt-beef or pork in pickle,—is a
-very common thing to meet with, and in fact had formed the
-<i>pièce de resistance</i> of Madame Ullitz’s stores.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Jacob, my man,” said the Captain; “I will
-show you a trick in cookery that has never reached Gottenborg
-yet, nor London neither, for that matter; it is worth a
-hogshead of your teal-soup.”</p>
-
-<p>He called to Tom, who had been preparing under his
-superintendence certain square sods of turf, and some long
-white skewers; which, in the absence of arbutus—in Ireland
-considered indispensable on such occasions,—he had been
-directed to cut from the juniper.</p>
-
-<p>Birger’s salmon, the flakes of which had actually curled
-under the cold of the waters, preserving all their curd between
-them, was cut into what he technically termed fids;
-each one of these was spread open by the skewers and fixed
-upon the turfs. These the Captain ranged round a great
-heap of hot embers, which he had raked from the fire, and
-set English Tom to turn as they required, basting them
-pretty freely with salt and water.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining fish had been given to the men, by whom
-they were subjected to a variety of culinary operations; one
-of which was making soup of them; and the fires began to
-grow bright and cheery in the increasing darkness, when
-Jacob paraded his kettle of teal-soup, and Tom set before
-each of the fishermen a turf of toasted salmon.</p>
-
-<p>In return, they received the men’s rations of brandy, the
-only part of the provisions on which any limitation was
-affixed. This in Norway, perhaps, was considered but a
-small modicum: it would have been, however, quite enough
-to make twice the number of Englishmen roaring drunk.</p>
-
-<p>The men collected round their fires, looking like so many
-gipsies; provisions were dispatched in enormous quantities,
-pipes were lighted, horns produced and filled with pure
-brandy, in which each man drank “du” with his neighbour,—an
-ancient Scandinavian ceremony, which entitles the drinkers
-henceforward to address one another in the second person
-singular, and to consider themselves on terms of intimacy.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, the principal personages of the expedition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-sat at the door of their tent, for which the Captain
-received his due meed of praise, he having brought the
-canvas. They tempered their brandy with a little water,
-after the custom of their country, and they smoked somewhat
-better tobacco than the Norwegians; but after their
-kind, they indulged in very nearly the same relaxations as
-their attendants.</p>
-
-<p>And thus fell the shades of night upon the first day of
-the expedition.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE ENCAMPMENT MOSSE EURD.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Our good house is there,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though it be humble:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each man is master at home.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Rouse out, Birger, my boy,” said the Captain; “recollect
-we have got the Rapids of Oxea to pass before we get any
-breakfast, and that we have our breakfast to catch into the
-bargain. Come, come,” continued he, as Birger stretched
-himself on his Astrakan cloak, as if he was thinking of
-another spell of sleep, “‘shake off dull sloth, and early rise,’
-as Dr. Watts says—see me rouse out those lazy hounds down
-there!” And that he did, in good earnest, by firing off both
-barrels within a foot of their ears; a salutation responded to
-by a chorus of yelping from the dogs, who imagined, of
-course, that shooting was begun already.</p>
-
-<p>This had the effect of speedily setting the whole party in
-motion; and Jacob, who, with provident care, had prepared,
-over-night, a kettle of coffee, raked together the embers
-of the still burning fires, presented each with a full
-horn of it, a very welcome introduction to the day’s labour;
-and then, as wood was plentiful, threw on some logs for a
-parting blaze.</p>
-
-<p>The river itself formed the fishermen’s washing-basin, and
-the boat’s thwarts their toilet-tables. Bitter cold, indeed,
-was the water; whatever the air may be, there is seldom
-much caloric to spare in the water till autumn is pretty well
-advanced; but, at least, it had the effect of thoroughly
-waking them, and causing them fully to appreciate the luxury
-of the now blazing fires to dress by.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN.</p>
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_78">p. 78.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>No one who has any regard for his health should think of
-going on a fishing expedition, however short, without a complete
-change of clothes,—one set for work, and one for dining
-and sleeping in. No man has any business, indeed, on such
-an expedition at all, who is afraid of water; but whether he
-is afraid or not, he will be sure to be wet, at one time or
-other, during the day. This, while the limbs are in exercise
-and the sun above the horizon, is all well enough; but let no
-man, however hardy he may think himself, sleep habitually in
-wet clothes, or in clothes hastily and imperfectly dried by the
-camp fire. The very bracing of the nerves during the day,
-which prevents the fisherman from taking injury by what
-would be called imprudence by his stay-at-home friends,
-makes the relaxation and reaction during the night more
-complete; and during that time he is exposed to a host of
-dangers which vanish before the face of the sun. With all
-his precautions, no man gets up from his night’s sleep in the
-open air without a little stiffness in the limbs for the first
-minute or so, though it may vanish at the first plunge into
-the water of his morning’s ablutions. But without these
-precautions, he is not unlikely to cut short his own expedition
-by any one of a dozen diseases which no amount of
-animal courage will enable him to bear up against, and thus
-he will be defeating his own object. It is very well to bear
-hardships cheerily when they are unavoidable—cheerfulness
-itself is a preservative. But it is only very young sportsmen
-indeed, who will seek out hardships for the pleasure of undergoing
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Our fishermen were not young sportsmen, they were men
-of experience. The Parson and the Captain had both of
-them learned their lesson in Ireland, where people soon begin
-to understand what wet means; and Birger was a Swedish
-soldier, and had learnt these matters professionally. Before
-they started, they had settled the invariable rule of a complete
-dress for dinner, under any circumstances whatever,
-which implied, of course, as complete a dress in the morning:
-it is necessary almost to bind oneself to some such vow, there
-are so many temptations to break it; in Norway especially,
-where, though the summer days are hot—hotter by many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-degrees than they are in England, and the evenings in the
-highest degree enjoyable, the morning air is generally sharp
-and bracing, and the water which comes down from the
-snowy ranges bitterly cold.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob, in the meanwhile, whose toilet did not take very
-long, and who rarely occupied himself in any work which did
-not especially belong to his own department, had been parleying
-with a young fellow, who, roused by the Captain’s gun,
-had pulled across in his boat from the opposite side, while
-the rest of the men were occupied in preparing the boats and
-re-arranging the articles that had been taken on shore the
-preceding evening.</p>
-
-<p>They came up together to where the Parson was standing
-by the fire, busily engaged in exchanging his salmon casting-line
-for one better adapted for trout.</p>
-
-<p>“The young man says that the river is dangy,” said he;
-for though he spoke English well enough, he has his own
-particular words, which it was necessary to make out.</p>
-
-<p>“Dingy,” said the Parson, without any very clear comprehension
-of what was meant, but rather reverting in his mind
-to the azure transparency of the waters; which, in truth, he
-would gladly have seen a little stained by mud. “Well,
-that is a good job. But I fear he will find himself a little
-mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p>Jacob evidently had not conveyed his meaning: he looked
-round for Tom or Torkel to assist him, but they were both
-in the boats, working busily under the Captain’s orders; so
-Jacob tried his hand again.</p>
-
-<p>“The young man says that there is a great deal of water
-in the river from the snow. He says that boats are very
-often sunk at Oxea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” said the Parson, who began to suspect something.</p>
-
-<p>Here the young man himself broke in with a long story in
-Norske.</p>
-
-<p>“He says,” interpreted Jacob, “only last week, one boat
-was upset, and two men were drowned.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye? aye?” said the Parson; “what! sober men?”</p>
-
-<p>Jacob did not see the inference, or would not. “This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-young man is a river-pilot,” said he; “he will take you up
-for two mark each boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you what it is, Mr. Jacob,” said the Parson; “I
-will teach you a lesson. When you engaged as our courier,
-you meant to fleece us all pretty handsomely. Well, I have
-nothing to say against this. As courier, it is your undoubted
-privilege so to do. But remember this, it is equally your
-duty, as courier, to prevent any one else from fleecing us.
-And if I find you only once again failing in that respect, off
-you go at a minute’s notice. Now send your friend home
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>Without looking behind him, the Parson, who had now
-finished fitting his flies, took his place in his own boat, and,
-directing Torkel to shove off to the other bank, threw his
-line across the mouth of a small tributary to the great river,
-which he had marked the year before as abounding with
-trout. Jacob looked for a moment inclined to rebel, but no
-man was more alive to his own interests than the ex-smuggler.
-He had engaged in the trip, not like Tom and Torkel,
-from sheer love of sport and adventure, but as a profitable
-speculation. So, pocketing the affront, much as “ancient
-Pistol” did his leek, he crept down to Birger’s boat, which
-was his place in the line of march, where he sat sulky, but
-utterly wasting his sulkiness; for Birger, anxious to keep up
-his yesterday’s character of a fisherman, was much too intent
-upon the—to him—difficult manœuvre of keeping his flies clear
-of the oars, to observe whether he was pleased or not.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain took the inner line skirting the shore on the
-right bank, for it had been agreed that the flat below the
-Oxea rapids should be well tried, in hopes of getting some
-fresh fish for breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>Though last in the field, he drew the first blood, hooking
-and, in a few minutes, landing a small salmon, and thus
-securing a breakfast. And by the time the boats came
-together again, the Parson had brought to bag a very fair
-supply of fjeld öret, or brook trout, from the little streamlet
-he had been trying. And now began the serious business of
-the day.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding Mr. Jacob’s information, the rapids of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-Oxea are perfectly safe to sober men. It is impossible that
-an accident can happen in them, except from carelessness;
-for the water, though swift, is everywhere deep. The stream
-falls with some force over a slanting ledge of smooth, slaty
-rock, some three or four hundred yards long or perhaps more,
-and acquires in its slide considerable velocity; but the bottom
-is smooth, and the surface nowhere broken by sunken rocks.
-The stream, therefore, is a steady current, surging up against
-the numerous islands which dot the river, as if they had been
-pieces of a ruined bridge. Each of these was crested with
-its half-dozen or so of ash or birch, which looked as if it was
-they that were in motion, and not the clear stream that was
-racing past them.</p>
-
-<p>The passage was a sheer trial of strength, requiring no
-great amount of pilotage, or local experience, or even skill.
-The ropes were got out and made fast to two or three thwarts,
-to take off the strain; the boats were lightened of their living
-incumbrances—except so far as the steersmen were concerned,—and
-were then tracked by main force one by one, every one
-of the party lending a hand, except, indeed, Jacob, who considered
-it his duty, having once said the rapids were dangerous,
-to act as if he thought so, and who had, therefore,
-been despatched by land to the head of the rapid, with orders
-to light the fires and get the breakfast ready, as nothing else
-could be done with him.</p>
-
-<p>The principal difficulty arose from the uncertainty of the
-footing among the crags, and the gnarled ash-trees that every
-here and there shot almost horizontally from between the
-fissures of the rock, dipping their branches into the stream.
-These rendered it necessary, every now and then, to make
-fast the boat to the tree itself, and then to float down a line
-to it from some point above the obstacle, for the river fortunately
-ran in a curve at that place. Thus, by giving a
-broad sheer into the stream, while the rest of the party
-hauled upon the rope, the boat would swing clear of the
-impediment.</p>
-
-<p>But all this was very hard work, and, as the sun was now
-high in heaven, very hot work; and, moreover, it had to
-be repeated three times before all the boats were in safety.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-Fully as much justice was done to Jacob’s breakfast as had
-been done to his supper on the preceding evening; and most
-luxurious was the hour’s rest which succeeded it.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining part of the voyage was easy: there was a
-sharp current, no doubt, too sharp for anything to speak of
-to be done with the flies; but it was all plain travelling, and,
-with an occasional help from the ropes, before noon their
-destination had been reached. This was the foot of a low
-fall, or something between a fall and a rapid, called “The
-Aal Foss,” in the middle of which was a picturesque rocky
-island, covered with trees, and on the left bank an equally
-picturesque peninsula, which was destined to be the head-quarters
-of the expedition, and the basis of subsequent
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>“There,” said the Parson, fixing his rod in the stern-rings,
-and springing on shore as the boat’s keel touched a sandy,
-slaty beach in the isthmus of the peninsula—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Thus far into the bowels of the land</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Have we marched on without impediment.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here is the limit of my survey. Thus far have I borne the
-baton of command; and I beg you to observe that we have
-reached the appointed spot twenty minutes before the appointed
-time.” And he held out his watch in proof of it.
-“I have, as you see, performed my promise; and thus I resign
-the leadership of the expedition.”</p>
-
-<p>“With universal thanks and approbation,” said the
-Captain; “and I propose that now the leadership devolve
-upon Birger; he is the man of camps and bivouacs, for he
-has experienced what we have only read about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “I will not affect modesty. Like
-others, I have passed my degrees, and it would be a great
-shame if bearing his Majesty’s commission, I did not understand
-what every soldier is taught.” Then, suddenly recollecting
-that the Captain was a military man as well as himself,
-he steered adroitly out of his scrape, continuing, as if his
-concluding paragraph had been part of his original speech—“You
-have only to wait for a war, Captain, and you will be
-in a situation to give us all a lesson. No one understood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-these things better than your old Peninsula men; but Sweden
-thinks her soldiers ought to learn their business before we are
-called out to fight, and not afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>To pass the degrees—“gradar,” or rather “gradarne,” for
-no one ever thinks of speaking of them without the definite
-article “ne,” as if there were no other degrees in the world—is
-anything but a joke in Sweden. Military service, so
-far, at least, as the Guards and the Indelta<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> are concerned,
-is extremely popular. There is ample choice in candidates;
-and very good care is taken that the officers shall be men
-who know their business, and shall not be at a loss in what
-situation soever they may be placed. The “gradar” consists
-of a series of lectures and extremely strict examinations, in
-everything connected with the service, both intellectual or
-physical, from the construction of an equilateral triangle up
-to the sketch of a campaign, and from the musket drill to a
-year of sea service. Passing out in seamanship is indispensable;
-for Sweden, reversing our principle of hatching ducklings
-under hens, hatches her young death-or-glory cornets
-and ensigns on board her ships. Properly speaking, the
-Swedish navy has no midshipmen. The cadets, who fill pretty
-numerously the midshipman’s berth, may possibly enter the
-navy, if they are so inclined; but nine-tenths of them are
-candidates for commissions in the army, and are thus learning
-a lesson which may be of use to them hereafter, when they
-have troops of their own to embark or manage on ship-board.</p>
-
-<p>Birger had passed his degrees with credit, or he would
-not have been selected as a travelling student; and his companions
-were now likely to profit by this circumstance, for
-one of those degrees comprehends all these mysteries of
-camping, and hunting, and cooking, and provisioning, and, if
-scandal may be trusted, a sort of Spartan stealing, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-goes under the euphemism of “availing one’s self of the resources
-of the country;” these little matters being taught by
-a three weeks’ actual practice in the field every summer.</p>
-
-<p>Birger was altogether in his element. “Now,” said he,
-“the first thing I must do is to borrow all your boatmen,
-for I shall want every man I can lay my hands upon; some
-for the camps, and some for cutting and drawing fuel; I can
-find something to do for them all, and for more too if I had
-them. And here, you Jacob, take a basket with you, and
-see what you can forage out from the cottages and woods
-about, in the way of milk, bread, butter, berries, and so
-forth; and hark you, Jacob, no brandy, if you please;
-that is the first thing those scamps always put their hands
-upon.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have not reckoned us,” said the Captain, “among
-your effective strength; we shall not be of much use in
-foraging, as we cannot speak Norske, but we have hands and
-heads too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not forget how scantily the camp is provisioned,” said
-Birger; “we have not had time or opportunity to catch or
-shoot anything since we left Oxea, where, I am sure, we ate
-up most of our fresh fish. It will not do to be drawing too
-largely from our supplies.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no objection, I am sure,” said the Parson; “but
-you must let us have one boat, Birger; even if we are to fish
-this river from the shore, there is half a mile of open space,
-certainly, between this and the great falls of Wigeland; but
-best throws lie on the right bank, and we really must have
-the power of crossing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “I cannot spare you Torkel, that is
-certain—he is much too valuable; take your own boatman;
-you may halloo out ‘Kom öfver elven,<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>’ if you want him,
-and happen to be on the wrong side; and if he cannot hear
-you, say ‘Skynda paa mid baaten sáa skall du faa drikspengar,’<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-and I will warrant he hears fast enough, deaf as
-he may be to the first call. We must have one of the boats<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-above this fall,” he continued, musing; “and we may as well
-do it at once. We will set all hands to launch it over this
-isthmus, before we do anything else, and then you can use it
-for your passage-boat. And now for the camp. Tom,
-Torkel, my own man Peter, my boatman and the Captain’s
-will be little enough for what I have to do, though there are
-some good hands among them, as I saw last night and this
-morning too at Oxea.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must fish, then,” said the Captain; “for there is
-no use going about after grouse, in this thick forest,
-without Torkel, or some one that knows the place; we
-should be but wasting our time, poking about these trees at
-hap-hazard.”</p>
-
-<p>“And, I am half-afraid that we shall not do much in
-fishing either,” said the Parson, as they got a sight of the
-upper reach of the river, which lay calm and shining before
-them. “The sun is as bright as if Odin<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> had got
-his other eye out of pledge, and were shining on us with
-both at once.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain whistled a few bars of the Canadian Boat
-Song.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Parson, “it is very true, as you whistle,
-but, though the sun be bright, and, though ‘there be not a
-breath the blue wave to curl,’ we must try what we can do.
-It adds considerably to the interest of fishing, when we know
-that our supper depends upon it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If this were the old Erne,” said the Captain, “we might
-whistle for our supper, in good earnest; but, it must be confessed,
-that the fish here are very innocent; we may deceive
-one; it is not impossible; for, as Pat Gallagher used to say,
-‘there are fools everywhere.’ But—look here,” he said, as
-he cast across the stream, “positively, you may see the
-shadow of the line on the bottom, deep as the water is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us cross,” said the Parson. “‘Gaa öfver elven,’ as
-Birger says, for I see they have got the boat up: near the
-great fall there are some strong streams that will defy the
-sun and the calm together.”</p>
-
-<p>Thanks to the innocence of the salmon, which the Captain
-had hinted at, their pot-fishing was not entirely without
-success: the upper part of the reach, where the waters had
-not yet recovered their serenity after undergoing the roar
-and fury of the great fall, did actually furnish them with a
-graul or two; but the salmon that had arrived at years of
-discretion were very much too cautious to be taken. They
-had never, it is true, been fished for in their lives with anything
-more delicate than a piece of whipcord and a bunch of
-lobworms, as big as a cricket-ball; but, for all that, they
-were quite old enough to draw an inference, and were perfectly
-aware that natural grasshoppers were not in the habit
-of swimming about with lines tied to their noses.</p>
-
-<p>Towards evening there sprang up a light air of wind, and
-the rises began to be more frequent. The Captain, by
-making use of Birger’s prescribed form of words, had got the
-boatman to land him on the rocky island which divides the
-Aal Foss into two branches. There, concealed by a stubby
-fir, not quite so high as himself, he was sending out twenty
-yards of line that fell so lightly that it never seemed to touch
-the water at all.</p>
-
-<p>There is no doubt that, of all the Erne fishermen, it was the
-Captain who threw the longest and the lightest line, and well
-was the Captain aware of that fact: but there is an axiom
-which “far and fine” fishers would do well to bear in mind, and
-which, though apparently evident to the meanest capacity, is
-very seldom borne in mind by any one; and that is, that it
-is of very little use to fish “far and fine,” when the fish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-themselves are lying, all the while, in the water close under
-your feet. This was precisely the Captain’s position; the
-waters, divided by the rock on which he was standing, were
-naturally deepest close to the rock itself, and, as naturally,
-the best fish lay in the deepest water. The Captain understood
-this well, but he could not deny himself his length of
-line, and, therefore, contrived to fish the water close to him
-by raising his arms, bringing the point of his rod over his
-right shoulder, and then whisking his flies out for a fresh
-cast with a dextrous turn of the wrist which no man in
-England but himself could have performed.</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you what,” said the Parson—who, not having
-met with much success, had stuck up his rod, and had got
-himself ferried over to the island—“it is not very likely that
-a fish of any size will rise this evening, but if such a thing
-should happen I would not give much for your rod.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish the biggest fish in the river——”</p>
-
-<p>The sentence was never finished, for, at the word, the wish
-was granted; and, if not the biggest fish in the river, certainly
-the biggest fish they had yet seen, rose at the fly when
-it was not a foot from the rock.</p>
-
-<p>The rod never stood a chance. Raised at a sharp angle
-over the Captain’s shoulder, the whole strain came upon the
-top-piece, which, as he struck, snapped like a flower-stalk,
-without effort or resistance; and away rushed the fish forty
-or fifty yards up-stream with the top-piece, which had run
-down upon the fly, bobbing against his nose.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain did all that man could do. Carefully did he
-watch his fish, anticipating every movement; instantly did
-he dip his rod, as the salmon sprang madly into air—instantly
-did he recover it; promptly was the line reeled in
-at the turn; tenderly was it given out at the rush; but it
-was of no avail—the rod had lost its delicate spring; and,
-despite the Captain’s care, every now and then the fish
-would get a stiff pull against the stump, thus gradually enlarging
-the hold which the hook had taken in the skin of the
-jaw, till, at last, just as the Parson, who had been hoping
-against hope, was taking the cork off the point of his
-gaff and clearing away the brambles to get a good standing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-place for using it, the line came up slack; the hold had
-given way.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson had the generosity to be silent about his
-warning that had received so immediate a fulfilment.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said, “you have recovered your top; that is
-something, so many miles from Bell Yard; and as for
-the fish, depend upon it that there are more where he came
-from.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain mused a little. With the exception of
-Birger’s chance-medley, they had not seen a full-grown
-salmon<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> since they had come upon the river, and the loss
-was no light one. “I suppose,” he said, interrogatively, “it
-would be hardly worth while to fetch another top from the
-camp?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all worth while,” said the Parson; “the wonder is,
-that you rose one full-mouthed fish on such a day as this.
-You are not going to rise another. Besides,” he added,
-“look at the sun! It is time for us to think of cooking,
-rather than catching. Birger will be wondering what is
-become of us.”</p>
-
-<p>They were at no great distance from the camp, which, to
-their surprise, they found tenanted by Jacob alone, who,
-having got over his morning sulks, was busy in what he
-called a Långref, a miniature variety of which is not
-altogether unknown to our Hampshire poachers; but
-Jacob’s was a tremendous affair, more like what in sea-fishing
-is called a spillet or bolter, consisting of three or four hundred
-yards of water cord, and half as many hooks.</p>
-
-<p>“Halloo,” said the Captain; “what has become of them
-all? Why, Jacob, where is Lieutenant Birger?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is gone with the men to make an offering to Nyssen,”
-said Jacob.</p>
-
-<p>“Who the devil is Nyssen?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob looked distressed. It is not lucky to mention the
-mundane spirits and those of hell in the same sentence; in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-fact, the less people talk about either of them the better,
-so, at least, the Swedes think, and therefore imprecate their
-curses by saying, “The Thousand take you,” leaving it for
-your own conscience to determine whether they are consigning
-you to saints or devils.</p>
-
-<p>“There they are, you may see them yourself,” replied he,
-evading the question, and pointing to a bare rounded rock
-which rose above the wooded summits about a mile down the
-river.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson’s telescope was in his hand in a moment; but
-all he could make out was, that they put something on the
-ground which they left there, and immediately entered the
-thick wood, which hid them from his sight. Jacob could
-not, or at all events would not, satisfy their curiosity, and
-they had nothing for it but to amuse themselves with
-admiring Birger’s handy-work, till that individual on his
-return should make his own report of himself.</p>
-
-<p>And really the Lieutenant would have extorted praise from
-the head of the Kong’s-öfver-commandant’s-Expedition himself,
-so well and so orderly was the encampment made.</p>
-
-<p>The sails were formed into three several tents, not very
-large ones, certainly, and scarcely admitting of the inmates
-sitting upright, except in the centre, but quite sufficient to
-shelter a man lying at full length. At the back of these,
-where the ground rose a little, a neat trench was cut, in
-order to carry off the drainings of any unforeseen shower.
-These were the sleeping tents; and in front of them were
-spread out a quantity of poplar leaves, which were eventually
-to form the beds, and which were then pretty rapidly
-undergoing the process of desiccation in the hot and bright
-sunshine which had hitherto been so unfriendly. A birch
-trimmed in its weeping branches, and thickened above with
-a few supplementary boughs of spruce-fir, was evidently
-arranged for the dining-room, and several of the stores were
-gathered round its trunk and thatched with fir-branches,
-while at some distance below, and not far from the sandy
-beach, stood three or four neat green huts, built with a framework
-of fir-poles, and thatched closely, both in roof and walls,
-with the upper branches of the trees that had been cut down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-for the frame. Not far from where Jacob was sitting over his
-långref, there was an elaborate kitchen, built of rough stones
-against a natural rock, with a cross-beam on the top to swing
-the kettle from, and beside it rose a goodly pile of fuel, cut
-into lengths, and stacked into what is called in the country
-fathoms, that is to say, square piles, six feet long and three
-high. This had evidently been their last work, for the axes
-and saws were still lying on the unfinished pile. By the
-river’s bank at the edge of the peninsula was a curious erection,
-which Jacob called the smoking-house. It was a
-pyramid constructed of outsides of deals, hundreds of which,
-rejected from the saw-mills, were floating about unheeded in
-the river, and drifting into every corner that was sheltered
-from the current. This was by no means a place constructed
-for the luxury of smoking tobacco, an amusement in which
-every individual of the party indulged in every possible place
-and in all places alike. It was erected for hanging up superfluous
-salmon which had previously been slightly salted, in
-order, with the help of smoke from the green juniper, to convert
-them into what in London is called “kipper.”</p>
-
-<p>There was little use for it that evening, however, for the
-grauls brought in by the fishermen would have been but
-scanty allowance, even for the present supper, had they not
-been helped out by other provisions. But Jacob had by no
-means been idle in his vocation. On a shelf of rock not very
-far from the kitchen, and shaded by a friendly tree, stood
-gallons of milk and piles of flad bröd, with a few raspberries,
-which were just then ripening, and an actual little mountain
-of strawberries, for the woods were carpetted with their
-bright green leaves and scarlet berries.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob, as was his duty, rolled up his långref as quickly as
-such a combination of tackle could be stowed away, and commenced
-preparing the fish for dinner, while the fishermen
-changed their clothes, and hung them to dry round a supplementary
-fire which had been lighted for the purpose.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MAKING A NIGHT OF IT.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ale’s not so good</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the children of men</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As people have boasted;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For less and less,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As more he drinketh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Knows man himself.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The kern of forgetfulness</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sits on the drunken</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And steals the man’s senses,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By the bird’s pinions</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fettered I lay</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In Gunlada’s dwelling.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Drunken I lay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lay thoroughly drunken,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With Fjalar the wise.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This is the best of drink,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That every one afterwards</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Comes to his senses.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>High Song of Odin the Old.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Many minutes had not expired, during which brief space the
-fishermen had been luxuriating in their dry clothes, when
-the boats were seen working their way back across the tail
-of the Aal Foss rapid, as they returned with the party from
-the right bank, which, after bobbing about on the ripples
-and cross currents, shot into their little harbour beneath the
-encampment.</p>
-
-<p>Birger came up the bank, half-laughing, yet looking as if
-he had been doing something he was ashamed of.</p>
-
-<p>“Where the deuce have you been, Birger?” said the Captain,
-as that worthy threw himself on the turf under the
-birch-tree: “Jacob says you have been sacrificing to Nyssen,
-whoever he is.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So I have,” said Birger; “but don’t speak so loud. I will
-tell you all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not speak so loud,” said the Captain; “why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, rather hesitatingly, “Nyssen does
-not like to be spoken of. That is to say, the men don’t
-exactly like to hear people speaking of him, at least by name,
-if it is above the breath.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come, Birger, be honest,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you must have it, I do not quite like it myself.
-I do not believe in such things, of course; but there is no
-good in doing what everybody thinks unlucky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said the Captain, “but tell us what you have
-been about. I am quite in the dark as yet about this mysterious
-gentleman or lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the Nyss,” said Birger, sinking his voice at the
-word to a whisper, “is a spirit of the air, just as the Neck (a
-similar whisper) is a spirit of the water.”</p>
-
-<p>“The very familiars of the Lady of Branksome,” said the
-Parson:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">It was the Spirit of the Flood,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And he spoke to the Spirit of the Fell.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Very likely, but our spirits, like our people, are not
-indifferent to the pleasures of eating and drinking; and
-therefore, whenever we start on an expedition, we propitiate
-them with an offering.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the offering consists of——?”</p>
-
-<p>“What we like best ourselves, cakes and ale.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what had you to do with it,” said the Captain; “I
-suppose you do not believe in spirits?”</p>
-
-<p>“The men asked leave to go, when they had done their
-work, and wanted me to go with them, to that high rock
-you see down there,—for they always choose out some
-bare and elevated locality, as best adapted to a spirit
-of the air; and so—well, I went with them; don’t laugh
-at me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will I not,” said the Parson; “you could not have
-done a wiser thing. Always fall in with men’s superstitions;
-there is nothing that attaches them so much as humouring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-their little illegitimate beliefs; to say nothing,” he added
-slily, “of believing a little in them yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“How is this offering made?” said the Captain: “what are
-the rites belonging to the worship of a spirit of the air?”</p>
-
-<p>“They are simple enough,” said Birger, “and not at all
-like those you would see on the stage of London,—no blue
-fires or poetical incantations: they consist in simply
-placing the cake on the most exposed pinnacle you can find,
-pouring the ale into the nearest hollow that will hold it,
-and then retreating in silence, and without looking behind
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“While some thirsty soul, after the manner of Bel in the
-Apocrypha, plays Nyssen and accepts the offering,” said the
-Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“What! eat Nyssen’s offering! Tom, what do you say
-to that?”—for the men were still fidgetting about the fire,—“what
-do you say to that? The Captain thinks that
-one of you will eat up Nyssen’s cake; what do you say
-about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Tom, “we have bold men in Norway, as all
-our histories will tell you; but bold as we are, I do
-not think you will get a man in the whole country to do
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a young fellow once who did it in my country
-though,” said Jacob, “and dearly he paid for it. The family
-used to place the yearly gifts to Nyssen under the sails of
-their windmill every Christmas Eve;—you Norwegians do
-not know what windmills are; you grind all your corn by
-water, poor devils!”</p>
-
-<p>Here Tom and Torkel, both Tellemarken men, broke in
-simultaneously; the one swearing that, in the Tellemark,
-windmills were as plenty as fir trees; the other vociferating,
-somewhat incongruously, that no nation two degrees from
-actual barbarism could ever think of such a piece of machinery
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>Birger stilled their national animosities by wishing
-“The Thousand” would take them all three, and their
-windmills into the bargain, and Jacob went on with his
-story.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The eldest son,” he said, “was a sad unbeliever; he had
-been a very good boy as long as he had lived with his father
-and mother at Lerum, but when he grew up he had gone to
-Copenhagen and got corrupted; for, as his honour Lieutenant
-Birger knows, they are all sad infidels at Copenhagen.”
-Here was likely to be another outbreak; for the Danes,
-though it is quite true that a great many of them are not
-only sceptics in fairy mythology but in religion also, are yet
-vehemently regretted by the Norwegians, who were in no
-ways pleased with that act of the Congress of Vienna which
-separated them from Denmark; a fact which our friend
-Jacob was perfectly aware of.</p>
-
-<p>Peace was again effected by a vigorous kick from his
-fellow-countrymen, together with some observations respecting
-a donkey in a state of eternal condemnation; and
-Jacob went on as if nothing particular had happened.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “the young man found that the best ale
-and sweetest cake were always given to Nyssen, so he slipped
-out and gobbled them up himself. During the whole year
-that followed that Christmas, no great harm came of it, only
-there was always something wrong about the windmill; now
-a sail blown away, now a cog broken; there was plenty of
-grist, trade was lively enough, it was always something to do
-with the wind, and, as far as that was concerned, nothing
-went right. Still no one suspected the reason, till Christmas
-Eve came round again, and another sweet cake and another
-bottle of strong ale were placed under the mill for Nyssen.
-The night was as still and as quiet as this evening is,—quieter
-if possible; there was not a breath of wind, and the snow
-looked like a winding-sheet in the moonlight. Well, the
-young man slipped out again; but scarcely had he stooped
-to pick up the bottle, when a furious gust of wind arose,
-scattering the snow like flour out of a sack; the sails flew
-round as if they were mad; it was said that a figure in a
-pointed cap and a red jacket sat astride on the axle, and one
-of the sails taking the young man on the side of the head,
-threw him as far as I could fling a stone. He sank into the
-snow, which closed over him, and no one knew what had
-become of him till the thaw came on. It was very late that
-year, for the ground was not clear till Walpurgis’ Night,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-and then they found him, and Nyssen’s broken bottle still
-in his hand. It was by that they found out how it had
-happened. I would not be the man to touch anything belonging
-to Nyssen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I neither,” chimed in the two Norsemen.</p>
-
-<p>“Johnstone and Maxwell both agree for once,” said the
-Parson, laughing; “and I will tell you another thing,
-neither would I. But now, Mr. Jacob, that we have done
-everything that can be expected of us by the spirits of the
-air, who, I hope, in common gratitude, will give us fishermen
-a cloudy sky and a little bit of a breeze to-morrow,
-I must say I should like to take my turn at the cakes
-and ale; so let us have whatever you have got in your big
-pot there, and bring us a bucket of strawberries and cream
-for dessert.”</p>
-
-<p>The dinner was by no means so elaborate an affair as that
-of yesterday; this was occasioned, in some measure, by
-their want of sport, but, principally, because all had been
-far too much engaged in the necessary business of the
-camp to think much of eating. The solids, such as they
-were, that is to say, beef and pork, out of the harness
-cask, were soon despatched, and the huge camp kettle,
-one of the old-fashioned ante-Wellingtonian affairs, as big as
-a mortar, and nearly as heavy, was sent down to the men,
-while the fishermen lounged at full length on the turf, enjoying
-their rest over Jacob’s plentiful provision of strawberries
-and cream.</p>
-
-<p>Fénélon has, somewhere or other, a fable about a man who
-had the power of procuring, “<i>pour son argent</i>,” as the good
-Bishop says, half-a-dozen men’s appetites and digestions.
-The man does not seem, in the fable, to have made a very
-good use of his extraordinary powers, or to have derived
-any extraordinary pleasure from them. If he had only
-come out campaigning in Norway, he might have had his
-five appetites for nothing, and been much the better for
-them all.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the lower table did not at all seem to be in
-want of an appetite; the kettle was emptied, and whole heaps
-of flad-bröd, sour as verdjuice, and pots of butter, such as no
-nose or stomach, out of Norway, could tolerate, were fast<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-disappearing beneath the unceasing attacks of seven gluttonous
-Scandinavians—while, as the twilight darkened, and
-diminished the restraint they might possibly have felt at the
-presence of their superiors, the noise grew louder and louder.
-Jacob began some interminable ballad about the sorrows and
-trials of little Kirstin, a very beautiful lady, who went
-through all sorts of misfortunes, and did not seem a “bit
-better than she should be;” but that goes for nothing at all
-in Swedish song, and very little in Swedish life. This he
-sang, chorus and all, to his own share. It seemed to affect
-the worthy man very little, that he was almost his own
-audience; no one seemed to attend him, but his song
-went on, stanza after stanza, uninterruptedly, forming a sort
-of running accompaniment to the shouts and screams of
-“Gammle Norgé,” “Wackere Lota, or, Kari,” which startled
-the echoes alternately, according as love, or patriotism, was
-the prevailing sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>At last, they began drinking healths—“Skaal Herr
-Carblom,” “Skaal for the well-born singer;” for, like the
-old Spanish nobility, though they addressed one another as
-Tom, Piersen, and so forth, they always gave the interloper
-his full title.</p>
-
-<p>“Jeg takker de,” said Jacob, solemnly, without, however,
-pausing for one moment in his song.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Little Kirstin, she came to the bridal hall,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We will begin with the wooing,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And a little page answered to her call,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My best beloved, I ne’er can forget you”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here broke in Tom, beating time to his music with a horn
-which he had replenished to the very brim, and of which he
-was imparting the contents very liberally to the turf round
-him—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">“Wet your clay, Andy!</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Out with the brandy!</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">We live in jolly way,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Here’s to you, night or day!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Look at sister Kajsa Stina,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">See her bottles bright and clear-ah!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Take the horn, good fellow! grin-ah!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Grin and swill and drink like me!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jacob’s voice was again audible—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“She tied her horse in the garden there:</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We will begin with the wooing”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Skaal Thorsen! skaal Tom Engelsk! skaal for the British
-navy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rule, Britannia!” shouted Tom. Jacob went on—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">“We will begin with the wooing:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She brushed and—”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here a general chorus—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“To the brim, young men! fill it up! fill again!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Drain! drain, young men!—’tis to Norway you drain.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Your fathers have sown it,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Your fields they have grown it;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then quaff it, young men! for he’ll be the strongest</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who drinks of it deepest and sits at it longest.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jacob’s voice became audible, like a symphony, between
-the verses—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“She brushed and combed her golden hair,”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">when again rose up the wild chorus, overwhelming it under
-the volume of sound:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“To the brim, old men! fill it up! fill again!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Drain! drain, old men!—’tis to Norway you drain.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">There’s health in the cup,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Fill it up! fill it up!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And quaff it, old men! for he’ll live the longest</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who drinks of it deepest and likes it the strongest.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“By the Harp of Bragi,” said Birger, “I’ll back old
-Jacob against the field,—that fellow has such bottom!” for
-the honest toper’s voice came again dreamily up the hill
-where they were sitting, during the pause that followed this
-outburst.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Little Kirstin then passed out from the door,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We had best begin with the wooing:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She said, I shall hither come no more,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My best beloved! I never will forget thee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Forth she went to the garden there,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We had best begin with the wooing:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She hung herself with her golden hair,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My best beloved! I never can forget thee.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-<p>“Skaal for Birger! skaal for the brave Lieutenant! skaal
-for the royal guard!” shouted one, waxing more bold as the
-night drew on.</p>
-
-<p>“Gammle Norgé!” screamed back an opponent, and
-immediately Torkel burst out, with his fine bass voice, into
-the national song, drowning entirely poor Jacob’s melancholy
-ditty, which never got much beyond the wooing after all.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The hardy Norseman’s house of yore</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Was on the foaming wave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And there he gathered bright renown—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The bravest of the brave.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O, ne’er should we forget our sires,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wherever we may be;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For they did win a gallant name,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And ruled the stormy sea.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">What though our hands be weaker now</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Than they were wont to be</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When boldly forth our fathers sailed</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And conquered Normandy?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We still may sing their deeds of fame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In thrilling harmony;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They won <span class="smcap">for us</span> that gallant name,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ruling the stormy sea!”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Enthusiasm was at its height, as the full chorus thundered
-forth from all the voices—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Never will we forget our sires,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wherever we may be;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They won for us that gallant name,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ruling the stormy sea!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Whether Jacob joined in it, or persevered in the sorrows
-of little Kirstin, it is impossible to say; but the loud-ringing
-alto of Birger came in tellingly from the house of the Nobles,
-accompanied by the bass of his two friends. The compliment
-was taken at once, “Skaal for the high-born Fishermen!”
-“Skaal for the noble gentlemen!” “Skaal for Vict<i>ou</i>ria!”
-“Skaal for Carl Johann!” “Skaal for England!”</p>
-
-<p>“Skaal for Sweden,” shouted Jacob at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Gammle Norgé! Gammle Norgé! Sweden and Norway!—Sweden
-and Norway for ever! Skaal! Skaal!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the Parson, “some one must have
-been shelling out in good earnest. There goes something
-stronger than water to all that noise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “it is very true: they did their work
-this afternoon like men, and then, instead of going and buying
-brandy, and making beasts of themselves, they very properly
-sent Torkel as spokesman to me, and asked my permission to
-get drunk, which, as they had behaved so well, of course I
-granted them, and gave them five or six orts to buy brandy
-with.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson burst out laughing: “Well, Birger, it is very
-kind of you, to save them from making beasts of themselves:
-rather a novel way of doing it, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, it is all right,” said Birger; “that is the way we
-always do in my country, we get it over at once: they will
-be as sober as judges after this—if we had not indulged them
-when they knew they had deserved it, they would always
-have been hankering after brandy, and dropping off drunk
-when they were most wanted: they will be as sober as judges
-after this, I tell you,” he reiterated, observing a slight smile
-of incredulity on the faces of both his companions.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not feel quite so confident of their being as sober as
-judges to-morrow, as I do about their being as drunk as pigs
-to-night,” said the Captain; “though, to be sure, I do not
-know what judges are in Norway; but it does seem to me
-that five or six orts<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> are rather a liberal allowance, in a
-country where one can get roaring drunk for half-a-dozen
-skillings.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is just the very thing I do not want them to do,”
-said Birger. “Whenever a Norseman gets roaring drunk,
-he is sure to kick up a row: it is very much better that they
-should get beastly drunk at once; then they go to sleep and
-sleep it off, and no one the wiser.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I should have thought, though,” said the Captain, “that
-you gave them quite enough for that, and a good remainder
-for another day into the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is little you know of the Norwegian, then,” said
-Birger, “or, for the matter of that, of the Swede either: he
-is not the man to make two bites of a cherry, or to leave his
-brandy in the bottom of the keg. Besides, they will consider
-themselves upon honour. They asked my leave to get
-drunk on this particular night, and I gave them the money
-to do it with; it would be absolute swindling, to get drunk
-with my money on any other occasion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the Captain, “this a terrible drawback
-to your beautiful country. Our fellows in Ireland used
-to get drunk now and then, to be sure, but they had always
-the grace to be ashamed of it. These scoundrels do it in such
-a business-like way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your countryman, Laing, sets that down to the score of
-our virtues,” said Birger. “He considers it much better to
-act upon principle, like our people, than to yield to temptation,
-as your English and Irish sots do. I must say, though,
-that he is not half so indulgent to us poor Swedes.”</p>
-
-<p>“My countryman, Laing,” said the Parson, “though a
-very observant traveller, is, also, a very extreme republican
-and a very prejudiced writer. He gives us facts in
-monarchical Sweden, as well as in republican Norway, and he
-gives them as he sees them, no doubt; but, he looks at the
-two countries through glasses of different tints. Now, my
-idea is, that, in point of drunkenness, there is not a pin to
-choose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but there is, though,” said Birger. “The Norwegian
-is quarrelsome in his cups; and you will seldom find that in
-any part of Sweden, unless in Scånia, and the Scånians are half
-Danes yet. I had the precaution to take away those gentlemen’s
-knives when I gave them the money for their brandy (and,
-I must admit, they gave them up with very good grace), or,
-the chances are, that we should have lost the services of that
-ass Jacob, and given a job for the Landamptman to-morrow.
-Why, half the party-coloured gentlemen in the castle at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-Christiania have earned their iron decorations in some
-drunken brawl or other.”<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Well, that may be,” said the Parson. “I have not experienced
-enough to gainsay you; but you must admit that as
-far as simple drinking goes, the two nations have the organ
-of drunkenness pretty equally developed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think it must be a barrel organ, then,” said the
-Captain, “if we are to judge by the quantity it contains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank your stars it has got a good many stops in it.
-The Scandinavian does not drink irregularly, like your
-people whom you can never reckon upon for two days
-together. He has his days of solemn drunkenness—some
-of them political, such as the coronation; or the king’s
-name day; or, here, in Norway, the signing of their cursed
-constitution. Some of them, again, are religious—such as
-Christmas, and Easter, and Whitsuntide: these are days in
-which all Scandinavia gets drunk as one man. And there
-are a few little domestic anniversaries besides—such as
-christenings and weddings; but, this is all, except a chance
-affair, like this; so that, by a glance at the calendar, and a
-little inquiry into a man’s private history, you may always
-know when to find him sober, and fit for work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sober, meaning three or four glasses of brandy?” said
-the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Birger. “He seldom goes beyond that, on
-ordinary days; and, therefore, on festivals like this, I think
-him very well entitled to make up for it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I think, though,” said the Parson, “when I was in Sweden,
-last year, I did see such things as stocks for drunkards,
-at some of the church doors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you did, at all of them; but, you never saw any
-one in them. How is a mayor to order a man into the
-stocks, for drunkenness, when the chances are, that he was
-just as drunk himself on the very same occasion?”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you account for this universal system of drinking
-spirits?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“It is easy enough to account for it,” said the Parson; for
-Birger rather shirked the question. “Every landed proprietor
-has a right to a private still; the duty is a farthing
-a gallon, carriage is difficult, and brandy is much more
-portable than corn. Will not this account for some of it?
-I do not happen to know what may be the return for
-Sweden; but, for Norway, it is somewhat over five million
-gallons a-year, in a country which does not grow nearly
-enough of corn to support itself; and this, as the population
-does not come up to a million and a-half, gives three and
-a-half gallons per Christian, to every man, woman, and child,
-in the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” said Birger, “if you go to statistics, look
-at home. Your Mr. Hume moved, last session, for a return
-of all the men that had been picked up, drunk, in the course
-of the preceding year; and, in Glasgow alone, there were
-nearly fifteen thousand—that is to say, one out of every
-twenty-two of the whole population. Do not talk to us of
-drunkenness. Did you ever hear of the controversy between
-the pot and the kettle?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Scotch are no more our countrymen, than the
-Norwegians are yours,” said the Parson; “and, if I recollect
-right, that very return gave no more than one in every six
-hundred, picked up, drunk, in our Manchester; and Manchester
-is not what we call a moral place, either.”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In that very place, Glasgow,” said the Captain, “where,
-for my sins, I was quartered last year, I was actually taken
-up before the magistrates, and fined five shillings, for what
-the hypocritical sinners call ‘whustling on the Saubboth,’
-and it was only Saturday night, either—the rascally Jews!
-They are fellows to</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Compound for sins they are inclined to</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By damning those they have no mind to.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The scoundrels couldn’t whistle a tune themselves on any
-day of the week, ‘were it their neck verse at Hairibee;’ they
-have no notion of music, beyond the bagpipe and the Scotch
-fiddle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Five shillings?” said the Parson, musingly; “that is
-just the sum they fine people, in London, for being drunk and
-disorderly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, in all human probability, the Captain made one
-individual item in Mr. Hume’s fifteen thousand himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very possibly,” said the Captain. “It was Saturday
-night, and I will not say I might not have been a little
-screwed. When one is in Turkey one must live as turkeys
-live.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “I believe all northern nations
-have a natural turn for drunkenness, but laws and regulations
-may increase or diminish the amount of it; and the
-laws of both these countries tend most particularly to increase
-it. With you it is a regular case of ‘Drunkenness made
-easy.’ Besides, public opinion sets that way too. If I were
-suspected of anything approaching to the state of our friends
-down below, I never could face my parish again. Your
-parish priest might be carried home and tucked into bed by
-a dozen of his faithful and hard-headed parishioners on Saturday
-night, and if the thing did not come round too often,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-would get up not a pin the worse on Sunday morning, either
-in health or in reputation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” said the Captain, “public presents are a very
-fair test of public propensities. In the snuffy days of the
-last century and the beginning of this, every public character,
-from the Duke of Wellington down to William Cobbett, had
-the freedoms of all sorts of things given them in golden snuff-boxes.
-Now, look at your people. When your king paid a
-visit to the University of Upsala, the most appropriate
-present he could think of making to that learned body, was
-an ancient drinking-horn,—of course, by way of encouraging
-the national tastes. And when he made a pilgrimage to
-the tomb of Odin and Freya, the most appropriate present
-which that learned body could make to him in their turn,
-was another ancient drinking-horn, which had the additional
-value of having once been the property of those heroic,
-but, if there is any truth in Sagas, exceedingly drunken
-divinities.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said Birger, good-humouredly (and it must
-be said that his was a case of good-humour under difficulties),
-“every nation has its own national sins to answer for, and it
-is no use for me to deny that ours is drunkenness. But what
-else can you expect from a people whose ideal of the joys of
-heaven used to be fighting all day, and after a huge dinner
-of boiled pork, getting beastly drunk upon beer? Gangler,
-in the prose Edda, asks Har, ‘How do your Heroes pass
-their time in Valhalla when they are not drinking?’ And
-Har replies, ‘Every day, as soon as they have dressed themselves,
-they ride out into the court, and fight till they cut
-each other in pieces. This is their pastime; but when meal-time
-approaches, they return to drink in Valhalla.’ Or, if
-you will have the same in verse, this is what the Vafthrudnis
-Mal says:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Einherjir all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On Odin’s plain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Hew daily each other</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While chosen the slain are;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the fray they then ride,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And drink ale with the Œsir.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p>“After all,” said the Parson, “this is nothing more than a
-ghostly tournament; and I have no doubt but that the
-haughty tournaments of the middle ages, if deprived of their
-mediæval gilding, would be very like the hewings, ale swillings,
-and pork banquetings of the Einherjir. I hope, though,
-that they brewed good ale in Asgard.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say,” said the Captain, “that, after their carousal,
-they wanted a little sleep to fit them for the toils of the next
-day; I am sure I do, and I vote we try what sort of couches
-Birger has prepared for us. Our once merry friends below
-seem to be as fast asleep as swine now, and as quiet. To
-tell you the truth, I am a little tired with our day’s work,
-and we certainly have another good day’s work cut out for us
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“With all my heart,” said Birger, finishing off what, from
-its colour, might have been a glass of water, but was not.
-As Odin says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“No one will charge thee</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With evil, if early</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou goest to slumber.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Come along, then,” said the Captain, “turn in; and may
-the Nyss to whom we have sacrificed send us to-morrow ‘a
-southerly wind and a cloudy sky.’”</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p>There are several national songs in Norway. That which Torkel sings
-is an ancient song, and has been adapted and arranged as a chorus, by
-Hullah; but it is not that which is generally known as “Gammle
-Norgé.” This, though eminently popular, is but a modern composition.
-Its author is Bjerregaard, a Norse poet of some eminence. It has been
-thus rendered into English by Mr. Latham:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Minstrel, awaken the harp from its slumbers!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Strike for old Norway, the land of the free!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">High and heroic in soul-stirring numbers,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Clime of our fathers, we strike it for thee!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Old recollections</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Awake our affections,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They hallow the name of the land of our birth;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Each heart beats its loudest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Each cheek glows its proudest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For Norway the Ancient, the Throne of the Earth!</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Spirit! look back on her far-flashing glory,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The far-flashing meteor that bursts on thy glance,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On chieftain and hero immortal in story,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They press to the battle like maids to the dance.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The blood flows before them,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The wave dashes o’er them,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They reap with the sword what they plough with the keel;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Enough that they leave</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">To the country that bore them</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bosoms to bleed for her freedom and weal.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Shrine of the Northman, the Temple of Freedom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stands like a rock where the stormy wind breaks;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The tempests howl round it, but little he’ll heed them,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Freely he thinks, and as freely he speaks.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The bird in its motion,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The wave in its ocean,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Scarcely can rival his liberty’s voice;</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Yet he obeys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">With a willing devotion</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Laws of his making and kings of his choice.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Land of the forest, the fell, and the fountain,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Blest with the wealth of the field and the flood,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Steady and truthful, the sons of thy mountain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Pay the glad price of thy rights with their blood.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Ocean hath bound thee,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Freedom hath found thee,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Flourish, old Norway, thy flag be unfurled!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Free as the breezes</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">And breakers around thee—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The pride of thy children, the Throne of the World!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE HELL FALL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“If thou hadst not been leading a life of sin—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The sun shines over Enen—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou wouldst have given me water thy bare hand within—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Under the linden green.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now, this is the penance that on thee I lay:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Eight years in the wood shalt thou live from this day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And no food shall pass thy lips between,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save only the leaves of the linden green;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And no other drink shalt thou have at all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save the dew on the linden leaves so small;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And no other bed shall be pressed by thee,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save only the roots of the linden tree.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When eight long years were gone and spent,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Jesus the Lord to Magdalene went—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now shall Heaven’s mercy thee restore—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The sun shines over Enen—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Go, Magdalena, and sin no more</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Under the linden green.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Svenska Folk-visor.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Whether the Spirits of the Flood and Fell considered
-themselves complimented by the homage which had been paid
-to them, or whether things would have turned out exactly
-the same had there been no offering at all, is a mystery of
-mythology which we will not take upon ourselves to determine.
-Certain it is, that when the next morning was ushered
-in with a soft westerly breeze and a dull cloudy sky, interspersed
-with bright transient gleams of joyous sunshine, such
-as salmon love, the Nyssar got the credit of it all. Not that
-the Norwegians were at first aware of the extent of their
-blessings, for the barbarians are all unversed in the mysteries
-of fly-fishing, but they were not long in finding it out, from
-the smiling looks and congratulatory expressions of their
-employers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p>Englishmen might have felt dull and heavy after the consumption
-of such enormous quantities of brandy: English
-heads might have ached, and English hands might have felt
-shaky during the operation of getting sober. Thor himself
-could not have risen from the challenge cup, set before him
-by Loki Utgard, with more complete self-possession than did
-Tom and Torkel, and the mighty Jacob. Sleep and drink
-had fled with the shades of night, and it was a steady hand
-that served out the coffee that morning.</p>
-
-<p>The party had long separated to their respective pursuits,
-for the impatience of the fishermen and the actual dearth of
-provisions in the camp did not allow of idling.</p>
-
-<p>Towards noon the breeze had entirely sunk, and the sun,
-having succeeded in dispelling the clouds, was shining in its
-summer strength into the confined valley, concentrating its
-rays from the encircling rocks upon the channel of the river,
-and pouring them on the encampment as on the focus of a
-burning-glass.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, however, a depressing, moist, stewing heat;
-there was a lightness and elasticity in the air unknown in
-southern climes, or if known at all, known only on the higher
-Alps, and in the middle of the summer. Men felt the heat,
-no doubt, and the thermometer indicated a high degree of
-temperature; but there was nothing in it enervating, nothing
-predisposing to slothfulness or inaction; on the contrary, the
-nerves seemed braced under it, and the spirits buoyant.
-Work and exercise were a pleasure, not a toil; and if the
-Parson did stretch himself out under the shade of the great
-birch tree, it was the natural result of a well-spent morning
-of downright hard work. Wielding a flail is a trifle compared
-to wielding a salmon rod; and he and the Captain had,
-both of them, wielded it that morning to some purpose, for
-the salmon had not been unmindful of the soft breeze and
-the cloudy skies, but had risen to the fly with appetites truly
-Norwegian.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob and Torkel, with one of the boatmen in the distance,
-were up to their eyes in salt and blood, cleaning, splitting,
-salting, and otherwise preparing the spare fish for a three
-days’ sojourn in the smoking-house; while three or four<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-bright-looking fresh run salmon, selected from the heap, and
-ready crimped for the kettle or toasting skewers, were glittering
-from under the green and constantly-wetted branches,
-with which they were protected from the heat of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Birger, who was much more at home with his gun than
-with his fishing-rod, had gone out that morning early, attended
-by his two men, in order to reconnoitre the country,
-and see what its capabilities were; for the Parson’s report
-had been confined to its excellencies as a fishing station. The
-Captain was still on the river; every now and then distant
-glimpses of his boat could be seen as he shifted from throw
-to throw, and occasionally condescended even to harl the
-river, by way of resting his arms. Such a fishing morning
-as they had enjoyed, is not often to be met with, and the
-Captain would not take the hint which the cloudless sun had
-been giving him for the last half-hour.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, whose rod was pitched in a neighbouring
-juniper, and whose fly, a sober dark-green, as big as a bird,
-floated out faintly in the expiring breeze, was stretched at
-full length on the turf, occupied, so far as a tired man who is
-resting himself can be said to be occupied at all, in watching
-the motions of a little red-headed woodpecker, that was darting
-from branch to branch and from tree to tree, making the
-forest ring again with its sharp succession of taps, as it drove
-the insects out of their hiding-places beneath the outside
-bark. Taps they were, no doubt, and given by the bird’s
-beak, too, but by no means like the distinct and deliberate tap
-of the yellow woodpecker, every one of which may be counted:
-so rapid were they, that they sounded more like the scrooping
-of a branch torn violently from the tree, and so loud, that
-it was difficult to conceive that such a sound could be caused
-by a bird comparatively so diminutive.</p>
-
-<p>The woodpecker, which seemed almost tame and by no
-means disconcerted by the presence of strangers, pursued its
-occupation with the utmost confidence, though quite within
-reach of the Parson’s rod.</p>
-
-<p>“Take care,” said the Parson, as Torkel approached, “do
-not disturb it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Disturb what?” said Torkel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Parson pointed to the woodpecker, which was not a
-dozen yards from them. The bird paused a moment, and
-looked at them, but evinced no symptoms of timidity.</p>
-
-<p>“What, the Gertrude-bird?” said Torkel; “no one would
-disturb her while working out her penance, poor thing! She
-knows that well enough; look at her.” And, in truth, the
-bird did seem to know it, for another loud rattle of taps
-formed an appropriate accompaniment to Torkel’s speech;
-though Birger and the Captain at that moment came up, the
-one with his last fish, the other with a couple of ducks, a
-tjäder, and two brace of grouse, of one sort or another,
-which he had met with during his morning’s exploration.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson nodded to the Captain, congratulated Birger,
-but, ever ready for a legend, turned round to Torkel.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by a Gertrude-bird, and what is her
-penance?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Birger smiled—not unbelievingly, though; for the legend
-is as well known in Sweden as it is in Norway; and
-few people, in either of these countries, who believe in anything
-at all, are altogether sceptical on matters of popular
-superstition.</p>
-
-<p>“That bird,” said Torkel, “or at least her ancestors, was
-once a woman; and it is a good lesson that she reads us
-every time we see her. God grant that we may all be the
-better for it,” he added, reverentially.</p>
-
-<p>“One day she was kneading bread, in her trough, under
-the eaves of her house, when our Lord passed by, leaning on
-St. Peter. She did not know that it was the Lord and his
-Apostle, for they looked like two poor men, who were travelling
-past her cottage door.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Give us of your dough, for the love of God,’ said the
-Lord Christ; ‘we have come far across the fjeld, and have
-fasted long!’</p>
-
-<p>“Gertrude pinched off a small piece for them, but on rolling
-it on her trough to get it into shape, it grew and grew,
-and filled up the trough completely. She looked at it in
-wonder. ‘No,’ said she, ‘that is more than you want;’ so
-she pinched off a smaller piece, and rolled it out as before;
-but the smaller piece filled up the trough, just as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-other had done, and Gertrude put it aside, too, and pinched
-a smaller bit still. But the miracle was just the same; the
-smaller bit filled up the trough as full as the largest-sized
-kneading that she had ever put in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Gertrude’s heart was hardened still more; she put that
-aside too, resolving, so soon as the strangers had left her, to
-divide all her dough into little bits, and to roll it out into
-great loaves. ‘I cannot give you any to-day,’ said she; ‘go
-on your journey, and the Lord prosper you, but you must
-not stop at my house.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then the Lord Christ was angry; and her eyes were
-opened, and she saw whom she had forbidden to come into
-her house, and she fell down on her knees; but the Lord said,
-‘I gave you plenty, but that hardened your heart, so plenty
-was not a blessing to you; I will try you now with the
-blessing of poverty; you shall from henceforth seek your food
-day by day, and always between the wood and the bark.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
-But forasmuch as I see your penitence to be sincere, this
-shall not be for ever: as soon as your back is entirely clothed
-in mourning this shall cease, for by that time you will have
-learned to use your gifts rightly.’</p>
-
-<p>“Gertrude flew from the presence of the Lord, for she was
-already a bird, but her feathers were blackened already, from
-her mourning; and from that time forward she and her
-descendants have, all the year round, sought their food between
-the wood and the bark; but the feathers of their back
-and wings get more mottled with black as they grow older;
-and when the white is quite covered the Lord Christ takes
-them for his own again. No Norwegian will ever hurt a
-Gertrude-bird, for she is always under the Lord’s protection,
-though he is punishing her for the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bravo, Torkel,” said the Parson. “I could not preach
-a better sermon than that myself, or give you sounder
-theology.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem always on the look-out for a superstition,”
-said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“So I am,” said the Parson. “There is nothing that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-displays the character of a people so well as their national
-legends.”</p>
-
-<p>“But do you not consider that in lending your countenance
-to them, and looking as if you believed them, you are lending
-your countenance to superstition itself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “what would you have me do?
-laugh them out of it, like Miss Martineau? And if I succeeded
-in that, which I should not, what should I have done
-then? Why, opened a fallow for scepticism. Superstition
-is the natural evidence of the Unseen in the minds of the
-ignorant; to be superstitious, is to believe in a Being superior
-to ourselves; and this is in itself the first step to spiritual
-advancement. Inform the mind, teaching it to distinguish
-the true from the false, and superstition—that is to say, the
-reverence for the unseen—brightens into true religion.
-Take it away by force, or quench it by ridicule, and you
-have an unoccupied corner of the soul for every bad passion
-to take root in. Superstition is the religion of the
-ignorant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there is truth in that,” said the Captain. “When
-a boy becomes a man, he will not play prison-base, or go a
-bird’s-nesting; but prison-base and bird’s-nesting are no bad
-preparation for manly daring and gallant enterprise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very true; and when the boy is capable of the latter
-he will leave off his prison-base and bird’s-nesting without
-any trouble on your part.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are good superstitions as well as bad,” said Birger.
-“To be afraid of thinning down a noxious bird, like the
-magpie, as our people are, because the devil has them under
-his protection, is a bad superstition. It is a distrust in the
-power and providence of God; but, though it is equally a
-superstition to imagine that one bird is more a favourite with
-God than another, yet the boy who, in your country, in the
-ardour of his first shooting expedition, turns aside his gun
-because</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Cock-robins and kitty-wrens</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are God Almighty’s cocks and hens;</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">or, in our country, from the Gertrude-bird, because she is
-working out the penance which Christ has imposed upon her,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-has, in so doing, exercised self-denial, has acknowledged the
-existence of a God, and has admitted the sanctity of His
-protection. Many a superstition has as good a moral as a
-parable, and this is one of them.”</p>
-
-<p>The approach of dinner at once scared away the Gertrude-bird,
-and put an end to Birger’s moralising; and as they
-discussed the pink curdy salmon, the produce of the morning’s
-sport, and revelled in the anticipation of strawberry and
-raspberry jam, the fumes of which every now and then were
-wafted to them from the kitchen, and in the certainty of roast
-game and smoked fish for future consumption, they laid their
-plans for the afternoon’s sport.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was still shining in its strength and cloudlessness,
-and bade fair so to shine for the rest of the day; and the
-breeze, which had been for some time failing, had now sunk
-into a perfect calm. No salmon or trout were to be caught
-by the usual means—that was clear enough. Jacob, however,
-who had procured what might be called with great propriety
-a kettle of fish, for he had borrowed from a neighbouring
-farm-house one of the kettles in which they simmer
-their milk, and had got it full of minnows and other small
-fry—proposed setting his långref. This was unanimously
-assented to, for occupation is pleasing, and so is variety;
-and eels, pike, and flounders, which were likely to be
-its produce, were no bad additions to a larder less remarkable
-for the variety of its provisions than for their
-abundance.</p>
-
-<p>But the grand scheme was one proposed by the Captain,
-who had been reconnoitring the higher parts of the river,
-and had discovered a very likely place for a bright day,
-but one which could not be reached from the shore, or by
-any of the ordinary means of propelling a boat. It was a
-fall terminating, not as falls generally do, in a huge basin,
-but in a shoot or rapid of considerable length, like a gigantic
-mill race, which, after a straight but turbulent course of a
-couple of hundred yards, shot all at once into the middle of a
-round and eddying pool. It was called the Hell Fall, probably
-from its fury, for the word is Norske; but possibly
-also, from Hela’s Fall, Hela being the Goddess of Darkness;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-and well did the yawning chasm, through which the waters
-rushed, deserve that name, overshadowed as it was by its
-black walls of rock. It was upon this that the Captain had
-reckoned; whatever were the case with the rest of the world,
-sunshine or storm must be alike to it, and to the tenants of
-its gloomy recesses.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain was confident the thing could be done, and
-the Parson was as confident that if it could be done, and the
-fly introduced into the numerous turn-holes round which the
-water boiled and bubbled, the rapid would require neither
-cloud nor wind to make it practicable. And Birger, who
-was a great man at contrivances, asseverated strongly that it
-should be done.</p>
-
-<p>The first job, however, was to set the långref, and that
-was a mode of poaching with which they were all familiar.
-The långref, a line of two or three hundred fathoms in length,
-with a snood and a hook at each fathom, was baited from
-the minnow kettle, and coiled, so that the baited hooks lay
-together on a board; and one end having been made fast to
-a stump on the landing place, the boat was pulled diagonally
-down and across the stream, and the line gradually paid out
-in such a manner that the hooks were carried by the current,
-so as to hang free of the back line; the other end, which
-came within a few yards of the farther bank, was anchored
-by a heavy stone, backed by a smaller one, and the whole
-affair left to fish for itself.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, some of the men had been sent forward
-with ropes, and with the boat-hooks and oars belonging
-to the expedition; for, though boats are always procurable
-in a place where the river forms the usual means of communication,
-their gear is not always to be relied on in cases of
-difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>The fishermen selected their short lake rods, as better
-adapted to the work they were going about than the great
-two-handed salmon rods with which they had been fishing
-that morning; and having fitted fresh casting lines, which, in
-consideration of the work they were going about, were of the
-strongest twisted gut they could find, they took the path up
-the river.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wonder what are the proper flies of this river,” said
-the Captain. “In Scotland every place has its own set of
-flies, and you are always told that you will do nothing at all,
-unless you get the very colours and the very flies peculiar to
-the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to have done pretty well on this river, at all
-events,” said Birger, “without any such information.”</p>
-
-<p>“No information is to be despised,” said the Parson.
-“The oldest fisherman will always find something to be
-learnt from men who have passed their lives on a particular
-stream, and have studied it from their boyhood. There is,
-however, only one general principle, and that will always
-hold good. By this the experienced fisherman will never be
-at a loss about suiting his fly to the water. Here is the
-Captain now; we have had no consultation, and yet I will
-venture to say that we are both fishing with flies of a similar
-character. What fly did you catch your fish with, this
-morning, Captain?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been using my old Scotch flies,” said the Captain,
-“such as they tie on the Tay and Spey,<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> and the largest of
-the sort I could find.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure you did; and tell Birger why you did not use
-your Irish flies.”</p>
-
-<p>“They were too gaudy for the water,” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That, Birger, will give you the principle,” said the
-Parson. “The Captain has been very successful with flies
-belonging to another river; now, look at mine, which I tied
-last night, while I was waiting till you came home from
-sacrificing to Nyssen. Except in size, this is as different as
-possible from the Captain’s; and yet its principle is precisely
-the same; mine is a green silk body, black hackle, blackcock
-wing, no tinsel, and nothing bright about it, except this
-single golden pheasant topping for a tail. Now, the Tay
-flies are quite different to look at; they are mostly brown
-or dun pig’s wool bodies, with natural red or brown hackles
-and mallard wings; but the principle of both is the same;
-they are sober, quiet flies, with no glitter or gaudiness about
-them; and the Captain shall tell you what induced him to
-select such as these.”</p>
-
-<p>“I chose the largest fly I could find,” said the Captain;
-“because the water here is very deep and strong; and as
-the salmon lies near the bottom, I must have a large fly to
-attract his attention; but I must not have a gaudy fly,
-because the water is so clear that the sparkle of the tinsel
-would be more glittering than anything in nature; and the
-fish, when he had risen and come near enough to distinguish
-it, would be very apt to turn short.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have it now, precisely,” said the Parson; “the
-depth of the water regulates the size of the fly, and the
-clearness of the water its colours. This rule, of course, is
-not without exceptions; if it were, there would be no
-science in fishing. The sun, the wind, the season, the state
-of the atmosphere must also be taken into consideration;
-for instance, this rapid we are going to fish now, is the very
-same water we have been fishing in below, and therefore
-just as clear, but it is rough, and overhung by rocks and
-trees. I mean, therefore, to put on a gayer fly than anything
-we have used hitherto. But here we are,” he said, as
-they looked down upon the rush of waters, “and upon my
-word, an ugly place it is.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson might well say that, for the waters were rushing
-below with frightful rapidity. Above them was the
-fall, where the river, compressed into a narrow fissure, shot<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-through it like an enormous spout, into a channel, wider
-certainly than the spout itself, but still very narrow; while
-the perpendicular walls reminded the spectators of an artificial
-lock right in the middle of the stream; at the very
-foot of the fall, was a solid rock, on the back of which the
-waters heaped themselves up, and found their way into the
-straight channel by rushing round it. In fact, without this
-check, their rapidity would have been too great for anything
-to swim in them; and as it was they looked anything but
-inviting.</p>
-
-<p>“A very awkward place!” said the Parson! “and how do
-you mean to fish this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come away a little from the roar of the waters,” said the
-Captain, “and I will explain my plans. You see that flat
-ledge of rock below us, just above the rush of the water;
-that spot we can reach by means of the rope. Make it fast
-to that tree, Tom: you learned knotting in the English
-navy, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom grinned, and did as he was told, and the Captain
-ascertained the strength of his work practically, by climbing
-down the face of the rock, and reconnoitring personally the
-ledge he had pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said he, when he had returned, “we will get the
-boat as near as we can to this rush of water, and then veer
-out a rope to her from this rock: birch ropes will float, and
-the stream is quite sufficient to carry it down. If we make
-the boat fast to this, we may command every inch of the
-rapid, and you see yourself, how many turn-holes are made
-by the points of the rock which project from either side.
-You may depend upon it, every one of these contains a
-salmon, and the water is so troubled and covered with foam,
-that not one of these fish will know or care whether the sun
-is shining or not.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think your reasoning is sound enough,” said the Parson;
-“but if the boat capsizes, the best swimmer in Norway
-would be drowned, or knocked to pieces against these rocky
-points.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">HELL FALL.</p>
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_119">p. 119.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“But what is to capsize the boat? I am not going to
-take young hands with me; we all know our work; at all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-events, I mean to make the first trial of my own plan myself,
-you have nothing to do but to stand on the rock, and haul
-up the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson looked at Birger.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think there is much danger,” said he; “and if
-the Captain will manage the rod, I will see to the boat.
-Tom shall take the other oar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “you have left me the safest
-job; but I do not quite like to see you do it. However,
-I suppose you will; so here goes to see that you
-run no more danger than is absolutely necessary.” So
-saying, he eased himself down the rope to the flat rock,
-followed by Torkel and Pierson, who had previously
-thrown down a coil of birch rope; while the Captain, Birger,
-and Tom went down to the place below the rapid, where
-the boat was moored to a stump of a tree that grew over the
-river.</p>
-
-<p>The birch rope floated on the top of the racing water, and
-soon reached the great turn-hole below the rapid, where the
-current was not so furious but that the boat could easily be
-managed. After one or two misses, Birger caught the end
-of it with his boat-hook, and, passing it round all the
-thwarts, secured it to the aftermost one; placing an axe in
-the stern sheets, in which the Captain had seated himself
-with his short lake-rod in his hand, Tom sat amidships with
-the paddles, while Birger himself stood forward with the
-boat-hook, to fend off from any point of rock that the eddies
-might sheer the boat against.</p>
-
-<p>When all was ready, he waved his cap—for no voice could
-be heard amid the roar of water—and the Parson and
-his party began steadily hauling on the rope. The boat
-entered the dark cleft, and, though her progress was very
-slow, cut a feather through the water, as if she were racing
-over it.</p>
-
-<p>Tom, by dipping one or other paddle, steered from side
-to side, as he was bid; and the Captain threw his fly into
-the wreaths of foam which gathered in the dark corners; for
-in the most furious of rapids, there will always be spots of
-water perfectly stationary, where the eddies, that have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-been turned off by projecting rocks, meet again the
-main current; and, in those places, the salmon will invariably
-rest themselves, accomplishing their passage, as it
-were, by stages.</p>
-
-<p>From side to side swung the boat—now at rest, now
-hauled upon by the line, according to the messages which
-Birger telegraphed with his cap; but, for some time, without
-any result, except that of convincing the Parson that the
-dangers he apprehended, were more in appearance than in
-reality; so that they were beginning to think that their ingenuity
-would be the sole reward of their pains. At length,
-there was a sudden tug at the line, the water was far too
-agitated to permit the rise to be seen, and the Captain’s rod
-bent like a bow.</p>
-
-<p>“Haul up, a few fathoms,” said he, raising his rod so as to
-get his line, as much as possible, out of the action of the
-water, which was forcing it into a bight. “Now, steer
-across, Tom, to the opposite side. We must try the
-strength of the tackle—‘Pull for the half,’ as we say in
-Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p>The fish had not attempted to run, knowing that its best
-chance of safety was in the hole in which it lay, but had
-sunk sulkily to the bottom. No sooner, however, did the
-boat feel the current on her bow, than she sheered across to
-the opposite side; and the Captain, stopping his line from
-running out, drew the salmon by main force from its shelter,
-who, feeling the strength of the current, for a moment attempted
-to stem it; but soon, the Captain, adroitly dropping
-his hand, turned tail and raced away, downward, with the
-combined velocity of the stream, and its own efforts.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain paused a moment, to make sure that the
-fish was in earnest, and then cut the rope; and boat, fish,
-and all, came tumbling down the rapid into the turn-hole
-below.</p>
-
-<p>Once there, it became an ordinary trial of skill between
-man and fish—such as always occurs whenever a salmon is
-hooked in rough water—and that the Captain was well up
-to. It was impossible for it again to head up the dangerous
-ground of the rapid, or to face the rush of the waters with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-the strain of the line upon it; so it raced backwards and
-forwards, and up and down in the deep pool, while Tom
-took advantage of every turn to paddle his boat quietly into
-still water. At last, the Captain succeeded in turning his
-fish under a projecting tree, upon which the Parson, who, as
-soon as he had seen the turn matters were likely to take, had
-shinned up the rope, and hurried to the scene of action, was
-standing gaff in hand to receive it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well done, all hands!” said the Captain, as the Parson
-freed his gaff from the back fin of a twenty-pound salmon, and
-Birger hooked on to the tree, and brought his boat to shore.
-“Well done, all hands! it was no easy matter to invade such
-territories as that; but one wants a little additional excitement
-after such a fishing morning as we have had.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we may set you down as <i>bene meritus de patriâ</i>,”
-said the Parson; “it is just as well to have a fresh resource
-on a bright afternoon like this; the time may come when we
-may want it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then, for another fish,” said the Captain; “Birger
-shall try his hand at the rod this time.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger would have excused himself on account of his want
-of skill, but was very easily persuaded, and, thus they took
-turns, now securing a fish, now cutting a line against an
-unseen rock, now losing one by downright hard pulling,
-till, when the light began to fail, and the dangers to grow
-more real from the darkness, they made fast their boat
-to the stump, and returned victorious to the camp, having
-added three or four fish to their store, and those the finest
-they had caught that day.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.<br />
-<span class="smaller">DEPARTURE FROM TORJEDAHL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Og Trolde, Hexer, Nysser i hver Vraae.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Finn Magnussen.</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And Witches, Trolls, and Nysses in each nook.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Hallo! what is the matter now?” said the Captain, who had
-been out with his gun that morning, and on his return caught
-sight of the Parson sitting disconsolate on the river’s bank.
-By the waters of Torjedahl we sat down and wept. “What
-has gone wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, everything has gone wrong,” said the Parson
-peevishly; “look at my line.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do seem to have lost your casting line, certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I have, and half my reel line beside.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very tinkerish, I dare say, but do not grieve over it; put
-on a new one and hold your tongue about it; no one saw
-you, and I promise not to tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can you be so absurd?” said the Parson, “look at
-the river, and tell me how we are to fish that; just look at
-those baulks of timber floating all over it. I had on as
-fine a fish as ever I saw in my life,—five-and-twenty pounds
-if he was an ounce, when down came these logs, and one of
-them takes my reel line, with sixty yards out, and cuts it right
-in the middle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is provoking,” said the Captain, “enough to
-make a saint swear, let alone a parson; but, hang it, man, it
-is only once in the way. Come along, do not look behind you;
-I am in a hurry to be at it myself, I came home on purpose,
-I was ashamed to waste so glorious a fishing day as this in
-the fjeld.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is just the thing that annoys me,” said the Parson;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-“it is, as you say, a most lovely fishing day,—I never saw a
-more promising one; and I have just heard that these logs
-will take three days floating by at the very least, and while
-they are on the river I defy the best fisherman in all England
-to land anything bigger than a graul.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said the Captain, “have the scoundrels been
-cutting a whole forest?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is what Torkel tells me,” said the Parson; “he says
-that in the winter they cut their confounded firs, and when
-the snow is on the ground they just square them, haul them
-down to the river or its tributaries, where they leave them to
-take care of themselves, and when the ice melts in the spring,
-down come the trees with it. But there are three or four
-lakes, it seems, through which this river passes—that, by-the-by,
-is the reason why it is so clear; and, as the baulks
-would be drifting all manner of ways when they got into
-these lakes, and would get stranded on the shores instead of
-going down the stream, they make what they call a boom
-at or near the mouth of the river, that is to say, they chain
-together a number of baulks, end-ways, and moor them in a
-bight across the river, so that they catch everything that
-floats. Here they get hold of the loose baulks, make them
-into rafts, and navigate them along the lakes, launching them
-again into the river at the other end, and catching them
-again at the next boom in the same way. They have, it
-seems, just broken up the contents of one of these booms
-above us. It will take three days to clear it out, and another
-day for the straggling pieces.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” said the Captain, “three blessed days taken
-from the sum of our lives; what on earth is to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “that is exactly what we must
-see about, for it is quite certain that there is nothing to be
-done on the water. Before I began grumbling I sent off
-Torkel to look for Birger—for we must hold a council of
-war upon it. O! there is Birger,” said he, as they crossed
-the little rise which forms the head of the Aal Foss and came
-in sight of the camp and the river below it; “Torkel must
-have missed him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo!” said Birger, who was with Piersen in one of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-the boats, fishing up with his boat-hook the back line of the
-långref, and apparently he had made an awkward mess of it—“hallo
-there! get another boat and come and help me, these
-baulks have played Old Scratch with the långref; it has
-made a goodly catch, too, last night, as far as I can see, but
-we want more help to get it in.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson had the discretion to keep his own counsel,
-but the fact was, it was he who was the cause both of the
-abundant catch and of the present trouble. The small eels
-had been plaguing them, for some nights successively, by
-sucking off and nibbling to pieces baits which they were too
-small to swallow, and thus preventing the larger fish from
-getting at them. The Parson had seen this, and had set his
-wits to work to circumvent them. By attaching corks to
-the back line, he had floated the hooks above the reach of
-the eels, which he knew would never venture far from the
-bottom, while pike, gös, id, perch, the larger eels, and occasionally
-even trout, would take the floating bait more readily
-when they found it in mid-water.</p>
-
-<p>This would have done exceedingly well, had he looked at
-it early in the morning; that, however, he had not exactly
-forgotten, but had neglected to do. Time was precious, and
-he was unwilling to waste it on hauling the långref. Jacob,
-whose business it was to haul it, had been sent down to
-Christiansand on the preceding day, with two of the boatmen,
-for supplies, and had not yet returned; and the Parson,
-holding his tongue about his experiment, and proposing to
-himself the pleasure of hauling the långref when the mid-day
-sun should be too hot for salmon-fishing, had gone out
-early with his two-handed rod. In the meanwhile the
-baulks had come down, and the very first of them, catching
-the centre of the floating bight, had cut it in two, and had
-thus permitted the whole of the Parson’s great catch of fish
-to entangle themselves at their pleasure.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_124">p. 124.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was these <i>disjecta membra</i> that Birger was busying himself
-about; the task was not an easy one; and if it were, the
-guardsman was not altogether a proficient. But, even when
-the reinforcement arrived, there was nothing to be done beyond
-lifting the whole tangle bodily into the boat, releasing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-the fish from the hooks, and then, partly by patience, partly
-by a liberal use of the knife, to get out the tangle on
-shore. The further half gave them the most trouble to find;
-it had been moored to a stone, and the back line had been
-strong enough to drag it some way down the river before it
-broke. It was, however, at last discovered and secured, and
-the catch was of sufficient magnitude to ensure a supply of
-fish, notwithstanding the logs.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop a minute,” said the Captain, as the boats’ heads
-were put up the stream on their return; “we have not
-got all the långref yet, I am sure; I see another fish; just
-pull across that ripple, Parson, a few yards below the end of
-that stranded log. Yes, to be sure it is, and a salmon, too, and
-as dead as Harry the Eighth. Steady there! hold water!”
-and he made a rake for the line with his boat-hook. “Why,
-what have we got here? it is much too fine for the långref.
-As I live, it is your own line. To be sure; here it runs.
-Steady! Let me get a hold of it with my hand, it may not
-be hitched in the wood firmly, and if it slips we shall lose it
-entirely. That will do: all right. That must be the log
-that broke you; it must have stranded here after coming
-down the Aal Foss, with the fish still on it—and—hurrah!
-here is the fish all safe—and, I say, Parson, remarkably fine
-fish it is, certainly! not quite twenty-five pounds, though,”—holding
-up the fish by the tail, and measuring it against
-his own leg; for his trousers were marked with inches, from
-the pocket-button downwards,—a yard measure having been
-stitched on the seam. “You have not such a thing as a
-steelyard, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, laughing—rather confusedly, though,—produced
-from his slip pocket the required instrument.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! I thought so, ten pounds and a half; the biggest
-fish always do get away, that is certain, especially if they
-are not caught again; it is a thousand pities I put my eye
-on this one. I have spoilt your story?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said the Parson, “if you have spoilt my story,
-you have made a good one for yourself, so take the other oar
-and let us pull for the camp.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Birger,” said the Captain, when the boats had been made
-fast, and the spoils left in the charge of Piersen, “Torkel has
-been telling the Parson that we are to have three days of
-these logs. If the rascal speaks the truth, what is to be done
-by us fishermen?”</p>
-
-<p>“The rascal does speak the truth in this instance, I will
-be bound for it,” said Birger; “he knows the river well,
-and besides, it is what they do on every river in Norway
-that is deep enough to float a baulk.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be done, then? there is no fishing on the river
-while this is going on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you what we can do,” said Birger; “two or
-three days ago—that day when I returned to the camp so
-late—if you remember, I told you that I had fallen in with
-a lonely lake in the course of my rambles. There was a
-boat there belonging to a sœter in the neighbourhood, which
-Piersen knew of, and I missed a beautiful chance at a flight
-of ducks. However, that is neither here nor there; the
-people at the sœter told me that the great lake-char was to
-be found there; so the next day I sent Piersen, who understands
-laying lines if he does not understand fly-fishing, to
-set some trimmers for them. I vote we shoot our way to
-the lake, look at these lines, get another crack at the ducks,
-and make our way to the Toftdahl (which, if the map is to
-be trusted, must be somewhere within reach), fish there for a
-day, shoot our way back again, and by that time the wooden
-flood will be over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bravo, Birger,” said the Captain, “a very promising plan,
-and here, in good time, comes Commissary-General Jacob
-with the supplies. I see his boat just over that point, entangled
-among a lump of logs. I vote we take him with us;
-no man makes such coffee. I have not had a cup worth
-drinking since you sent him down the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“You cannot take the poor fellow a long march to-day,”
-said the Parson, considerately, “he has just been pulling up
-the stream from Christiansand.”</p>
-
-<p>“He pull! is that all you know of Jacob? I will venture
-to say he has not pulled a stroke since he started;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-look at the rascal, how he lolls at his ease, with his legs over
-the hamper, while the men are half in the water, struggling
-their way through the obstacles.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see the scamp,” said the Parson; “upon my word, he
-puts me in mind of what the nigger observed on landing in
-England; man work, horse work, ox work, everything work,
-pig the only gentleman; Jacob is the only gentleman in our
-expedition.”</p>
-
-<p>“I admire that man,” said Birger; “that is the true practical
-philosophy, never to do anything for yourself if you can
-get other people to do it for you. But I think those fellows
-had better make haste about it. I have known such a hitch
-of timber as that bridge the whole river, from side to side, in
-ten minutes; they accumulate very rapidly when they once
-take ground—ah! there goes the boat free; all right; but I
-certainly began to tremble for my provisions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, we will take gentleman Jacob,” said the
-Captain, “I cannot give up my coffee.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so,” said Birger; “we will leave our three boatmen
-here in charge of the camp; Tom, Torkel, and Piersen
-can carry the fishing-rods and our knapsacks, which we must
-pack in light marching order. Jacob shall provide for the
-kitchen, and we will each of us take a day’s provisions in our
-havresacs, and our guns on our shoulders; the odds are, we
-knock over grouse and wild fowl, by the way, enough to
-supply us nobly. And even if we do not meet with sport,
-we shall at all events have a pleasant pic-nicking trip, and
-see something of the country, while the Parson, who is so
-fond of open air, may indulge himself with sleeping under a
-tree, and contemplating the moon at his ease.”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel, who had come up while they were watching Jacob’s
-progress, and had learnt their plans, informed them of a
-sœter which lay nearly in their proposed course, and in which
-he had himself often received hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said the Captain, “that will do for us, and
-we will leave the Parson, if he prefers it,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“His hollow tree,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His crust of bread and liberty.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“You may laugh,” said the Parson, “but the time will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-come when you will find out certain disagreeables in a Norwegian
-dwelling, which may make you think with less contempt
-on the hollow tree.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Parson is of the same mind as the Douglas,” said the
-Captain, “he likes better to hear the lark sing, than the
-mouse squeak.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like clean heather better than dirty sheep-skin,” said
-the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“And musquitoes better than fleas,” added the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Bother the musquitoes: I did not think of them.”<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-<p>“They will soon remind you,” said Birger, “if we happen
-to encamp near standing water.” And he went on packing
-his knapsack to the tune of “Should Auld Acquaintance
-be Forgot,” which he whistled with considerable taste and
-skill.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<p>Arrangements, such as these, are soon made; the three
-boatmen were left in charge of the camp, with full permission
-to get as drunk as they pleased; and, before Jacob
-had well stretched his legs, which had been cramped in
-the boat, he was stretching them on the mountain-side,
-marching a good way in the rear of the party, and grumbling
-as he marched.</p>
-
-<p>The mountains, which, all the way from Christiansand,
-hem in the river, so that not even a goat can travel along its
-banks, at Mosse Eurd and Wigeland recede on both sides,
-forming a sort of basin; and here, in a great measure, they
-lose their abrupt and perpendicular character. Close by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-water-side, there are a hundred, or two, of acres of inclosed
-ground comparatively flat, and either arable or meadow; not
-by any means in a ring fence, but spots cribbed here and there
-from the fjeld, which looks more like a gentleman’s park
-than anything else, with these little paddocks fenced out of
-it. The houses, too, are quite the picturesque houses that
-gentlemen in England ornament their estates with, so that
-the untidy plank fences seemed altogether out of character
-with the scenery. What one would look for here, is the
-neat park palings of England, or its trim quickset hedges.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond this, the ground becomes more broken and
-wooded, but without losing its parkish character; it is
-something like the forest grounds of the South Downs in
-England, only broken into detached hills and deep rises,
-with, occasionally, a bare ridge of rock forcing its way through
-the short green turf. The forest was mostly birch, with a
-few maples and sycamores, and, here and there, a fir; but
-every tree big enough for a timber stick, had long ago been
-floated down to the boom at Christiansand. The character
-of the whole scene was prettiness rather than beauty. The
-mountains, however, were no lower than they had been
-further down the river; it was as if their perpendicular
-sides had, in some antediluvian age, given way, and that, in
-the course of centuries, the fragments had become covered
-with trees and verdure.</p>
-
-<p>Among these broken pieces of mountain it was extremely
-easy for the traveller to lose his way; there was not the
-vestige of a path, that is to say, a path leading to any place
-to which he could possibly want to go. The grass was
-particularly good and sweet there, and sheep and cows are
-intensely conservative in their idiosyncracy; so stoutly had
-they kept up the principle of <i>stare super antiquas vias</i>, that
-the appearance was as if the whole region was thickly
-inhabited and intersected with foot-paths in every direction,
-while every animal that helps to make them rings its own
-individual bell, and carries its own individual brand, but
-pastures in uncontrolled liberty. A cow is a very good
-guide to a lost man, for, if he has patience to wait till evening,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-she is sure to feed her way to the sœter to be milked;
-but woe to the man who puts his trust in bullocks or in
-sheep; they feed at ease, and roam at pleasure, till the frosts
-and snows of approaching winter bring them home to the
-fold, the stall, and the salting-tub.</p>
-
-<p>Much of the shrubbery appearance of the scene is produced
-by the numerous plants of the vaccinium tribe, the
-bright glossy leaves of which look like myrtle; and the blue
-aconite, and the gentian, and the lily of the valley, flowers
-which we seldom meet with in England, absolutely wild,
-and the familiar leaves of the raspberry, and black currant,
-suggest ideas of home, while the turf on which the
-traveller treads, looks as if it had been mown by the gardener
-that very morning.</p>
-
-<p>The course, though varied by quite as many ups and
-downs as there were ins and outs, was, upon the whole,
-continually ascending; and, as the higher regions were
-attained, and the facilities of transport diminished, the tall
-stately fir began to assert its natural supremacy among the
-northern sylva. Still, however, there was enough of birch,
-and even of the softer woods, to diversify the foliage, and
-preserve the park-like aspect. Heather, of which the Parson
-had anticipated making his couch, there was none; but,
-on the other hand, there was no furze to irritate the shins,
-or brambles to tear the clothes. The latter does grow in
-Norway, and is much more prized for its fruit than either
-raspberry or strawberry, but the former cannot stand the
-winters. Linnæus is said to have sat for hours in delighted
-contemplation of an English field of furze in full
-bloom, and the plant is generally seen in Swedish conservatories
-to this day, or set out in pots as oranges and myrtles
-are with us.</p>
-
-<p>The mid-day sun had scattered the clouds of the morning,
-as, in truth, it very generally does on a Norway summer
-day, and, shining down in patches of brilliant light through
-the openings, added to the beauty of the scene, and diminished
-in an equal proportion all regrets at leaving the
-Torjedahl behind; for it was quite evident that, except<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-in the Hell Fall, or the pools, little or nothing could
-be done on so bright a day, had the baulks been entirely out
-of the question.</p>
-
-<p>It was an hour or two past noon when they arrived at the
-ridge which divides the valley of the Torjedahl from that of
-the Aalfjer—not that ridge is the proper expression, for the
-ground had, for some miles, become so nearly level that,
-were it not for a little rill, whose line of rushes had been
-for some time their guide, they would not have known
-whether they were ascending or descending. The country
-still preserved its character of beauty, but its features had
-gradually become more tame, so that the inequalities which,
-in the beginning of their journey had looked like fragments
-of mountains, were now rounded and regular, like so many
-gigantic mole-hills.</p>
-
-<p>Between two of these, the turf of which was green and
-unbroken to the summit, and shorter and more velvety, if
-that were possible, than any they had passed over, was the
-source of the rill, a black, boggy, rushy, uninviting bit of
-ground, but covered with myrica bushes, which diffused
-through the still air their peculiarly aromatic and refreshing
-scent; in the centre of this was a deep still hole—it
-could be called nothing else—it certainly was not a spring
-head, for there was not a bubble of springing water; it was
-perfectly still and motionless, and looked absolutely black in
-its clearness.</p>
-
-<p>It was a welcome halt to all, for the sun was hot and the
-way was long. The well-head was a noted haunt of the
-dwarfs or Trolls, indeed it was said to penetrate to the centre
-of the earth, and to be the passage through which they
-emerged to upper air.</p>
-
-<p>This was the reason why, though everything around
-was scorching and dropping in the withering heat, and
-though the unshaded sun fell full upon the unprotected
-surface, the water was at all times very cold, and yet in
-the hardest winter no ice ever formed upon it—its cold
-was that of the well of Urdar which waters the roots of
-Yggdrassil, the tree of life; no frost can bind these waters,
-neither can they be polluted with leaves or sticks, for a dwarf<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-sits continually on guard there, to keep open the passage for
-his brethren.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “I can readily believe that these are
-the waters of life, I never met with anything so refreshing,
-it beats all the brandy in the universe.”</p>
-
-<p>Jacob put in no protest to this heresy, but expressed a
-practical dissent by applying his mouth to a private bottle
-and passing it to Tom.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain was proceeding to wash his face and hands in
-the well-head, but the men begged him not to pollute it; the
-rill below, they said, did not so much signify.</p>
-
-<p>The place had been noted by Birger for a halt, and
-right glad were they all to disembarrass themselves of their
-respective loads, and to stretch themselves in various
-attitudes of repose picturesque enough upon the whole,
-under the great white poplars whose restless leaves fluttered
-over head though no one could feel the breeze that
-stirred them, and shaded the fairy precincts of the haunted
-well.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson threw himself on his back upon the turf with
-his jacket, waistcoat, and shirt-collar wide open, his arms
-extended, and his neckerchief, which he had removed,
-spread over his face and bare neck to keep off the musquitoes.
-He was not asleep exactly, nor, strictly speaking,
-could it be said that he was awake; he was enjoying
-that quiet dreamy sort of repose, that a man thoroughly
-appreciates after walking for five or six hours on a burning
-hot summer’s day. His blood was still galloping
-through his veins, and he was listening to the beat of his
-own pulses.</p>
-
-<p>“This is very delightful, very,” he said, in a drowsy
-drawling voice, speaking rather to himself than to Torkel.
-“A very curious sound, one, two, three, it sounds like distant
-hammers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the Thousand!” said Torkel, “where are we
-lying?”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, when he threw himself down on the hill
-side, had been a great deal too hot and tired to pay much
-attention to his couch, beyond the evident fact that the turf<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-was very green and inviting, and that it contained no
-young juniper or other uncomfortable bedding: roused by
-Torkel’s observation, he sat upright, and seeing nothing very
-remarkable except a good rood of lilies of the valley at his
-feet, the scent of which he had been unconsciously enjoying,
-and which did not look at all terrible, stared at him.
-“Well,” said he, “what is the matter? where should we be
-lying?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know,” said Torkel, “that is, I do not know
-for certain; but did you not say you heard hammers?
-Stay,” he said, looking as if he had resolved to do some
-desperate deed—“yes, I will, I am determined,” and he
-took a piece of clay that was sticking on his right boot,
-and having patted it into the size of a half-crown, put it
-on his head and dashed his hat on over it. Then shading
-his eyes with his hand, he looked fixedly at the hill, as
-if he were trying to look through it. “No,” said he,
-“I do not see anything, I hope and trust you are mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p>“What can you be about?” said the Parson impatiently,
-“have you found a brandy shop in the forest?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it must be the Bjergfolk,” he said, “when
-you heard the hammers. I never can hear them myself,
-because I was not born on a Saturday, and I thought
-perhaps you might have been. It is a very round hill too,
-just the sort of place they would choose, and they have
-not a great deal of choice nowadays, there are so many bells
-in the churches, and the Trolls cannot live within the sound
-of bells.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” said the Parson, “why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“None of the spirits of the middle earth like bells,” said
-Torkel, “neither Alfs, nor Nisses, nor Nechs, nor Trolls,
-they do not like to think of man’s salvation. Bells call
-people to church, and that is where neither Troll nor
-Alf may go. They are sometimes very spiteful about it,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the good old times, when it was Norway and Denmark,
-and we were not tied to those hogs of Swedes as we
-are now” (sinking his voice, out of respect to Birger, but by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-no means so much so that Birger could not hear him), “they
-were building a church at Knud. They pitched upon a
-highish mound near the river, on which to build it, because
-they wanted the people to see their new church, little
-thinking that the mound was the house of a Troll, and that
-on St. John’s eve, it would stand open supported on real
-pillars. Well, the Troll, who must have been very young
-and green, could not make out what they were going to do
-with his hill, and he had no objection whatever to a house
-being built upon it, because he reckoned upon a good supply
-of gröd and milk from the dairy. He could have seen but
-very little of the world above the turf not to know a church
-from a house. However, he had no suspicions, and the bells
-were put up, and the Pröbst came to consecrate. The poor
-Troll could not bear to see it, so he rushed out into the wide
-world, and left his goods and his gold and his silver behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“The next day a peasant going home from the consecration
-saw him weeping and wringing his hands beyond the
-hearing of the bells, which was as near as he could venture
-to come. And the Troll told him that he was obliged to
-leave his country, and could never come back, and asked him
-to take a letter to his friends.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose the man’s senses were rather muzzy yet—he
-could hardly have had time to get sober so soon after
-the ceremony; but somehow or another he did not see that
-the speaker was a Troll, but took him for some poor
-fellow who had had a misfortune, and had killed some one,
-and fancied he was afraid of the Landamptman, particularly
-as he had told him not to give the letter to any
-one (indeed it had no direction), but to leave it in the
-churchyard of the new church, where the owner would
-find it.</p>
-
-<p>“One would naturally wish to befriend a poor fellow in
-such a strait; so the man took the letter, put it into his
-pocket, and turned back.</p>
-
-<p>“He had not gone far before he felt hungry, so he took
-out a bit of flad bröd and some dried cod that he had
-put into his pocket. They were all wet. He did not know<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-how that could be; but he took out the letter for fear
-it should be spoiled, and then found that there was wet
-oozing out from under the seal. He wiped it; but the
-more he wiped it, the wetter it was. At last, in rubbing,
-he broke the seal, and he was glad enough to run for it
-then, for the water came roaring out of the letter like
-the Wigelands Foss, and all he could do he could only
-just keep before it till it had filled up the valley. And
-there it is to this day. I have seen it myself—a large
-lake as big as our Forres Vand. The fact was, the Troll
-had packed up a lake in the letter, and would have drowned
-church, bells, and all, if he had only sealed it up a little more
-carefully.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “this beats our penny-post; we
-send queer things by that ourselves, but I do not think anybody
-has ever yet thought of sending a lake through the
-General Post Office.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there not some story about Hercules cleaning out the
-Admiralty, or some such place, in a very similar way?” said
-the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Parson, “I never heard that the Admiralty
-has ever been cleaned out at all since the days of Pepys.
-If ever it is done, though, it must be in some such wholesale
-way as this—I do not know anything else that will do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“The hill-men are not such bad fellows, though,” said
-Tom, on whom all this by-play about the Admiralty was
-quite lost, British seaman as he was; “and, by the way,
-Torkel, I wish you would not call them by their names, you
-know they do not like it, and may very well do us a mischief
-before we get clear of this fjeld. Many people say that
-there is no certainty of their being damned after all—our
-schoolmaster thinks they certainly will not, for he says he
-cannot find anything about damning Trolls in the Bible,
-and I am sure I hope it will not be found necessary to damn
-them, for they often do us a good turn. There was a Huusbonde
-in the Tellemark who had one of their hills on his
-farm that no one had ever made any use of, and he made up
-his mind to speak to the Troll about it. So he waited till St.
-John’s eve came round and the hill was open, and then he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-went, and sure enough he found the Bjergman. He seemed
-a good-humoured fellow enough, but he was not so rich as
-most of them; he had only a very few copper vessels in his
-hill and hardly any silver.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Herr Bjergman,’ said the Huusbonde, ‘you do not seem
-to be in a very good case, neither am I, but I think we may
-make something of this hill of yours between us—I say
-between us, for, you know, the top of the soil belongs to me,
-just as the under soil belongs to you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Aye, aye!’ said the Bjergman, ‘I should like that very
-well. What do you propose?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, I propose to dig it up and sow it, and as we have
-both of us a right to the ground, I think in common fairness
-we ought both of us to labour at it, and then we will take
-the produce year and year about. The first year I will have
-all that is above ground and you shall have all below; and
-the next year we will change over, and then you shall have
-all that is above and I will have all that is below.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ said the Troll, greatly pleased, ‘that is fair; I
-like dealing with an honest man. When shall we begin?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, next spring, I think; suppose we say after
-Walpurgis night,<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> we cannot get at the ground much
-before.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘With all my heart,’ said the Bjergman—and so they
-did. They worked very well together, but the Bjergman
-did twice as much work as his friend; they always do when
-they are pleased; and they sowed oats and rye and bear;
-and when harvest came the Huusbonde took that which was
-above the ground, the grain and the straw which came to
-his share, while the Bjergman was very well contented with
-his share of roots.</p>
-
-<p>“‘When next Walpurgis night came round they dug up
-the ground again; and this time the Bjergman was to have
-all that was above ground, so they manured it well, and
-sowed turnips and carrots; and by and by, when the harvest
-came, the Huusbonde had a fine heap of roots, and the
-Bjergman was delighted with his share of greens. There<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-never came any harm of this that I know, each was pleased
-with his bargain, and the Huusbonde came to be the richest
-man in the Tellemark. You know the family, Torkel, old
-Nils of Bygland, it was his grandfather Lars, to whom it
-happened.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Torkel, “it is quite true, then, I can testify,
-I only wish I had a tenth part so many specie-dalers in the
-Trondhjem Bank as old Nils has.”</p>
-
-<p>“And our Norfolk squires,” said the Captain, “fancy it
-was their sagacity that discovered the four-course system of
-agriculture! The Trolls were before them, it seems.”</p>
-
-<p>“The system seems to answer quite as well in Norway as
-ever it did in England,” said the Parson, “If all that Tom
-tells us about Nils of Bygland be true.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is not a doubt of that,” said Torkel, “all Tellemarken
-knows Nils of Bygland, and it is a great pity, when
-we were crossing the lake the other day, that we did not stop
-at his house; he was never known to let a stranger go to bed
-sober yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think he was seldom without company, then,”
-said Birger.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to have answered very well in this particular
-case,” said Jacob, “but I do not think you can trust beings
-without souls, after all. It is best just to make your offering
-to Nyssen, and to the Lady of the Lake, and two or three
-others, and then to have nothing more to do with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You certainly had better keep a sharp look-out,” said
-Torkel, “But I think we Norwegians know how to handle
-them, and so do our gallant friends the Danes. Did you
-ever hear how Kallendborg Church was built?”</p>
-
-<p>The Englishmen, at all events, had not, and Torkel went
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“Esberne Snorre was building that church, and his means
-began to run short, when a Troll came up to him and offered
-to finish it off himself, upon one condition, and that was, that
-if Snorre could not find out his name he should forfeit his
-heart and his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Snorre was very anxious to finish his church, and he consented,
-though he was not without misgivings either; and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-Troll set about his work in earnest. Kallendborg Church is
-the finest church in the whole country, and the roof of its
-nave was to stand on four pillars, for the Troll drew out the
-plan himself. It was all finished except half a pillar, and
-poor Snorre was in a great fright about his heart and his
-eyes, when one evening as he came home late from the
-market at Roeskilde he heard a Troll woman singing under
-a hill—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent20">“Tie stille, barn min,</div>
- <div class="verse indent20">Imorgen kommer Fin</div>
- <div class="verse indent20">Fa’er din,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Og gi’er dig Esberne Snorre’s öine og hjerte at lege mid.”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Snorre said nothing; but the next morning out he goes
-to his church, and there he meets the Troll bringing in the
-last half pillar.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good morning, my friend <span class="smcap">Fin</span>,’ said he, ‘you have got a
-heavy weight to carry.’</p>
-
-<p>“The Troll stopped, looking at him fiercely, gnashed his
-teeth, stamped on the ground for rage, flew off with the half
-pillar he was carrying; and so Snorre built his church and
-kept his heart and eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not believe a word of that,” said Jacob, “there is not
-a word of truth in the story; and as for Esberne Snorre
-building a church, everybody knows he was no better than
-he should be at any time of his life.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> He was not the man
-to build a church, much less to give his eyes for it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is true,” said Torkel, “I have been at Kallendborg
-Church myself; and have seen the half pillar with my own
-eyes. The roof of the nave stands on three pillars and a
-half to this day.”</p>
-
-<p>“More shame to the Kallendborgers, who never had religion
-enough to finish it,” said Jacob, “nor ever will. Do
-you mean to deny that the Devil carried off Esberne Snorre
-bodily? I think all the world knows that pretty well.”</p>
-
-<p>“That shows that he thought him worth the trouble of carrying,”
-said Torkel, “he would never put himself out about
-carrying off you, because he knows you will go to him of
-your own accord.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come, Torkel,” said the Parson, “do not be personal,
-and take your fingers off your knife handle; we cannot
-spare our cook yet, and you seem to like Jacob’s gröd yourself,
-too, judging by the quantity you eat of it; and now,
-Jacob, do not grind your teeth, but let us hear why you do
-not believe Torkel’s story, which certainly is very circumstantial,
-not to say probable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because every one knows that it was Lund Cathedral
-that was built by the Trolls, at the desire of the blessed
-Saint Laurentius,” said Jacob; “it was he who promised his
-eyes for it, and had them preserved by a miracle, not by a
-trumpery trick. Esberne Snorre, indeed; or any Dane, for
-matter of that! A set of infidels! It is only a Swede who
-would give his eyes for the church.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to know who Scånia belonged to at the
-time when Lund Cathedral was built,” said Tom, “I do not
-think it was to the Swedes; and I should like to know who
-took away its archbishopric when they did get it, and made
-the great metropolis of all Scandinavia a trumpery little
-bishopric under the see of Upsala?”</p>
-
-<p>“And I should like to know,” said Torkel, “who made
-bishops ride upon asses, and drink ‘du’ with the hangman.
-The Swedes give their eyes for the church, indeed! That for
-the Swedes!” snapping his fingers, and spitting on the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>This was a poser. Jacob was not only in the minority,
-but clearly wrong in matter of fact. At the dissolution of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-the union of Kalmar, Scånia, though situated in Sweden, was
-a Danish province, and its archbishop was, as he always had
-been, the metropolitan.</p>
-
-<p>At the present time it is quite true that Scånia is a
-Swedish province; but this is a comparatively modern
-arrangement. In the days when the cathedral was built,
-though geographically a portion of Sweden, it was politically
-a province of Denmark; nor was it till its union with the
-former state that its capital, Lund, was deprived of its
-ecclesiastical primacy. And the treacherous conduct of
-Gustavus Vasa towards Canute, Archbishop of Upsala, and
-Peter, Bishop of Westeras, and the contumelies to which
-they were exposed, previous to their most unjust execution,
-are a blot even in that blood-stained reign, which Geijer
-himself, with all his ingenuity, cannot vindicate, and which
-the Norwegians, from whose protection the bishops were
-lured, are continually throwing in the teeth of their more
-powerful neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>Birger himself was a little taken aback, not exactly liking
-that the weak points in his country’s history should be thus
-exposed to strangers.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind them, Jacob,” said he, forcing a laugh, “they
-are only Tellemarkers, and know no better. You and I
-shall see them, some of these days, climbing the trees of
-Goth’s garden themselves.”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<p>This bit of national slang, which fortunately was lost on
-the Norwegians, had the effect of soothing the ire of the
-sulky Jacob, who drew near to his countryman with a happy
-feeling of partisanship.</p>
-
-<p>“The sooner the better,” said he, bitterly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MOUNTAIN MARCH.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Onward amid the copse ’gan peep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A narrow inlet still and deep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Affording scarce such breadth of brim</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As served the wild duck’s brood to swim;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lost for a space through thickets veering,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But broader when again appearing,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tall rocks and tufted knolls their face</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Could in the dark-blue mirror trace;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And farther as the hunter strayed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Still broader sweep its channels made.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Lady of the Lake.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“How shall it be? Will you look your lay-lines to-day or
-to-morrow?” said the Parson, who, though not a little
-amused at the tilting between the rival champions, and by
-the manner in which Birger had suffered himself to be drawn
-into the squabble, began to think it had gone quite far
-enough for the future peace and unanimity of the expedition.
-“Come, Jacob, shoulder your knapsack, and march
-like a sensible Swede.”</p>
-
-<p>“There never was but one sensible Swede,” said Torkel, in
-a grumbling aside, “and that was Queen Kerstin, when she
-jumped over the boundary, and thanked God that Sweden
-could not jump after her.”<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>Jacob had sense enough not to hear this laudatory remark on
-his late sovereign’s discrimination, but, with his ordinary
-phlegm, resumed his load and his place in the line of march.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span></p>
-
-<p>“By the way,” said the Parson, as they resumed their
-journey, “what was it, Torkel, that made you scrape the mud
-from your right foot and put it on your head in that insane
-manner, just now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can answer that,” said Birger; “you know that the
-whole tribe of Alfs, white, brown, and black, and the Trolls,
-and in fact the whole class that go under the generic
-name of Bjerg-folk, or Hill-men, live under the earth. To
-see them, therefore, on ordinary occasions, you must put
-yourself—at least, typically—in a similar condition. That
-upon which you have trod must cover your head; and you
-take it from the right foot rather than the left, partly as
-being more lucky, and partly because the left being a mark
-of disrespect, would incense the dwarfs, who would be sure
-to make you pay for it sooner or later; in fact they are a
-dangerous race to meddle with at all, they take offence so
-very easily. I believe, however, this is the safest plan, for
-they are not aware, unless you betray yourself, that the
-veil is removed from your sight. Did you never hear the
-story of the Ferryman of Sund?”</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman, of course, had not heard it, neither had
-any of the men, for the legend is Danish and local; and
-though anything Danish is much better known in Norway
-than stories or legends relating to Sweden, it so happened
-that it was new to them all, and they closed up to listen to it.</p>
-
-<p>“One evening, between the two lights,<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> a strange man
-came to the ferry at Sund and engaged all the boats: no
-sooner had the bargain been made, than they began to sink
-deeper and deeper into the water, as if some heavy cargo had
-been put into them, though the astonished boatmen could see
-nothing, and the boats looked quite empty.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Shove off,’ said the stranger, ‘you have got quite load
-enough for one trip;’ and so they had, for the gunwales were
-not a couple of inches from the water, and the boats pulled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-so heavily, that it was as much as the men could do to get
-to the Vandsyssel side; if the water had not been wonderfully
-calm, they could not have done it at all—but it was calm;
-and all under the wake of the moon it looked as if it was
-covered with a network of silver filigree, to chain down the
-ripples.</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as the boats touched the Vandsyssel shore, they
-began rising in the water again, as if their freight had been
-taken out of them, and then the stranger sent them back
-again; and so it went on throughout the whole night, and
-very hard work the ferrymen had, bringing over cargoes of
-emptiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the day began to break, and the eastern sky to
-whiten; and just as the coming sun shot up his seven lances
-to show the world that King Day was at hand, the stranger,
-who had arranged all this, paid the ferrymen, not counting
-the coins, but filling their hats with them with both hands,
-as a boy shovels out his nuts.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What had they been bringing over?’ asked one of
-them. ‘Cannot you be quiet, and know when you are well
-off,’ said the stranger; ‘you need not be afraid of the custom-house
-dues; they will have sharp eyes to see anything contraband
-in what you have carried over last night; put your
-money in your pockets and be thankful—you will not earn
-so much in the next three years.’</p>
-
-<p>“But in the mean while one of the ferrymen, a sharper
-fellow than his neighbours, jumped on shore, and did just
-exactly what Torkel did just now—put a piece of clay from
-the sole of his shoe on the crown of his head. His eyes
-were opened at once; all the sandhills about Aalberg were
-alive with little people, every one of them carrying on his
-back gold and silver pots, and jugs, and vessels of every description—the
-whole place looked like one gigantic anthill.</p>
-
-<p>“‘O-ho,’ said he, ‘that’s what you are about; well, joy go
-with you, we shall not be plagued with you any more on our
-side of the water; that’s one good job, anyhow.’</p>
-
-<p>“But it was not a good job for him; it is very possible to
-be too sharp for one’s own good. All his gold money turned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-to yellow queens,<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> and his silver money to chipped oyster-shells,
-and he never got rich, or anything more than a poor
-ferryman of Sund, while his companions had their hats full
-of ancient Danish gold and silver coins, and bought ships of
-their own, and went trading to Holland and the free towns,
-and became great men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, Torkel,” said the Parson, “you are too
-venturesome; it is just as well that there were no Trolls to
-be seen just now at the well; but you must not try it again,
-or you will never become a great man, or command a ship—not
-that this would suit you very well, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Torkel would undertake the command of the <i>Haabet</i>,
-just now, I’ll engage, little as he knows about seamanship, if
-he could only get young Svensen out of her,” said Mr Tom,
-with a knowing grin; to which innuendo, whatever it might
-mean, Torkel playfully replied by kicking out behind at him
-with one foot, after the manner of a donkey. He missed
-Tom, however, to his and Piersen’s intense mirth; but what
-was the precise nature of the joke, there was now no opportunity
-of explaining, as the descent had become so steep that
-the assistance of the hand was necessary, in order to keep
-their footing.</p>
-
-<p>At a few hundred yards from the dwarf’s well, they had
-fallen in with a little streamlet, running eastward, on a pretty
-rapid descent, even from the first, but which now began to
-form a series of diminutive cascades, leaping in so many
-spouts from rock to rock, while the ground, over which it
-ran, seemed as if it was fast changing from the horizontal to
-the perpendicular; indeed, had there not been plenty of rocks
-jutting out, and a good crop of twisted and gnarled trunks
-and roots, many portions of the journey might have been
-accomplished with more speed than pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>The rapidity of the descent soon brought them to the
-bottom of a deep hollow valley, far above the level of the
-sea, indeed, but low compared with the abrupt heights that
-surrounded it. It was one of those singular features in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-Norwegian scenery, a valley without an outlet; its bottom
-occupied by a deep, black, still lake, whose only drain—if it
-had any drain at all except the porous nature of the soil—was
-under the surface. As the ground rose rapidly on every
-side, it did not answer to cut timber which could never be
-carried, and the forest here was left in the wildest state of
-desolation. Solid, substantial firs, of ancient growth, were
-the predominant tree; but the soil was rich and the valley
-sheltered, and there was a plentiful sprinkling of birch and
-wych-elm, interspersed with a much rarer tree, the stubborn
-old oak himself.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath this mingled canopy was a plentiful undergrowth
-of juniper, and enormous ferns. There was a still, calm
-desolateness about the whole scene, for many of the trees
-were dead, not by accident or disease, but from pure old age,
-and stood where they had withered, or reclined against the
-younger brethren of the forest, exhibiting their torn and
-ragged bark, and stretching forth their bare and leafless
-arms: the very rill—their lively and noisy companion
-hitherto—seemed to be sobered down, and to partake here
-of the general sadness, as it soaked its still way among the
-rushes and weeds that encumbered its course.</p>
-
-<p>Where it ran, or rather crept, into the lake, a small marshy
-delta was formed of the sand carried down in its course; and
-here was moored an old crazy boat, half full of water, with a
-couple of old primitive oars; the whole had a bleached and
-weather-stained appearance, well in keeping with the general
-character of the scene. The boat belonged to a sœter some
-three or four miles off, on the western slope of the mountains,
-and was used occasionally by the inhabitants, when, at
-rare intervals, they amused themselves by setting lay lines
-for the char, for which the lake had a local celebrity. The
-sœter belonged to Piersen’s brother, and it was he who had
-induced Birger to visit the spot.</p>
-
-<p>Having baled out the boat with their mess tins,
-they pulled out into the lake, which turned out to be
-very much larger than they expected to find it. The spot
-where the boat was moored, and which indeed looked like
-a small, deep, still tarn, was in fact only a bay, or inlet, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-the whole lake was a body with numerous arms, none of
-them very large in themselves, but making a very large
-piece of water when taken together.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it had a name; every rock, and stream, and
-splash of water in Norway, has a name of one sort or other;
-but whatever it might have been, it was unknown to the
-fishermen, and this dark pool was entered into their diaries
-by the appropriate appellation of the “Lake of the Woods.”
-Mountains surrounded it on every side, steep, abrupt,
-plunging into the deep dark water, and wooded from base to
-summit with a dense black mass of wood wherever tree
-could stand on rock. There was not beach or shore of any
-kind; the mountain rose from the water itself, so steep as
-to be scarcely accessible, and, in many places, not accessible
-at all. As for a bird, Avernus itself could not be more
-destitute of them. Not a sound was heard, except the splash
-of the cumbersome oar, and the creaking of the rowlock, and
-that sounded so loud, and so out of place in the universal
-stillness, that the rowers tried to dip them quietly, as if
-they feared to awaken the desolate echoes.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said Birger, in a whisper, “this is just the place for
-the ‘Lady of the Lake;’ I hope she will do us no harm for
-trespassing on her territories.”</p>
-
-<p>The men looked uneasy, and a little whispering went on
-between Tom and Piersen, who were pulling, they resting
-on their oars the while, from which the drops trickled off
-and dripped into the silent water. Tom brightened up.
-“I do not think she will hurt us,” he said; “she had a very
-fine cake from Piersen’s family last Christmas, and she will
-not hurt any one while he is with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a confounded set of gluttonous sprites you have
-in your country,” said the Captain; “mercenary devils they
-are too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, hush, don’t abuse them, at all events while you
-are on their territories. The fact is, the ‘Lady of the Lake’
-is the easiest propitiated of all the sprites: she is an epicure,
-too, and not a glutton; she likes her cake good, but she does
-not care how small it is. On Christmas Eve you pick a very
-small hole in the ice, and put a cake by the side of it, only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-just big enough to go through it; and if you watch, which
-is not a safe thing to do if you have any sins unconfessed,<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-you may see, not the lady herself, for she is never seen, but
-her small white hand and arm, as she takes the offering and
-draws it down through the hole in the ice. Those see her
-best who are born on the eves of the holiest festivals.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is all nonsense,” said Jacob, “I never could see
-her at all, often as I have looked, and I was born on Easter
-Eve.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why you precious rascal,” said the Captain, “how could
-you expect it? When were your sins shriven, I should like
-to know?”</p>
-
-<p>The men were not by any means displeased at Jacob’s rebuff,
-who seemed much more disconcerted by it than the occasion
-at all required; when Birger took up the conversation.
-“There is danger in that,” said he, “not that you should miss
-seeing the Lady, but that you should suffer for your rashness.
-The fact is,” he continued, turning to his friends, “the
-Lady of the Lake is the impersonation of the sudden squalls
-which fall unexpectedly on open spaces of any kind in
-mountainous countries, and her small white hand and arm
-are the dangerous little white breakers that are stirred up
-by the gusts, which, though diminutive when compared with
-the mighty rollers of the ocean, very often do draw men
-down, just as the hand draws Torkel’s cake. There is a
-similar spirit for the rivers, called the Black Horse, and
-another for the sea. This latter is called King Tolf, and is
-represented as driving furiously across the Sound, his chariot
-drawn by water-horses, and cutting right through any ship
-or boat that may lie in his path. But they all signify the
-same thing, in different situations to which their several
-attributes are very well adapted.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And that thing is?”</p>
-
-<p>“Death, by drowning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here are the corks,” broke in Piersen in very indifferent
-English; “we shall have gjep for supper to-day, I see the
-floats bobbing.”</p>
-
-<p>The corks which he had pointed out were, in reality, a
-string of birch-bark floats, which on being examined, were
-found attached to lines anchored in the very deepest spot
-of the whole lake; for the gjep, or great lake char, unlike
-any of its congeners, and indeed unlike any fresh-water
-fish whatever, except the common char, the eel, and the
-fictitious mal,<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> is never found but in the deepest waters.</p>
-
-<p>Birger, who was the hero of this fishing, caught the nearest
-float in the crook of his gaff, and began hauling in—evidently
-there was something, for at first the line twitched and
-twitched and was nearly jerked out of his hand; but as he
-hauled on (and in good truth the line seemed as long as if
-some one, as Paddy says, had cut off the other end of it),
-it came lighter and lighter, and before he had got it in, a
-large ugly fish, three or four pounds weight, with an enormous
-protuberant belly, lay helpless on the surface.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the fellow,” said Piersen, pouncing on him,—but
-the fish made little effort to get away; it was almost dead
-before he got hold of it. The gjep, though classed as a char
-by the learned, is as little like the bright crimson char of
-our own lakes or of the mountain lakes of Norway as can well
-be imagined; never met with except in water of immense
-depth, never found out of his hole, never caught except with
-a still and (so the Swedes assert) a stinking bait, he bears
-the colours and character of his local habitation, a sober dark<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-olive brown back, a dark grey side shot with purple, which
-turns black when the fish is dead; no red spots or very
-minute ones, no splashes of red or anything red about it,
-except one bright line along the edge of the fins. The most
-remarkable point about it, its enormous belly, from which it
-derives its name, <i>Salvelinus ventricosus</i>, is really no distinguishing
-mark at all, except of its habitat. The fact is,
-drawn suddenly and against its will from the depths of the
-lake, its air-bladder swells so enormously as to kill the fish,
-and give it that peculiarly inelegant appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Inelegant as it looks, and disagreeable as it is to catch, it
-is by far the best eating of any Swedish fish, and, from its
-rarity, and from the difficulty of catching it, bears, when
-it is to be had at all, which is very seldom, by far the
-highest price of any fish in the market. In fact, to eat
-it at all in perfection, a man must go after it; it will
-never answer to catch it for amusement; but the men may
-easily be set to lay lines for it while other sports are going
-forward.</p>
-
-<p>Four or five of these highly prized fish were hauled in one
-after another by Birger, who looked as proud of his exploit
-as if he had landed a schoolmaster.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> When the lines had
-been all coiled up and deposited in the boat, Birger proposed
-visiting some rushes that he remembered, in a hope
-of meeting with wild fowl; a hope in which he was disappointed,
-not at all to the surprise of his brother fishermen,
-for the whole lake looked so black and gloomy
-that no duck of ordinary taste would think of pitching
-there; it was, however, an interesting voyage among
-the sad and silent intricacies of the lake; but it so happened,
-that in returning they took a turn short of their
-point and wandered into another deep and narrow inlet,
-very like that from which they had started, but still not the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>So like was one spot to another that they had pulled some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-considerable distance before the mistake was found out, and
-when it was, so much time had been lost that they were
-unwilling to pull back.</p>
-
-<p>“Piú noja un miglio in dietro che dieci in avanti,”
-said the Captain; “let us pull on and see what luck will
-send us.”</p>
-
-<p>Piersen, on being consulted, as best acquainted with the
-country, did not seem to know a great deal about it, but
-imagined that if once on shore he could cut into the
-right track; and the fishermen having taken a look at
-their compasses, and the sun, and the wind, what little there
-was of it, decided that at all events the adventure should
-be tried.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had this conclusion been arrived at, when the boat
-grounded on a bed of spongy rushes, so like that from which
-they had embarked, that it was with difficulty they could
-persuade themselves that it was not the very same—there
-was the same little soaking rill, the same mossy, soppy turf,
-and when they had gone on a little further, there was the
-same leaping, sparkling brooklet, bounding from rock to rock,
-just like that by which they had descended.</p>
-
-<p>A good stiff pull it took them to reach the top, and then
-it was evident enough that the spot they had attained was
-not the same as that from which they had descended. There
-was no hill on the other side, properly so called, but a wide
-smooth plain of light sand, shelving, certainly, towards the
-east, but shelving so gradually, that the declivity was scarcely
-perceptible; it was completely overshadowed by large massive
-well-grown pines, not growing together closely but in
-patches (as is generally the case both in Norway and Sweden),
-so as to leave grassy glades and featherly copse-wood between
-the groups, but regularly and evenly, as if they had all
-been planted at measured distances. The branches formed
-a complete canopy over head, shutting out both air and sunshine,
-and effectually destroying everything like verdure
-beneath: the tall straight monotonous trunks with a purplish
-crimson tint on their bark, effectually walled in the
-view on every side, and the whole ground was carpeted with
-a slippery covering of dead pine-leaves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I hope this will not last long,” said the Captain, “the
-place is so dark and the air so close and stifling, that it seems
-like walking through turpentine vaults. However, our road
-lies this way, that is certain,” putting his compass on the
-ground so that it could traverse easily, “and at all events we
-must come to a water-course sooner or later.”</p>
-
-<p>But they did not come to a water-course; whether there
-were none, the sand being sufficiently permeable to sop up
-the rain, or whether they were travelling on the rise between
-two parallel brooks, did not appear; but mile after mile was
-skated and slid over with considerable fatigue and exertion,
-and the same scene lay before them, and around them, and
-above them. Tall clear branchless stems, with long vistas
-between them opening and closing as they went on, vistas
-which led to nothing and terminated in nothing but the
-same bare, branchless, dead-looking poles. Their compasses
-and a slight declivity told them that they were not travelling
-in a circle, and their reason enlightened them as to the fact
-that everything except a circle must have an end; but after
-three hours’ very hard work and some dozen of tumbles a
-piece, that end seemed as far off as ever.</p>
-
-<p>The only variety was a dead tree, and the only apparent
-difference between the living and the dead was, that in this
-case the straight perpendicular lines were crossed by lines as
-straight, which were diagonal; for the dead trees for the
-most part reclined against their living neighbours, very
-much to the detriment of the latter. As for a bird, it did
-not seem as if birds could live there; nor could they in the
-close space beneath that dark-green canopy; but every now
-and then there was a tantalizing whirr of wings, as a black-cock
-threw himself out from the topmost branches, and, far
-above their heads, skimmed along in that bright sunshine
-which could not penetrate to them. This is a favourite
-haunt of the black-cock, for the pine-tops and their young
-buds are its most welcome food, and often render its flesh
-absolutely uneatable from the strong turpentiny flavour
-they impart to it.</p>
-
-<p>At last, and after they had well-nigh begun to despair, the
-trees began to be thinner. Here and there a patch of sky<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-relieved the monotonous black, here and there a sunbeam
-would struggle down; then a little grass, weak and pale,
-would cast a shade of sickly green over the ashy brown of
-the dead fir leaves, and afford a somewhat steadier footing;
-a patch of birch was hailed with the joy with which one
-meets a welcome friend; cattle paths, deceptive as they are,
-afforded at least a token of civilization: and now the whort
-and the cranberry began to show themselves, and the hospitable
-juniper too, the remembrancer of bright crackling
-fires and aromatic floors, and—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, positively we must have a halt now, for the difficulties
-are over,” said Birger, and, though he had plenty of
-tobacco in his havresac, out of sheer sentiment he stuffed his
-pipe with the dead strippy bark of that useful shrub, which
-is generally its mountain substitute.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes were sufficient for their rest; breathing the
-fresh air again was in itself a luxury, and treading the firm
-elastic turf a refreshment. As they went on, the landscape
-began to resume its park-like character, glades to open, trees
-to feather down, gentians to embroider the green with their
-blue flower work, and lilies of the valley to perfume the air.
-They were as much lost as ever, but the country looked so
-like the beautiful banks of the Torjedahl, that they could
-not but think themselves at home.</p>
-
-<p>“This will do,” said Torkel, at last, who apparently had
-recognised some well-known landmark, “we shall soon find
-a night’s lodging now, and a kind welcome into the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>The track into which he had struck, did not at first
-appear more inviting than any of the numerous cattle-paths
-which they hitherto passed on their way; but Torkel followed
-it with a confidence which, as it turned out, was not
-misplaced; for it soon widened out into a broad green glade,
-at the further end of which stood a sœter of no mean pretensions.</p>
-
-<p>The portions of cultivated and inhabited land in Norway
-are almost always mere strips, the immediate banks of rivers
-or of lakes—most of them are actually bounded by the
-forest; and in no case is the wild unenclosed country at any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-great distance from them. Every farm, therefore, has, as a
-necessary portion of its establishment, its sœter, or mountain
-pasture, to which every head of cattle is driven as soon as
-the grass has sprung, in order to allow the meadows of the
-lower farms to be laid up for hay. At these it is often a very
-difficult thing to get a mess of milk in the summer, for
-almost all the cheese and butter of the kingdom is made at
-the sœters. They are generally abundantly stocked with
-dairy furniture, but, as they are abandoned in the winter,
-they seldom exhibit any great amount of luxury. They
-consist generally of rude log-huts, of sufficient solidity, no
-doubt, for these logs are whole trunks of pines roughly
-squared and laid upon one another, morticed firmly at the
-corners, but of very little comfort indeed, notwithstanding.
-They contain generally a single room, a chimneyless fire-place,
-and a mud floor, in most places sufficiently dirty, with a few
-sheds and pens surrounding the main hut.</p>
-
-<p>The present sœter, however, was one of far greater pretensions,
-it was built of sawn timber, and boasted of an upper
-floor, implying, of necessity, a separation between human
-beings who could climb a ladder, and cows and pigs who
-could not. This projected some two or three feet on every
-side beyond the lower storey, forming at once a shade and a
-shelter for the cattle, according as the weather required one
-or the other, and, in its turn, was crowned with a low-pitched
-shingled roof, whose eaves had another projection
-of two or three feet, so that, seen end on end, it had the appearance
-of a gigantic mushroom standing on its stalk. The
-dairymen had been men of taste as well as of leisure, for the
-barge-boards which protected its gables were ingeniously
-carved and painted with texts from Scripture, and the heavy
-corners of the projecting upper storey terminated in pendants
-no less grotesque than elaborate. There was one window in
-each gable and two in the side, the sills of which had been
-planed and painted with some date, text, or motto, like the
-barge-boards.</p>
-
-<p>Round these sœters there are generally some patches of
-enclosed ground where hay is made, or where the more tender
-of the herds or flocks are protected, but here there seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-to be a complete farm; full forty acres had been redeemed
-from the forest, and enclosed by the peculiar fence of the
-country; which, except that it is straight, is in its general
-appearance not unlike the snake fences of America. It is
-formed by planting posts in the ground by pairs at small
-distances between pair and pair, and then heaping a quantity
-of loose planks and stems, and any other refuse timber
-which comes to hand, between them, the tops being kept
-firm by a ligature of birch-bark or some such material.
-These fences, when they begin to rot, which they do
-very soon, are the harbour of all sorts of small vermin, and
-are, in fact, the great eye-sores of Swedish scenery.</p>
-
-<p>In the present instance, this was pre-eminently the case;
-not only the fences, but everything else, was in a terrible
-state of disrepair—in many places the posts were gone, in
-others the birch ropes had rotted through, and the miscellaneous
-timber which had formed the fence was lying about
-entwined with a spiry growth of creepers and brambles, a
-mass of rottenness. The house itself was in a more promising
-state; it was evident that it had been partially repaired
-and put in order, and that very recently, for many of
-the timbers showed by their white gashes, the recent marks
-of the axe, and the axe which had made them was lying
-across the door sill.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel lifted the latch—that was easy, for there was no
-bolt or lock to prevent him—but the place was evidently
-uninhabited—he looked on Tom with a face of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith!” said he, “this is too bad. Torgenson told me
-that the Soberud party were to drive their cattle to the fjeld
-on Thursday last, and the weather has been as fine as fine
-can be. Well! there is no trusting people.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no trusting Torgenson’s daughter, at all events,”
-said Tom, “for I suspect it was from her that you had the
-information; Lota is much too pretty to be trusted further
-than you can see her; and I have no doubt she made some
-excuse herself for not coming last Thursday. It was natural
-enough too; of course she would not like to come to the
-sœter before young Svensen sailed.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The Thousand take young Svensen, and you too!” said
-Torkel, turning round as sharply as if Tom had bitten him
-in earnest, but catching a grin upon the latter’s countenance
-which he had not time to dismiss, looked very much as if he
-meditated making him pay for his ill-timed joke, when a
-loud, clear voice was heard in the glade below, making
-the leafy arches of the old forest ring with the ballad of
-master Olaf—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Master Olaf rode forth ere the dawn of day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And came where the elf folk were dancing away,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The dances so merry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">So merry in the green-wood.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Torkel stopped to listen, and Tom laughed.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The elf father put forth his white hand, and quoth he,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Master Olaf stand forth, dance a measure with me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The dances so merry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">So merry in the green-wood.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Here they come at last,” said Tom; “pretty Lota is not
-half so false as you thought her, Torkel. The <i>Haabet</i> has
-sailed, I suppose,” added he, in a stage whisper. Torkel,
-however was much too happy to pay the smallest attention
-to his malicious insinuations, but took up the song for himself.
-Whether Lota put any particular meaning on the
-words of it, we will not take upon ourselves to say—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And neither I will, and neither I may,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For to-morrow it is my own wedding-day,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">shouted he, at the full pitch of his voice, while the whole
-party took up the chorus—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The dances so merry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So merry in the green-wood.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>By this time the approaching party had emerged from the
-forest, and came along the glade in an irregular procession,
-putting one in mind of the Nemorins and Estelles of ancient
-pastorals, and all the more so from their picturesque costumes.
-The men wore certainly absurdly short round jackets, but
-they had rows of silver buttons on them, and brown short
-trousers worked with red tape, very high in the waistband,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-to match the jacket, but coming down no further than the
-calf of the leg, which was ornamented with bright blue stockings,
-with crimson clocks.</p>
-
-<p>The women had all of them red kerchiefs on their heads,
-the ends of which hung down their backs, and red or yellow
-bodices with great silver brooches on them, and blue petticoats
-trimmed with red or yellow. Both sexes adorn themselves
-with all the silver they can collect; the men’s shirt
-buttons are sometimes as big as a walnut, and on gala days
-they will wear three or four of them strung one under another.</p>
-
-<p>All the party were loaded with the utensils necessary for
-following their occupations in the fjeld; the women were
-carrying the pails, while the men’s loads, which consisted of
-all sorts of heterogeneous articles, were topped with the great
-iron kettles in which they simmer their milk, after the
-Devonshire fashion, in order to collect the whole of the cream.</p>
-
-<p>There were little carts, too, that is to say, baskets
-placed upon two wheels and an axle, and drawn by little
-cream-coloured ponies; stout, stubby little beasts, very
-high crested, and with black manes and tails—the former
-hogged, the latter peculiarly full and flowing. A Swede
-generally values his horse according to the quantity of hair
-on his tail. These were loaded—it did not take much to
-load them—with meal for the summer’s gröd, and strings of
-flad bröd, a few sheep skins, particularly dirty, though in
-very close proximity to the provisions,—and now and then
-the black kettle, which its owner was too lazy to carry.
-Then came the goats and sheep, and the little cows following
-like dogs, now and then stopping to take a bite, when the
-turf looked particularly sweet and tempting—little fairy cows
-were they, much smaller than our Alderneys, finer in the
-bone, and more active on their legs; they looked as if they
-had a cross of the deer in them. They were all of one
-colour—probably that of the original wild cattle—a sort of
-dirty cream colour, approaching to dun, and almost black on
-the legs and muzzle.</p>
-
-<p>The party was a combined one, and was bound eventually
-to several other sœters besides this, but they had agreed to
-make their first night’s halt in Torgenson’s pasture, and beside<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-the regular herdsmen and dairymaids, as many supernumeraries
-as can possibly find excuse for going, accompany
-the first setting out of the expedition, which is always looked
-upon in the light of a holiday and a merry-making.</p>
-
-<p>And a holiday and a merry-making it seemed to be,
-judging by the shouts, and screams, and laughter, and
-rude love-making that was going on among the gentle
-shepherds and shepherdesses of the north; but, for all that,
-there was a good deal of real work too. Sœter-life may be
-a life of pleasure, but it certainly is anything but a life of ease.</p>
-
-<p>The Soberud division, bestial as well as human, evidently
-seemed to consider themselves quite at home; and the cows
-belonging to it, which looked as if they recognised the old localities,
-roamed at liberty; but the parties bound to the more
-distant mountains were occupied in hobbling, and tethering,
-and knee-haltering their respective charges, mindful of their
-morrow’s march and of the difficulty of collecting cattle
-and even sheep, which, except that they keep together, are
-just as bad, from among the intricacies of a strange forest.
-Some were forming temporary pounds, by effecting rude
-repairs in the dilapidated fences, chopping and hewing, for
-that purpose, great limbs of trees and trees themselves,
-with as little concern as, in England, men might cut thistles.</p>
-
-<p>Streams of blue smoke began now to steal up through the
-trees, and fires began to glimmer in the evening twilight,
-while the girls brought in pail after pail of fresh milk, and
-swung their kettles, gipsy fashion, and, opening their
-packages, measured out, with careful and parsimonious foresight,
-the rye-meal that was to thicken it into gröd. Meal
-is precious in the mountains, though milk is not.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the <i>Haabet</i> had sailed, or what had become of
-poor Svensen, did not transpire; but certain it was that the
-damsels from Soberud, after looking in vain for their mistress,
-were obliged, that evening, to act on their own
-discretion—and equally certain it was that the Parson,
-whose knife had been inconsiderately lent to Torkel on the
-preceding day, was obliged to eat his broiled gjep with two
-sticks, the knife and the fortunate individual in whose
-pocket it was, being, for the time, invisible.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE HOMESTEAD.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent20">“’Tis a homestead that scarce has an equal,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Plenteous in wood and corn-fields, with rich grassy meadow and moorland—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">This won my father, long since, in wedding the farmer’s fair daughter;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here, at length he grew old, like a summer’s eve calmly declining,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here he spent the best years of his life, and dwelt like a king, amid plenty.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Servants he had by the score—men servants to plough with the oxen,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And maids in the house besides, and children, the joy of their mother—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus sowing and reaping, in comfort, from season to season, abode he,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Envied by all around—but having the good will of all men.”—</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>The Elk Hunters—Runeberg.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sunrise found the whole bivouac in a stir; the habits of
-the Norwegian are always early—at least in the summer
-time—and many of the parties had to travel to the yet
-distant sœters and wilder uplands: cows are not very
-fast travellers, and the load which a dairyman carries on
-his back when he is bound to those fjelds, which are inaccessible
-to carts, is by no means a light one: ponies
-sometimes carry the heavier loads, but this is not often, as
-they are useless in the fjeld life, and in the summer are
-generally wanted for posting, as well as for agricultural purposes;
-the loads are generally carried by the men—sometimes
-by the women even,—and the milk-kettle which crowns
-the pack is alone a weight which few would like to carry
-far, even on level ground.</p>
-
-<p>The white smoke was already curling about the trees in
-long thin columns, and the girls were already bringing in
-their pails of new milk, a very fair proportion of which
-would be consumed with the morning’s gröd, which was
-already bubbling in the kettles.</p>
-
-<p>Gröd, in high life, means all sorts of eatables that are semi-liquid;
-but in the fjeld it is invariably made thus: the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-water is heated in the great milk-kettle to a galloping boil,
-and its temperature is raised to a still higher point by the
-addition of salt; meal, generally rye-meal, is then thinly
-sprinkled into it, the great art being to separate the particles,
-so as to prevent them from forming lumps. As soon as the
-contents of the kettle are thick enough for the bubbles to
-make little pops, the gröd is taken off the fire and served up
-with milk. When that milk is fresh, no one need desire a
-better breakfast; but when, as is generally the case, they
-mix it with milk that has been purposely kept till it is
-curdled over with incipient corruption, in which state they
-prefer it, it is as disgusting a mess as ever attained the
-dignity of a popular dish.</p>
-
-<p>In the present instance they were obliged to put up with
-fresh milk, no other being procurable; and the fishermen,
-having grilled the remains of their gjep (an especial delicacy),
-and added to it some of the contents of their havresacs, sent
-a deputation, headed by Birger, to invite Miss Lota and her
-hand-maidens to partake of their breakfast. This was a
-proceeding which Torkel regarded with very questionable
-pleasure. He was flattered, no doubt, at the attentions paid
-to his lady-love by the fishermen, who could not speak
-Norske; but, at the same time, was rather jealous of those of
-Birger, who could.</p>
-
-<p>Lota, however, was in no way disconcerted; she came
-smiling and blushing, indeed, but without any sort of affectation
-or bashfulness, and listened graciously, and without
-laughing, to the blundering compliments paid her by the
-Englishmen; and without any great amount of coquetry, considering
-the rarity of guardsmen in the Tellemark, to the
-tender elegance of the Swede. Torkel had very good reason
-to be proud of her, and none at all to be jealous, particularly
-as the knapsacks were already packed up for the march.</p>
-
-<p>The fishermen were in no particular hurry: the track to
-Soberud was perfectly known; even if the droves of cows and
-the flocks of sheep that had come up it the day before had
-not already marked it very sufficiently. The way was not
-long either, for it was but a day’s journey to the herds;
-the breaking up of the bivouac was very picturesque; Lota<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-was very pretty, and Birger found her very entertaining.
-It is no wonder that they lingered.</p>
-
-<p>However, the shadows of the trees began to shorten.
-Party after party came up with their merry “farvels;” the
-songs and the laughter, and the tinkling of the bells, sounded
-fainter and fainter from under the arches of the forest; and,
-last of all, the fishermen, reluctantly shouldering their knapsacks,
-took their journey down the glade; with the exception
-of Torkel, who, having something to adjust about his straps,
-was not exactly ready, and in fact was not seen for a couple
-of hours afterwards. He did not join them, indeed, till the
-party had made their first halt near the banks of a mountain
-lake.</p>
-
-<p>The halt was called somewhat sooner than usual, for the
-Captain, who, with his gun in his hand and old Grog at his
-heels, was a little in advance, and had first caught sight of
-the lake, had caught sight also of an object floating quietly
-along in the middle of it, which his practised eye at once
-assured him was that very rare and beautiful bird, the northern
-diver.</p>
-
-<p>He threw himself flat on the ground, an action in which
-he was implicitly imitated by the rest of the party, who,
-though they had not seen the bird, were quite aware that
-there was some good reason for the caution.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, there are few birds more difficult to kill than the
-northern diver; to the greatest watchfulness he unites the
-most wonderful quickness of eye and motion, and, large as
-he is, he is fully able to duck the flash, as it is called,—that is
-to say, to dive between the time of seeing the flash and feeling
-the shot.</p>
-
-<p>They retired a hundred yards or so and smoked the pipe
-of council, thus giving Torkel the opportunity of coming up
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel was well acquainted with the ground, as was
-natural, not only because the lake was celebrated for ducks
-and the country round it for tjäder, but also because it happened
-to lie on the mountain track between his own home
-and Torgenson’s farm, a road which business (he did not
-state of what nature) required him to travel very often.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>His plan was founded on a well-known characteristic in
-the nature of diving birds: during their dive they cannot
-breathe, and therefore on rising to the surface for a moment
-or so, they cannot make any immediate effort either to dive
-or to fly. He proposed, therefore, that the Captain should
-conceal himself among the understuff, and that the rest,
-taking different positions about the lake, which was not
-large, should break twigs and slightly alarm the bird, who
-would naturally edge away toward the point occupied by the
-Captain, and the object being a valuable prize, an hour or so
-was not grudged, as there was plenty of time to spare. The
-party having first reconnoitred their ground, marked the
-position to be occupied by the Captain on the lee side of the
-lake, and ascertained that the bird was still resting on the
-water, separated, taking a wide circuit, lest they should alarm
-it prematurely.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, with his gun ready cocked, lay at full length
-on the top of a little ledge of rock about six feet high, which
-sloped away from the water, forming a sort of miniature cliff.
-It afforded very little cover apparently—there was nothing
-between it and the water but a light fringe of cranberry
-bushes—but the cover was perfect to a man in a recumbent
-position, and the Captain being dressed entirely, cap and all,
-in Lowland plaid, the most invisible colour in the world,
-looked, even if he had been seen, like a piece of the rock on
-which he lay. This place had been selected with forethought,
-for the bird is wonderfully suspicious, and will not approach
-any strong cover at all.</p>
-
-<p>For half an hour after the Captain had wormed himself to
-the edge of the rock, the bird lay as still as if it had been
-asleep, which it certainly was not; at the end of that time
-there was a quick turn of its neck, and its eye was evidently
-glancing round the margin, but the body remained as quiet
-and motionless as before; there was not a ripple on the
-water, and it was only by observing the diminishing distance
-between it and a lily leaf that happened to be lying on the
-surface, that even the practised eye of the Captain could tell
-that it was in motion, and was nearing him imperceptibly.
-There had been no sound, nor had the bird caught sight of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-anything; but the Parson had come between it and the wind,
-and the light air, that was not sufficient even to move the
-surface, had carried down the scent.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson had caught sight of the lily, as well as the
-Captain, and, seeing the bird in motion, had halted, leaving
-it to the scent alone to effect his purpose. But in a few
-minutes it was evident that the bird had become stationary,
-having either drifted out of the stream of scent, or, possibly,
-having imagined that it was now far enough from the suspected
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>A slight snapping of dry wood just broke the stillness;
-again that sharp, anxious glance, and the imperceptible
-motion, was renewed; another and another snap, and now
-the water seemed to rise against the bird’s breast, and a slight
-wake to be left behind him,—but it was still that same
-gliding motion, as if it were slipping through the water: at
-last, when the distance was sufficiently great to secure against
-flying, a cap was raised, and responded to by two or three hats
-at different places; the bird had disappeared, while the calm,
-quiet water showed no trace of anything having broken its
-surface. Half-a-dozen pair of eyes were anxiously on the
-look-out, and long and long was it before the smallest sign
-rewarded their vigilance. At last, and many hundred yards
-from the point at which they had lost sight of it, a black spot
-was seen floating on the water, as quietly and unconcernedly
-as if it had never been disturbed. It was, however, a good
-way to the right of the line in which they were endeavouring
-to drive it; the hats had disappeared, and for ten minutes
-the lake was as quiet as if the eye of man had never rested
-upon it. Then came again the glance, the move, the dive,—then
-an anxious moment of watchfulness,—then a white puff
-of smoke and a stream of hopping shot playing ducks and
-drakes across the water,—then the sharp, ringing report,
-caught up and repeated by echo after echo,—and there lay
-the bird, faintly stirring the surface, in the last struggles of
-death,—and there was gallant old Grog, plunging into the lake,
-and making the water foam before him in his eagerness.
-Four or five ducks, which had hitherto been basking unseen
-among the stones, sprang into air; and a flight of teal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-appeared suddenly whistling over the water, and, turning
-closely and together as they came unawares within a dozen
-yards of the Parson, received his right and left shots among
-them, and, with the loss of three or four of their company,
-scattered hither and thither among the trees.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah, Grog!—bring him along, boy! bring him along!”
-shouted the Captain; and on every side, instead of the quiet,
-gliding, creeping figures, just peering about the understuff,
-were seen forms bounding and tearing through the cover.</p>
-
-<p>The prize was one which the Captain, a taxidermist and
-a veteran collector, had long desired to possess, and great was
-the care with which it was secured on the top of Jacob’s
-knapsack; it being entrusted to him, as the most phlegmatic
-of the party and the least likely to be led away by any excitement
-of sport,—for at last they had arrived into something
-like shooting country: the character of the ground was
-more open and free from timber than anything they had
-seen, and the understuff of whort and cranberry was proportionally
-thicker and more luxuriant; it was ground which
-a dog could quarter without any very great amount of difficulty,
-particularly as it was absolutely free from brambles,
-and that furze was unknown in those latitudes anywhere
-outside of a greenhouse.</p>
-
-<p>It was more for the amusement of the thing, and for the
-sake of ascertaining the resources of the country, that the
-party extended themselves into a line and beat their way
-onwards, for it was too early in the year for shooting
-anything but wild ducks. Game laws in Norway exist,
-certainly, but are utterly disregarded; still the broods of
-grouse were, as yet, too young to take care of themselves,
-and it would have been sheer murdering the innocents to
-injure the grey hens, which, into the bargain, are at this time
-not fit for eating. This proceeding seemed very absurd to
-Torkel and to Tom, for a Norwegian has no idea of preserving
-the game—in reality, he can eat and relish much that most
-civilized people cannot; but, besides that, he is a selfish
-animal, and the poor lean bird that he secures for himself in
-spring, is better than the fine, fat, plump, autumnal one that
-he has left for his neighbour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>Hen after hen got up and tumbled away before the dogs,
-who were too well broke to disturb her, had they even been
-deceived by her antics, but no shot was fired to convert her
-pretence into reality. Now and then, it must be confessed,
-when an old, selfish, solitary cock, as black as a hat, and as
-glossy as a whole morning’s dressing could make him,
-whirred off as if he cared for no one but himself and had
-not a wife or family in the world, he paid the penalty of his
-selfishness, and fell fluttering on the cranberries—deservedly,
-perhaps; at all events, he left no one behind him to lament
-his fate, for the black-cock is a roving bird, and never pairs:
-but no exclamations of Torkel’s could induce the English
-sportsmen to sever the loves of the smaller description of
-grouse, and Birger, though a Swede—for very shame—was
-obliged to imitate their forbearance. But, every now and
-then, a blue Alpine hare was knocked over without mercy;
-once an unlucky badger came to an untimely end, and, upon
-the whole, the bags were getting quite as heavy as the men
-approved of, when a light, graceful, elegant roe, for once in
-its life was caught napping, though there had been noise
-enough, not only from shots, but from talking also, along the
-whole line, to have awakened a far less watchful animal. It
-sprang from a thicker piece of covering than common, which
-probably had been the means of deluding it into staying, in
-the false hope that it could possibly escape the keen scent of
-old Grog, whose flourishing tail said as plainly as tail could
-speak (and dogs’ tails are very eloquent), “look out, boys; I
-have got something here for you, this time, that is worth
-having.”</p>
-
-<p>Jacob was pretty well strung with hares, and remonstrated
-against the additional load, which was finally slung
-around Torkel’s body like a shoulder-belt, and he was dismissed
-at once with directions to follow the path to Soberud, a
-place where he was well known, and to prepare, as well as
-he could, for the reception of the party, and their provisioning.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel undertook the mission readily enough, and went
-off gaily under a load of game that would have been quite
-enough for a pony, casting back a knowing look to Tom,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-who seemed perfectly to understand him, implying that he
-had some project in his head by which he intended to astonish
-the strangers.</p>
-
-<p>The day wore on in this pleasant exercise—perhaps the halt
-for Middagsmad might have been a long one, and the pipe
-after luxurious; in fact, there is not so luxurious a couch in
-this sublunary world as a heap of heather, and no sensation
-so luxuriously happy as that of basking, half-tired, in the
-warm, pleasant sunshine, after a well-spent morning of honest
-exercise, with our gun beside us, and our dogs half sleeping,
-like ourselves, around us; but the sun was not a very great
-way from the horizon when the party gained the first view
-of the village which was to be their resting-place for the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>The fjeld was not high, for it had been sloping away
-gradually to the eastward ever since they left the high
-mountains which surround the Lake of the Woods, but, as
-it almost always does, it terminated abruptly in a sort of
-cliff, portions of which were precipitous, and the rest
-extremely steep. The path which Torkel had taken, following
-the course of a largish brook, had found an easy
-access to the valley, practicable even for the carts of the
-country; but at the point at which they had struck the
-valley, there was nothing for it but a stiff scramble down
-the face of the hill, a proceeding which their loads rendered
-anything but pleasant and easy. It was a beautiful scene
-that lay before them, and perfectly different from anything
-they had seen before, though they had been passing through
-scenery of wood and lake ever since they left the Torjedahl.</p>
-
-<p>In the present instance the broad, still lake, broad as it
-was, filled up but half the amphitheatre of the wooded
-mountains. There was an ample margin of cultivated land
-round it, fields rich with the promise of autumn, and green
-quiet meadows; here and there a wooded spur shot out
-from the frame of highlands, forming sometimes a cape or
-promontory in the water, while, in return, narrow secluded
-valleys would wind back into the recesses of the mountains,
-each with its own little brook and its own secluded pastures.
-Besides the village, there were several detached<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-farmsteadings and scattered cottages, all looking trim and
-tidy and well to do in the world, and through the middle of
-them ran a well-kept but very winding road, with a broad
-margin of turf on each side. The fences might have been a
-dissight a little nearer, for they were the post and slab fence
-so common in the north, but, at the distance, they looked
-like park paling; and the swing poles for opening the
-gates across the road, formed a picturesque feature in the
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p>Close by the lake-side was the church, a grey and weather-stained
-building, which looked like one solid mass of timber,
-supporting on its steeply-pitched and shingled roof, three
-round towers of different heights, each surmounted with its
-cross. Dominating over the whole sat a huge golden cock,
-which, newly gilded, glowed in the light of the setting sun
-as if it were a supplementary sun itself. The houses of the
-village were a good deal scattered, but, with the exception
-of the Præstgaard, or parsonage, did not hold out any very
-magnificent hopes of accommodation for the night.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, was of little importance to men whose last
-night’s abode had been the shelter of the thickest tree; and
-they proceeded, with very contented minds, to descend the
-steep hill-side, in order to reach the path they ought to have
-taken, which they now discovered, far below them, winding
-along the edge of the cultivated ground.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” said the Captain, as they reached it and
-rallied their forces, which had been a good deal scattered
-during the sharp descent, “where to bestow ourselves for
-the night? I should like to sleep in a bed, if it were only
-for the novelty of the thing; and here, in good time, comes
-Torkel, who looks as if he had made himself pretty well at
-home already.”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel, considerably smartened up—however he had contrived
-it—and sporting a clean white shirt-front, like a
-pouter pigeon, with his silver shirt buttons newly polished,
-came up the church path in close conversation with a
-respectable, fatherly, well-to-do-in-the-world sort of farmer,
-or huusbonde as he was called, in whom, as he introduced
-him by the name of Torgensen, the fishermen recognized the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-father of the pretty hostess of the sœter. Not one word
-of English could the good-man speak, though he looked as
-like an honest rough-handed English farmer as one man
-could look to another; but he wrung their hands, as if, like
-Holger, he meant to test their manhood by their powers of
-endurance, and smiled, and looked pleasant, which Torkel
-interpreted to mean that he heartily desired to see the
-whole party under his hospitable roof that night, and would
-be right glad to make them all drunk in honour of his roof-tree.
-And poor Torkel looked so excessively happy, that
-it was easy to see that, in spite of the <i>Haabet</i> and her
-skipper, he had not only sped in his wooing at the sœter,
-but had contrived to ingratiate himself with the elders of
-the household.</p>
-
-<p>A grand place was that homestead, which, hidden by a
-projecting point, and occupying a secluded valley of its own,
-had hitherto escaped their observation,—a good, snug, wealthy
-farm it really was, even as compared to others in the country;
-but in Norway, so much cover is always wanted; and building—at
-least timber building—is so cheap, that moderate-sized
-farm-houses, with their appurtenances, are little villages;
-and the house itself looks always larger than it is, as
-an habitation, because the whole upper storey, frequently
-called the rigging loft, is invariably used as a store-room for
-their provisions, and hides, and wool, and flax, and apples,
-and sometimes corn, in the winter, and not unfrequently as
-a ball-room, when they have eaten out sufficient space in it.</p>
-
-<p>The house, like all the rest, a wooden building with a
-planked roof and gabled ends, was unusually painted. Torgensen,
-in his youth, had himself commanded the <i>Haabet</i>,
-and had traded in her for provisions and corn along the
-coast of Scånia, and from it had imported Scånian fashions.
-Instead of the deep, dull red, which harmonizes so well with
-the tints of the country, he had painted his house in figures,
-blue, and yellow, and white, and black, which had a singular,
-but, upon the whole, a not unpleasant effect. Texts of
-Scripture in rough black letter, and dates, and monograms of
-himself, and wife, and children, were written under every
-window and every gable; and the barge-boards and ridge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-timber-ends, were carved as elaborately and grotesquely as
-those of the church.</p>
-
-<p>There was but little delicacy in accepting Torgensen’s
-hospitality; his house was large enough for a barrack, and
-its doors were as wide open as those of an inn. A large
-room, that could not exactly be called kitchen, hall, workshop,
-or dining-room, but served equally for any one of
-these offices (and occasionally for a ball-room also, when the
-store-room was too full to be used in that capacity), was open
-to all comers; half-a-dozen boards, as thick almost as
-baulks of timber, and placed upon trestles that might have
-supported the house, formed the principal table; two great
-chairs, like thrones, elaborately carved, and looking as if
-they required a steam-engine to move them, stood on a sort
-of dais;—these are not uncommon pieces of furniture in old
-houses; they are called grandfather and grandmother chairs,
-and are the seats of honour, though very seldom occupied at
-all, unless the master and mistress of the house are old enough
-to have lost their active habits. The more ordinary seats
-were substantial benches, with or without backs, and three-legged
-stools. Here and there was a great chest, a sort of
-expense magazine for stowing away the wool, and the flax,
-and the skins, which were in process of being converted into
-linen, wadmaal, or shoes, by the farm servants. Over
-these a series of shelves, like an ancient buffet, containing
-pewter drinking-vessels, large brass embossed plates with
-the bunch of grapes from the promised land or the expulsion
-of Adam and Eve glittering upon them in all the
-brightness of constant polish. Over these, again, were slung
-a row of copper cauldrons and pots; and on the opposite side
-a chest of drawers, carved and painted with grotesque
-figures, was ornamented with heaps of blue and white dishes,
-and pewter dinner-plates, and rows of brass candlesticks.</p>
-
-<p>All this was beautifully clean and tidy, for the Norse men
-and women keep all their cleanliness for their ships and
-houses, and waste none of it on their persons.</p>
-
-<p>A strong aromatic smell pervaded the whole room, from
-the fresh sprigs of fir and juniper with which it was strewn
-every morning, as old English halls were with rushes; it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-might indeed have well passed muster for an English hall in
-the olden times, but for the absence of the great gaping fire-place
-with its cozy chimney-corner and fire-side benches;
-the place of all this was ill supplied by the pride of Torgensen’s
-heart, which he pointed out before they had been in the
-room for five minutes, and called his “pot-kakoluvne”—a
-great pyramidal heap of glazed tiles, portraying Scripture
-subjects in Dutch costumes, and doing duty as a stove. This
-being an importation from foreign parts was of course of
-additional value; its pyramidal shape indicated Denmark as
-the country of its manufacture, for in Sweden the corresponding
-piece of furniture is cubical; and both are great
-improvements on the cast-iron stoves of Norway, which get
-nearly red hot, dry and parch the skin, crack the furniture,
-and fill the rooms with a description of gas, which, whatever
-it may do to a native, ensures to the stranger a perpetual
-headache.</p>
-
-<p>It is rare to find in Norway a farm, and consequently an
-establishment of the size of Torgensen’s, though in Sweden
-it is common enough. The Odal law, which enforces equal
-division of property among the children, prevents any accumulation
-of territorial property, and will ultimately reduce
-Norway to a population of agricultural peasants with a commercial
-aristocracy. The homesteads of the old Norwegian nobility
-are deserted and decaying, like their families, but Torgensen
-had been educated as a merchant and shipowner, as
-elder sons frequently are, and having been fortunate in his speculations,
-had been able to buy out his brothers, and to keep up
-unimpaired the old hospitalities of his father’s mansion; and
-thus fourteen or sixteen farm-servants, and as many girls,
-with, it must be confessed, an indefinite number of children
-that had found themselves by chance in the establishment
-without any fathers at all, sat daily round that mass of
-timber which was called the meal-board (<i>mad borden</i>), and
-supped their daily gröd and drank their daily brandy.</p>
-
-<p>Although the head of so great an establishment, Frue<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-Kerstin—as Madame Torgensen was usually called, though in
-truth she had no great right to the title—did not consider
-herself exempt from household duties; in fact she was but
-the principal housekeeper of the establishment, and wore a
-bunch of keys big enough for an ordinary jail as a badge of
-this distinction. It was not a very easy matter to catch her
-unprepared, for frugality was by no means the order of the
-house; but this day was really an exception to the general
-rule, and she saw with some dismay the party which her
-husband was bringing home with him. Lota was at the
-sœter, and with her were most of the young girls and, of
-course, their admirers. There had been hay-making at the
-Præstgaard during the past week, and, it being Saturday
-night, two-thirds of the remainder were dancing and drinking
-there, and thus the party at the homestead being a small
-one, the supper was none of the best. Good humour and
-real welcome, however, supplied all deficiencies, which after
-all, were more in Frue Kerstin’s imagination than in reality.
-The evening passed off admirably in songs and conversation;
-Torkel was an evident favourite,—and indeed his manly
-character, his ready stories and songs, his fine voice and
-constant and cheerful good humour well entitled him to the
-distinction, to say nothing of a broad strath in the higher
-Tellemark, and a lake, and a stream, and a saw-mill, and a
-“hammer” as it was called, that is to say, a smelting furnace
-for iron, to which, being the only son, he was undoubted
-heir, a qualification which prudent parents are not apt to
-overlook; but he had evidently risen in their esteem from
-the fact of his having brought such popular characters as
-English gentlemen to the homestead, and from the consideration
-with which those gentlemen treated him.</p>
-
-<p>Torgensen might have been better pleased had more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-justice been done to his brandy, which was real Cognac and
-admirable, and might have been a little scandalized at the
-admixture of water, but his broad, jolly face never lost that
-glow of good humour which made his guests feel they were
-doing him a pleasure by drinking his brandy and eating his
-good cheer. A lively conversation was kept up through
-Birger and Torkel till late at night, and when the fishermen,
-having duly thanked their hostess, after the customs of the
-country, retired to rest in the great square boxes of fragrant
-poplar leaves, they sank into such a mass of eider down,
-that told well for the <i>ci-devant</i> attractions of the Lady
-Christina.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE CHURCH.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Mighty stands the cross of God,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Smiling homeward to the soul.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Almquist.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One reason why the fishermen were so anxious to reach
-Soberud was, that the next day was Sunday, and they wanted
-a day of rest, and a church to go to; and that was not to be
-met with, on the Torjedahl, nearer than Christiansand itself.
-Hitherto their church had been a remarkably tall fir-tree,
-which had, somehow or other, been overlooked by the wood-cutters,
-and stood some little way within the forest. It had
-been chosen on account of its fancied resemblance to a church
-spire, as it towered above the rest of the foliage; and the
-lower branches having been cut away, and the space round
-its trunk enclosed and decorated with green boughs—as all
-Swedish churches used to be decorated on high days before
-a royal ordinance was passed which forbade it,—and the
-ground strewed with fresh juniper and marsh-marigolds—as
-church floors are to this day,—it did make a very fair forest
-church for fine weather; and as all the party could sing,
-more or less, the service was performed a good deal more
-ecclesiastically than it is in some of our English cathedrals.</p>
-
-<p>Norway is not in communion with England; indeed,
-strictly speaking, neither Norway nor Denmark are churches
-at all,—they are merely establishments. Sweden may, by
-some stretch of imagination and a little implicit faith in its
-history, be considered a church, and is so considered by the
-Bishop of London, who has authorised the Bishop of Gothenborg
-to confirm for him. But though neither the Englishmen,
-nor even the Swedes, considered themselves at liberty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-to communicate in the church of Soberud, there was no reason
-whatever against their joining in either the ottesång or the
-aftensång (morning or evening service), or even against their
-being present at the högmässe, or communion itself. The
-men, who had no very accurate ideas of theology, had joined
-in the English service very readily, and, indeed, had taken a
-good deal of pains in decorating the forest church, for both
-Tom and Torkel could read English as well as they could
-speak it; and Jacob pretended to do so. They were, however,
-all of them, extremely pleased at having the opportunity
-of going to a consecrated church.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps one of the most remarkable features of the country
-is the respect and reverence which all classes pay to their
-churches, combined with the very little effect which religion
-has on their conduct. Norwegians will face all sorts of
-weather, in order to be present at the högmässe of Sunday.
-Large sums of money—that is to say, large in comparison
-with the wealth of the parishes—are spent upon their
-churches, which are always in perfect repair, and always most
-carefully swept, and trimmed with rushes or green sprigs.
-A man would lose his character at once, and would be
-shunned by his acquaintance as a hopeless reprobate, if he
-neglected confirmation, or the Lord’s supper. Nothing,
-indeed, is more common than to see, as an advertisement—“Wanted,
-a confirmed cook or housemaid;” which advertisement
-in no ways relates to the capacities of the servant, but
-simply to her age, it being taken for granted that a person
-of a certain age must have been confirmed. Indeed, the
-legislature interferes with this: few offices can be held by
-unconfirmed people, or by those who are not communicants;
-and the legislature is only the interpreter of public opinion.
-No man is at present molested for any religious opinions he
-may please to hold; he simply loses his civil rights by
-seceding from the national religion. In fact, Norway is the
-most complete illustration of the establishment principle
-which exists in the world.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, education, as it is popularly called—that
-is to say, secular instruction—is almost universal. No
-one ever meets with a Norwegian unable to read and write.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-It may fairly be said that there is no country in the world
-in which the standard of popular education is so high, and
-the standard of popular morality so low,—where the respect for
-religion is so very great, and the ignorance of religion so very
-profound,—as it is in Norway. Sweden may be second in this
-paradox, but Norway is by far the first.</p>
-
-<p>It is not difficult to account for both these phenomena.
-Few countries suffered more extensive church spoliation in
-the good old Reformation times than Norway and Sweden;
-and when, after that convulsion, men began to gather up the
-fragments, they had to choose between an ill-paid clergy
-whose social position would be inferior to that of almost all
-their parishioners, and a sufficiently paid clergy with enormous
-and unmanageable parishes. They chose the latter,
-perhaps wisely, as more likely to preserve the character and
-influence of the church till better times should come. They,
-therefore, grouped the parishes into districts, few of which
-were under ten or twelve miles long, and wide in proportion,
-some very much larger, and one more than a hundred miles
-in length. These districts are a collected group of parishes,
-whose churches are still kept up under the name of Annexkyrker,
-and service is occasionally performed in them, as a
-sort of protest of their right.</p>
-
-<p>Over these districts they placed rectors (Pfarrherrer),
-whose revenue, though not what we should call large in our
-country, is, nevertheless, greater than that of most of their
-parishioners; they gave them good parsonage houses (præstgaards),
-and, in almost every case, provided a dowager house
-and farm for their widows. And, while they rendered their
-position an object of competition, they provided that it
-should be adequately filled, by establishing the most searching
-examinations and the most careful provisions. The consequence
-of this is, that the Norwegian clergy are almost invariably
-very superior people, and, in a country where the
-election is absolutely free, they are very generally chosen
-members of the Storthing; while, in Sweden, they form an
-integral estate of the realm, and possess their own independent
-house of parliament.</p>
-
-<p>In a country where there is so much ceremonial, so much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-that speaks to the understanding of the uneducated by
-speaking to their eye, it is impossible but that the externals
-of religion should be respected—the position of its ministers
-being such as is calculated to add to that respect, and not, as
-is too frequently the case in Roman Catholic countries, such
-as to diminish from it.</p>
-
-<p>But, from the enormous size of the parishes, the externals
-are all that can possibly come to the majority of the people.
-The Scandinavian Church, learned as its individual ministers
-may be, is not the teacher of the people, nor can it be—no
-man can teach over fifty miles of country. Education, on
-the other hand, there is plenty of, such as it is; for, not
-only do the frost-bound winters give plenty of opportunity,
-but the Church is the establishment, and the laws of the
-land are such as to make reading and writing necessary to
-all. At the same time, this education is absolutely secular,
-it has nothing to do with the doctrines of religion, and,
-consequently, nothing with the morals of the people, except
-to increase their power of doing anything. Knowledge with
-them, as with all others, is power: but, disjoined from religion,
-this is generally the power of doing wrong. Whether
-this be, or be not, a correct solution of the paradox, at all
-events, the fact remains, and it has never been accounted for:
-Norway is pre-eminent in the education of its people, and is
-also pre-eminent in the statistics of crime.</p>
-
-<p>But this is not the external view of the case: the mere
-visitor in Norway would speak of the very religious habits
-of the people. They certainly are a people of religious
-habits, and will continue to be so as long as the externals of
-religion are preserved with a magnificence and ceremonial
-sufficient to keep up their reverence. But they are, merely,
-a people of religious <i>habits</i>—they are not a people of religious
-feelings. The marriage between faith and works with them
-has been “dissolved by Act of Parliament, and neither their
-faith nor their works are the better for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing of this, however, was visible on that Sunday
-morning, as the Parson, when the hospitable and substantial
-breakfast of the farm-house had at last come to an end,
-walked quietly and musingly along the broad natural terrace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-which led to the church, and commanded a beautiful view
-over the wide valley and its quiet lake.</p>
-
-<p>The church was a good-sized building, with nave, and
-aisles, and transepts, and chancel. It was handsome and
-striking, but very quaint and singular; every part of it was of
-wood—not planks, but great solid beams of absolute timber;
-centuries had passed over them, and there was no perceptible
-decay,—they were merely weather-stained, and harmonised
-in their colouring; and the whole edifice looked as if the day
-of judgment would find it as firm and as eternal as the
-Church it was built to represent. The whole was a confused
-collection of acute gables and high-pointed roofs, covered with
-diamond-shaped pine shingles. The windows were small,
-square-headed, and few in number, barely enough, indeed, to
-give light to the interior, and in no way contributing to the
-architectural beauty of the church. No Norwegian ever
-breathes more fresh air than he can help, or thinks of opening
-his church windows; it is not very often that he opens
-even the windows of his house.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-
-<p>The sharp roofs, which are almost universal in the Norwegian
-churches, though extremely ornamental, especially
-where, as in the present case, they are shingled, are erected
-not for ornament but for use. It is absolutely necessary,
-in a land where snow falls so abundantly, to have such a
-slope that will not permit it to lodge in any quantities in a
-building which is not inhabited and constantly cleared. Were
-the roof no steeper than those of most of our English churches,
-the weight of lodged snow would soon become sufficient to
-bear down any strength of timbers they could put into it.</p>
-
-<p>Although there was but little of ornament about the windows
-and doors—those more ordinary objects of ecclesiastical
-decoration—this evidently did not arise from want of respect
-or care for their church; for every gable—and there were
-thirty or forty of them, great and small—was decorated with
-elaborately-carved barge-boards, the ridge timber of every
-one of them projected three or four feet beyond the face of
-the building, and terminated in the head of some nondescript<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-animal, particularly ugly, but still the record and evidence of
-infinite pains and labour. The chancel, the nave, and the
-belfry, constituted three separate pyramids, rising one above
-the other, consisting of from three to five stages each, and
-terminating in round towers, roofed with short shingled
-spires, like so many extinguishers. Each of these carried its
-huge cross, for neither Norwegian nor Swede is afraid of that
-holy emblem; and high on the top of all was the typical
-cock—and if it did not warn all sinners to repent, it certainly
-was not for want of being seen, for its size was colossal, and
-in its new gilding it glittered in the air for miles on every
-side. At the entrance of the churchyard, on the side facing
-the lake, was a lych-gate, also of solid timber, with a roof
-broad enough to shelter a whole funeral. The gate itself,
-which, when shut, formed a stile, was shod with iron spikes,
-to prevent the pigs from burrowing under. By the side of
-it was that satire upon Norway, the evidence of Karl Johann’s
-fruitless attempts to stem the tide of national habits—the
-stocks—of course unemployed—at least, so far as their legal
-purpose went;—they formed, however, a very comfortable
-seat, upon which Birger was balancing himself backwards and
-forwards, and trying to cross one foot over the other. The
-other fishermen, as decent as they could make themselves up
-for Sunday—which was rather dingy, after all, compared
-with the bright colours of the peasants’ dresses—lounged
-about, watching the assembling congregation.</p>
-
-<p>It wanted some time to service, but there were scattered
-here and there about the churchyard several parties, who
-had already been for some time on the ground. Sunday as
-it was, they had brought with them their garden tools, and
-their waterpots, and their baskets of plants, or papers of
-seeds, and had tucked up their smart embroidered petticoats,
-or turned back their shirt-sleeves, according to their sex, and
-were busily employed about the graves.</p>
-
-<p>These were not oblong mounds of turf, like the graves in
-our English churchyards, but raised borders with iron
-edging, and were, for the most part, pictures of neat and
-tidy gardening; wild flowers very often were all that grew
-there, little blue gentianellas, or lilies of the valley, such as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-might be met with anywhere in the open fjeld; more often
-than all, that innocent little white trailer, the anthemis
-cotula, which they call Balder’s eyebrow, and to which
-they attach a peculiar sanctity; but, even if they were wild,
-they always bore the traces of care and cultivation. Now
-and then a rose would be woven into the semblance of a
-cradle, or an edging of convolvolus major, twining round its
-supports, would form a pyramid or a canopy, with its
-fragile blue flowers already fading, though so early in the
-day, perhaps an apt type of those who lay below them.</p>
-
-<p>In no place does the Norwegian appear to so great
-advantage as when busied about the graves of his family;
-these are cared for by all who cherish the memory of the
-dead, as their occupants would be were they still on earth.
-Appointments are often made among distant members of a
-family, and little parties are arranged to meet at the grave
-of a common relative; the first object of all these is invariably
-to trim its flowers. These are not sad or solemn
-meetings; they are rather joyful reunions, much as if the
-families were visiting the house of their relation, instead of
-his grave. They are not even dressed in mourning, for their
-meetings are continued long after the time of mourning is
-passed: it is a sort of sober festivity. Much of the good
-that exists in the Norwegian character—their family affection,
-their patriotism, their attachment to their native country
-throughout all their wanderings,—may be traced to their
-graves.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, the bells struck up, and every man removed his
-hat, bowing to the church as if returning its salutation.
-Other people, besides the funeral parties, now began to
-collect from different quarters; here and there a stray
-cariole rattled up to the churchyard gate, and an old grandmother
-or two was brought along in one of the queer-looking
-little carts of the country; but the people of Norway are anything
-but vehicular in their habits; indeed, except the main
-roads—and these are very few indeed—the country is in no
-ways calculated for wheeled carriages.</p>
-
-<p>Boats were a much more fashionable mode of progression;
-several of these were already seen approaching from different<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-quarters of the lake, pulled by two or four oars, and containing
-a cargo of many-coloured petticoats, which looked,
-in the distance, like bunches of variegated tulips. Every
-Norwegian, man or woman, learns to row almost as soon as
-he learns to walk, and every Norwegian knows something of
-the principles of boat-building; and very elegant little craft,
-of the whale-boat build, they frequently turn out.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo!” said Birger; “we are in luck. I knew it was
-Communion Sunday, but we are to have a lot of christenings
-besides. Look at the little white bundles in their chrism-cloths,
-and the elegant white satin bows. I do believe they
-would none of them consider their children baptized without
-those white bows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you Christening Sundays, then?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Not always: in many places the clergy set their faces
-against them. But the Norwegian is a gregarious animal:
-he dearly loves a set feast, and hospitably considers the
-more the merrier. In these country-places you will often
-find not only Communion Sundays, but Christening Sundays,
-and Wedding Sundays, and—”</p>
-
-<p>“And funeral Sundays?” suggested the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“And funeral Sundays—you need not laugh, I mean what
-I say; in the winter we have a little frost here, hot as it
-is now,—and frost, compared to which your English frost is
-but a summer’s day. They cannot very well bury their dead
-in the winter, so they very frequently freeze them, and keep
-them till the frost breaks up. Whenever that happens it is
-of course necessary to bury immediately all that have died
-since the beginning of the winter, and thus—though I suspect
-you asked that question in pure joke—it really does happen,
-that besides gregarious communions, christenings, and weddings,
-they have gregarious funerals also.”</p>
-
-<p>The bells now began to “ring in,” and that portion of the
-congregation who were not related to any of the little white
-bundles in satin bows, or were not destined to be godfathers
-or godmothers to them, came stumbling into the church, and
-arranging themselves as best they could on the benches.</p>
-
-<p>To those coming in from the blaze of day outside, the
-interior appeared perfectly dark, so that the people were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-actually feeling for their places. The little square windows
-looked like dots of light against the black walls, but as the
-eye accustomed itself to the darkness, the scene came out by
-degrees: the tracery of the chancel screen—the great crucifix
-seen over it—the altar beyond, heavy with carving and
-gilding—the font just within the screen—the pulpit just without
-it—then the congregation themselves became visible—the
-men on one side of the nave, the women on the other. It was
-high mass; for though the Scandinavian Church be reformed,
-she still retains the ancient expressions.</p>
-
-<p>The short hymn which begins the service had closed, and
-the priest in his wide-sleeved surplice—mäss skjorta—was
-standing by the altar, while the Candidatus marshalled in the
-porch a little procession of the christening parties. When
-all was ready they entered the church, the congregation
-singing, as they advanced towards the chancel, one of the
-numerous hymns from the Bede Psalmer—to which little
-book, unpretending as it is, the people owe nearly all the
-very small acquaintance with the doctrines of their Church,
-which they possess.</p>
-
-<p>In our service we recognise but two parties, the priest and
-the people—the English choir being, theoretically, at all
-events, merely the leaders of the people’s responses; whereas,
-in Scandinavia there are three distinct divisions of the service—the
-prayers of the priest, the responses of the choir, and
-the hymns of the people; which last are collected and
-arranged for seasons and occasions, in their Bede Psalmer, a
-book which, as they all sing more or less, most of them have
-at their fingers’ ends.</p>
-
-<p>While this was proceeding, the Candidatus threw open the
-richly-carved doors of the chancel screen and admitted the
-christening party into the choir, arranging them round the
-font which stood at its entrance. The whole service was
-very like our own, except that, after the exhortation, the
-priest proclaimed his own commission to baptize, in the
-words of the three last verses in St. Matthew’s gospel, before
-reading the gospel from St. Mark which is used in the
-English Church; and afterwards announced the value of the
-Sacrament itself in the words of St. John—(chap. 3. v. 5, 6).<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-Before the act of baptism, the priest laid his hand on the
-head of each child, severally, and blessed it; then, after sprinkling
-it three several times as he pronounced the name of each
-of the three Persons in the Trinity, he stepped forward to the
-doors of the choir, and presented the new Christian to the
-congregation, saying, “In the name of the Holy Trinity, this
-child is now, through holy baptism, received as a member of
-the Christian Church, and hath right given him to all the
-privileges joined therewith: God give His grace, that he, all
-the days of his life, may fulfil this his baptismal covenant.”</p>
-
-<p>After a general thanksgiving for the new birth of the
-children, and a general exhortation to the sponsors on the
-subject of their duties, the congregation struck up another
-hymn from the Bede Psalmer, while the children were
-carried round the altar, which does not stand, as in our
-churches, close to the well, but has a passage left behind it,
-possibly for this purpose, the sponsors depositing on it their
-offerings as they passed.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the priest, kneeling on the altar steps,
-was invested by the Candidatus and Kyrke Sånger (precentor)
-with the mässe hacke, a crimson velvet chasuble, embroidered
-in front with a gold glory surrounding the Holy
-Name, and behind with a gold floriated cross. He remained
-kneeling, while the Candidatus, paper in hand, went down
-the nave, noting those who intended to present themselves
-at the communion, in order to be certain that none should
-partake of it who had not previously given their names to
-the priest for approbation, and attended the early service of
-confession—called communions-skrift. This was not so very
-difficult to do, though none of the congregation had left the
-church; for each intended communicant wore something
-black or grey about him, in memory of the Lord’s death.
-When this survey had been completed, the priest rose, and
-facing the people, intoned the general thanksgiving, and
-then turning again to the altar, made his confession alone, in
-the name of his flock, the congregation itself being silent,
-though the choir, at the occasional pauses, chanted the Kyrie
-Eleeson. He then placed on the altar the “Oblaten Schalten,”
-or wafer basket, the silver flagon, and lastly the chalice and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-patin, which were brought to him with great ceremony, the
-Candidatus and Kyrke Sånger, who carried them, being attended
-by the whole choir.</p>
-
-<p>The outer doors of the church were then shut, and the
-Candidatus in his black gown and cassock having taken his
-place on the lower step, the priest chanted the Gloria in
-Excelsis, the choir taking it up after the first sentence.</p>
-
-<p>After the consecration, the communicants were arranged
-in four divisions; the married men, and the married
-women, the single men and the single women; these
-knelt in the centre, while the non-communicants stood
-round them chanting softly the Agnus Dei, and bowing
-their heads as the elements were administered to each communicant,
-which was done individually, as with us.</p>
-
-<p>There was then a general thanksgiving and a Hallelujah
-by the choir; after which the priest dismissed the congregation
-with his benediction, making the sign of the cross towards
-them in the air. This form, which was universal
-throughout three kingdoms scarcely more than a hundred
-years ago, has almost entirely disappeared from the Swedish
-Church, disused rather than forbidden; but many of the old
-customs which in Sweden have become obsolete, in Norway
-are religiously kept up. And besides this, politics have something
-to do with the matter; there is always a great affectation
-of Danish peculiarities, such as dressing the church with
-green boughs on Whitsuntide, among those who are not over
-well affected to Sweden. These and many similar ceremonials
-retained in Norwegian churches are punishable by fine
-or deprivation; but the people will have it so, and the priests
-are very willing to indulge them,—members of Storthing and
-law-makers as many of them are.</p>
-
-<p>As for theology, the people are profoundly ignorant of that,
-while the priests themselves, who, nine out of ten, are learned
-divines,—thanks to the severe examination at Christiania
-which generally weeds out one half of the candidates every
-year,—are almost always politicians enough to borrow their
-churchmanship from Denmark, are just as much Grundtvigites,
-or Mynsterites, according as their bias is high or low,
-as if they lived in Copenhagen itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span></p>
-
-<p>After the conclusion of the service the fishermen were
-lounging homewards, taking their time, and enjoying the
-weather, and the views, and the sunshine, and the Sunday
-quiet, and upon the whole, though all of then ardent
-sportsmen, by no means sorry for a day of regular rest,
-when the Pfarrherr himself, accompanied by his Candidatus
-overtook them. The Candidatus was a long, tall youth, fresh
-from college, conceited and shy at the same time, who looked,
-as Birger afterwards observed, as if he smelt of the midnight
-oil; but the Pfarrherr was a gentleman-like man,
-with a broad, good-humoured, fresh-coloured face, looking
-more like an English old-fashioned squire than anything
-else. He had been priest of Soberud for many years, and
-being a regular anti-Swede, was very popular. He had
-represented the district in several Storthings, and was likely
-to do so in many more, though he did belong to the commercial
-party, which in Norway, as in America, is aristocratic
-and tory, in opposition to the country party, who in
-those nations are the radicals.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this, he was the probst, or rural dean, which
-was a fortunate circumstance for him—for being an enthusiastic
-admirer of Grundtvig, he was a great deal too much
-of a ritualist and antiquarian for the continually receding
-Swedish Church, and, under other circumstances, could hardly
-have failed in being brought up before the Church Committee
-at Christiania, for his little peculiarities; though it is a fact
-that most of the ecclesiastical members of Storthing, who
-composed it, thought, felt, and, if they dared, would act, precisely
-as he did.</p>
-
-<p>He spoke English readily enough—indeed, English is to
-the educated Norwegians what French is to us,—and, as a
-matter of course, invited the fishermen to share the hospitalities
-of the præstgaard. This, however, would have been
-a mortal offence to poor Torgenson, who, though he could
-not speak to his guests one single word except through an
-interpreter, would have been deeply scandalized, and, indeed,
-would have felt lowered in the eyes of his countrymen, had
-they deserted him. The Parson, however, being a professional
-man, was an exception, and Pfarrherr Nordlingen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-carried him off in triumph, Torkel promising to bring over
-his knapsack to the præstgaard.</p>
-
-<p>The præstgaard was not so large and rambling a building
-as the hall, but was infinitely more comfortable; highly-polished
-birchen furniture, and well-stored bookcases, gave it
-an air of habitableness. The room into which they entered
-was the summer parlour, whose French windows, shaded by
-gauze curtains, were wide open, looking on a broad lawn and
-a sparkling little stream beyond it; a good sprinkling of
-juniper twigs took off, in a great measure, from the bare look
-of the carpetless floors which always strikes an English eye.
-It is a great absurdity, in a country which is not favourable
-for sheep, and whose woollen manufactures seldom go higher
-than the wadmaal, that the duty upon English woollens
-should be so absurdly high. But the fact is, the Storthing is
-so entirely in the hands of the democratic, or country party,
-that anything beyond a class legislation is hopeless. The
-idea is not that all the people should have warm blankets,
-but that the democratic and agricultural majorities should
-work up inferior wool. Weaving by hand is an agriculturist’s
-winter work.</p>
-
-<p>The Priestess Nordlingen, as she was called, a smiling,
-pretty-looking woman, much younger than her husband, was
-occupied in laying the cloth for aftonsmad, assisted by the
-dowager priestess, who lived now on the other side of the
-little stream, but being on excellent terms with her late
-husband’s successor, spent a good deal more of her time in
-her old home than she did in her new one.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Servants they
-had, both of them, in plenty, for the præster are among the
-richest in the land; but no Norwegian wife is above acting
-as butler and housekeeper, and no Norwegian damsel, fröken
-though she be, is above waiting at table. It does not seem
-quite the thing to an English gentleman, to have the ladies
-waiting upon him; but certainly in the Norwegian grammar,
-if they have one, the masculine is more worthy than the
-feminine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<p>Forest life is pleasant, but a contrast is pleasant also, and
-the Parson, as he lay back in a peculiarly easy chair, sipping
-leisurely the dram which invariably precedes a Norwegian
-meal, and which, in the present case, was true cognac of
-unquestionable genuineness and undeniable antiquity, considered
-himself in very great luck indeed; in fact, much
-as he admired the rude abundance of the hall, he infinitely
-preferred the quiet elegances of the præstgaard. He made
-some such observation to Nordlingen.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied he, “the Reformation has injured the
-Church cruelly, as an endowment, and has cut off five-sixths
-of its clergy; but we individual præster have not much to
-complain of as regards ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have pretty severe duties, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they are not severe, because they cannot be done.
-My parish was originally six; these have been thrown together
-under one. If I had half-a-dozen curates, the parish
-could not be visited, nor the annex kyrker properly served;
-for in former times it supported six priests and six deacons;
-so what one cannot do at all, one soon ceases to distress one’s
-self about. The work is not done, cannot be done, and no
-one expects it to be done. We have work enough—especially
-those who, like me, are elevated to the Storthing,—but
-it is not ecclesiastical work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know,” said the Parson, “I wonder that, under
-such circumstances, you have no dissenters in Norway; our
-Wesleyans arose from precisely the same cause. The spoliation
-of our Church having diminished our number of priests,
-and very seriously impaired the discipline which might, in
-some measure, have kept the remainder to their work, the
-people in many districts became heathens, much like your
-own people, in fact; and when teachers rose up among them,
-men followed them not because they were orthodox, but
-because they were the only teachers to be had. But you
-have some sort of dissenters, too, have you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“O, the Haugerites. Yes—they are not dissenters, either.
-Hauger held a good many doctrines of that arch-heretic,
-Calvin: New Birth, as distinct from Baptism; Predestination,
-Election, and so forth; but neither he nor his followers separated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-from the Church. In truth, religion is at too low an
-ebb among us for dissent; we have no more strength to
-throw up dissenters, than an exhausted field has to throw up
-weeds. Hauger succeeded, because he was not only a pious,
-but a practical man; he was rich, too; he set up saw-mills
-and iron-works, and advanced the money;—it is no wonder
-he set up a religious party. But they are going down
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I understand—what we call in Ireland, soup Christians;
-and now Hauger is dead, the spring has run dry?”</p>
-
-<p>“No not at all—I do not mean to say that the practical
-turn of his mind was not a recommendation to his theology;
-but though he preached and did good, his good offices were
-not confined to his own followers; his sect is subsiding
-because it has no distinctive tenets, any more than that of
-your Wesleyans. You made a great blunder; by turning
-Wesley out of the Church, you forced him to set up a
-Church government of his own; it is that government, and
-not his doctrines, which keeps his followers in a state of
-antagonism to a Church with which they have no real doctrinal
-difference. We were not such fools with Hauger; he
-met with a little persecution himself—for we Norwegians are
-not tolerant,—but we were wise enough to leave his people
-alone, so they did not think it worth while to differ, and in
-fact never did.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think there may be another reason,” said the Parson:
-“with you a sectarian loses his rights of citizenship, by the
-fact of his being a sectarian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, and why should he not? by leaving the national
-Church he makes himself a foreigner; we do not persecute
-him any more than we persecute any other foreigners, but
-we do not allow foreigners to legislate for us, neither will we
-let him, or any man choose which of our national institutions
-he will adhere to and which he will not—and our Church is
-one of our national institutions;—we say to him, and to you
-alike—you are strangers, both of you, you are both very
-welcome to stay here, and to live under the protection of
-our laws; moreover, we are very ready to naturalize either
-of you, and to receive you as citizens of our country if you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-like, but choose for yourselves; you cannot be Norwegians
-and not Norwegians at the same time. These are the laws,
-religious and political, of Norway, take them or leave them,
-just as you like, but we cannot let you divide them. Now
-where is the injustice of this?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure I will not take upon myself to say,” said the
-Parson, laughing; “supposing always, the State meddles
-with Church affairs at all; and I, as an Englishman, have no
-right to find fault with you for that. But what does your
-Church itself say to all this; you called Calvin, just now, an
-arch-heretic, what do you say about his followers? Besides, it
-strikes me that there is a little difference of opinion between
-your friend Hauger and St. Paul, on the subject of female
-preachers, to say nothing of his unordained preachers, which
-all of his people were; but that I suppose does not greatly
-disturb you, as you attach so little value to Apostolical
-Succession.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a hard hit upon poor Nordlingen, who was a
-most patriotic Norwegian, but yet, as a Grundtvigite, was
-painfully aware of the want of divine commission in his
-Church. It was, however, a random shot of the Parson’s,
-who, speaking of the Norwegian Church as it then was,
-certainly was not aware that the reforms which Grundtvig
-and Mynster had effected in Denmark, had already penetrated
-to a Church politically divided from them. He took the
-opportunity of the bustle, caused by the servants bringing in
-the aftonsmad, to turn the conversation to less dangerous
-subjects, and occupied the rest of the evening, if not more
-profitably, at least more to the amusement of the ladies of
-the family, in drawing out the solemn Candidatus, who, fresh
-from his examinations, was brimful of theology, which, when
-once cheated out of his shyness, he was spilling over on
-every opportunity, and mixing, most absurdly, with the
-ordinary subjects of conversation.</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p>The Church of Norway—if Church it can be called—is in a very
-anomalous state. Intensely Erastian, it is dominated over by the
-Storthing, and swayed by the political feelings of the country. These,
-which are called Norwegian and patriotic, are really Danish. Norway
-has never been strong enough, or rich enough, since the times of barbarism,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-to form an independent nation of itself: feeling its weakness, it
-acquiesced readily in the dominant position assumed by Denmark,
-during the Union of Kalmar, which grated so much against the feeling
-of the Swedes only because Sweden was conscious of its own innate
-strength and real superiority. When that union was dissolved, it left
-very bitter animosities between the two principal nations, which was
-participated in by Norway, whose feeling was with Denmark. These
-the lapse of time has mitigated, so far as the Danes and Swedes are
-concerned. They have been renewed, however, in Norway, by the
-forcible annexation of that country to Sweden, by the Congress of Vienna,
-in compensation for the loss of Finland; and thus the Norwegian Church,
-politically allied to that of Sweden, is affected by that of Denmark.</p>
-
-<p>The original Reformation in Denmark, which involved that of Norway
-also, was exclusively a political movement; that of Sweden was
-political also, but grander interests were connected with it. Sweden
-was a country shaking off a foreign yoke, and the Reformation succeeded
-because the Reformers were patriots also. If reformation in religion is
-to be mixed with earthly motives at all, it could not have had a grander
-alliance; but the Reformation of Norway was a mere change of politics.
-It was forced on by the Court against the will of both clergy and people—the
-king, at that time, being nearly despotic. It was not resisted;
-there was too little religion—Romanist, or anything else—in the country
-for the people to feel any sort of excitement in the matter. After the
-fall of Christiern, a new religion was thought to be the most effectual
-mode of depressing the remains of his party. A certain German, of the
-name of Buggenhausen, was constituted the leading reformer; and, in
-fact, the Church of Denmark was not reformed, but destroyed, and
-Lutheranism imported in its place, and forced upon the nation by an
-arbitrary sovereign. The consequences were precisely similar to those
-which followed upon many of the Reformations in Germany. The
-Church remained in form, but the vital energy had gone from it. Many
-godly persons it had from time to time in its communion, but fewer and
-fewer as the time went on, and the traces it has still left of its vitality
-are few in number.</p>
-
-<p>“Towards the close of the last century,” says Hamilton, “the progress
-of stupor was complete, and vital Christianity seemed to have
-departed from the land; formalism was at its height, and, oddly enough,
-bigotry appeared to accompany it. An attempt at revival has been
-made during the present century, by Dr. Mynster, now Bishop of
-Copenhagen, and by Grundtvig, who may to a certain extent be considered
-as the leaders of the high and low Church parties; Mynster taking
-his stand on the doctrines connected with the Atonement; Grundtvig,
-on the faith once delivered to the saints. There does not appear to be
-any opposition between them, any more than there is opposition in the
-doctrines upon which they take their respective stand against Indifferentism
-and Rationalism; but this is the bent of their minds and the
-direction of their teaching.”</p>
-
-<p>Mynster says, in a letter to Oechlenschlager, “I design, God willing,
-to open my mouth, and that in divers ways, certainly first to try what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-echo will answer my voice; but it shall not be quite in vain, for I know
-that I am among the called, and I muse day and night in watching and
-praying that I may be also among the chosen.”</p>
-
-<p>“This object,” says Hamilton (<i>Sixteen Months in the Danish Isles</i>),
-“he speedily obtained; and from that time till the present, there has
-been no cessation of that gentle, but loud and solemn voice, persuading
-men everywhere to repent. In speaking and writing, Christ crucified
-has been the beginning and end, the first and the last.”</p>
-
-<p>Grundtvig, who, like our Keble, was a poet before he was a preacher,
-and who has taught by his poems, no less than by his sermons ever since
-he brought the great powers of his mind to bear against Rationalism, some
-few years after Dr. Mynster began to be celebrated. “It seemed to him
-a sin,” he said, “that he should be taken up with Mythology, while the
-pastors of God’s flock were neglecting their duty;” so he stepped forward,
-asserting the Faith against human might and reason. His leading
-text, upon which all his preaching hinges, is the Faith once delivered to
-the saints,—pure and complete from the beginning, and incapable of
-change. “Every change,” he argues, “is a corruption, and the office
-of the Church is simply to restore, either by supplying or by lopping
-off what has been superadded to the original Revelation, and to preserve
-the faith in its purity.” His style of teaching, therefore, is necessarily
-traditional. Grundtvig, himself a most powerful preacher, has naturally
-a somewhat exaggerated idea of the importance of preaching, as
-opposed to reading. Preaching, he calls the living word. There is a
-curious mixture of truth and fallacy in his idea of never putting the
-Bible into the hands of an unconverted person, because there is no hope
-that such a person can understand it. “It was written for the Church,”
-he says truly; and he infers from this, that it must be expounded orally
-by a Churchman, because “faith cometh by hearing:” and from this
-text he argues, that the Spirit of God does not instruct in the reading
-of the Word. Grundtvig, from the first, has been the most uncompromising
-opponent of Rationalism, and his line of argument much more
-telling and difficult to withstand than that of his fellow-worker,
-Mynster; and, accordingly, though now popular, he has not passed
-through his course without getting into difficulties of a personal nature,
-from the opposition of the Rationalist party. He resigned his living
-at one time, and for many years was not a pastor of the Danish National
-Church at all.</p>
-
-<p>These great leaders have their followers and their respective schools;
-but it is much to be feared that the revival which they have produced
-is merely the effect of their own personal influence and talent, for there
-is nothing in the system of the Danish Church which can perpetuate it,—that
-this Church, itself severed from the universal Church of Christ,
-has no inherent vitality,—and that, as the influence and name of even
-Calvin could not prevent even his own Geneva from becoming Unitarian
-when other teachers had arisen and his memory had faded from the
-recollections of his people, so the teaching of Grundtvig and Mynster is
-but a temporary revival of Evangelical teaching,—the produce of the
-individual, not of the Church.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Swedish Church, as distinguished from the Danish and Norwegian,
-has far more pretensions to Churchmanship than either of these,
-though it may have lost more of the externals and ceremonial. Its
-Apostolic Succession has been doubted, and certainly the question is
-not entirely clear. At the time of the Reformation, Matthias, Bishop
-of Strengnäs, and Vincent, Bishop of Skara, had been beheaded by
-Christiern; and on the other side, Canute, the Archbishop, and Peter,
-Bishop of Westeras, had been beheaded by his rival, Gustavus,—so that,
-at the final Diet of Westeras, at which the Reformation was determined
-upon, Sweden could muster but four bishops, of whom it is said that
-Bishop Brask only had been duly consecrated; two others, Haraldsen
-and Sommar, were only bishops elect. The results of that Diet caused
-Brask to go into voluntary exile, and as all communion with Rome was
-thereby broken off, the question of the Succession hinges on the fact,
-that Gustavus had previously sent the fourth Bishop, Magnussen, elect of
-Skara, to be consecrated at Rome. This fact, which is distinctly affirmed
-by Gejer, has been questioned, though on no very good grounds.</p>
-
-<p>The weakness of the Swedish Church, however, does not lie here, but
-in its peculiar connection with the State, which is perpetually involving
-it in secular politics, and as perpetually taking from its spiritual character.
-This defect existed before the Reformation just as it does now,
-and then, as now, formed its element of weakness: then, the bishops
-were treated with by contending sovereigns as the most influential
-barons—now, they are tampered with as the most influential politicians.
-Sweden is governed by a king and four houses of parliament—the
-Nobles, the Clergy, the Burghers, and the Peasants; and a bill passing
-any three of these houses becomes the law of the land. But, though
-the houses are of equal authority, the value of individual votes must
-vary inversely as the numbers of which those houses are composed:
-for instance, the house of the Nobles contains about 1500 members, and
-the house of the Clergy 80; the value of any single ecclesiastic’s vote
-is, therefore, eighteen times greater than that of any nobleman’s vote.
-The effect of this has been precisely the same as the more arbitrary
-nature of the Norwegian Reformation: the Church of Sweden has
-become—first political, then worldly, then Erastian; and, at the same
-time, the enormous size of the parishes operates precisely as it does in
-Norway,—the majority of the people are estranged from their Church
-through sheer ignorance of its doctrines,—the prescribed forms of
-Confirmation, Communion, and so forth, being gone through as essentials
-rather of civil promotion than of eternal Salvation.</p>
-
-<p>It is not a matter of surprise, therefore, that, year after year, the
-Swedish Church is losing some portion of her Churchmanship, and
-degenerating more and more every day into a mere establishment. At
-this point it would have arrived long ago, had it not been for Archbishop
-Wallin, who, not only a sound divine, which most of the educated
-clergy are, but by far the greatest poet modern Sweden has produced,
-has embodied the doctrines of the Church in a series of hymns, which
-now form part of the Church service, under the name of “Bede
-Psalmer.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span></p>
-
-<p>Sweden is a musical nation, and these hymns are extremely popular.
-So far as the author can find out, they are the only means by which
-ninety-nine Swedes out of every hundred have any knowledge whatever
-of the Christian doctrine, or in any way differ from their Heathen
-ancestors—the worshippers of Odin and the mythology of Asgard.</p>
-
-<p>As a specimen of Wallin’s poetry, we will take his hymn on the
-Creation—a paraphrase of the 104th Psalm,—perhaps as fine a specimen
-of rhythmic illustration as any that exists. We give it from
-Howitt’s translation:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“Sing, my soul,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The Eternal’s praise,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Infinite!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Omnipotent!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">God of all worlds!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In glorious light, all star-bestrewed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou dost Thy majesty invest,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Heaven of heavens is Thine abode,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And worlds revolve at Thy behest.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Infinite!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Omnipotent!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">God of all worlds!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy chariot on the winds doth go;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The thunder follows Thy career;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Flowers are Thy ministers below,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And storms Thy messengers of fear.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Infinite!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Omnipotent!</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">O Thou, our God!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The earth sang not Thy peerless might</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Amid the heavenly hosts of old,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Thou spakest, and from empty night</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">She issued forth, and on her flight</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of countless ages proudly rolled,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Darkness wrapped her, and the ocean</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wildly weltering on her lay;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Thou spakest, and, with glad devotion,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Up she rose with queenly motion,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And pursued her radiant way.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">“High soared the mountains,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Glittering and steep,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Forth burst the fountains,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And through the air flashing—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">From rock to rock dashing—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">’Mid the wild tempest crashing—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Took their dread leap.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“Then opened out the quiet dale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">With all its grass and flowers;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Then gushed the spring, so clear and pale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Beneath the forest bowers;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Then ran the brooks from moorlands brown,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Along the verdant lea,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the fleet fowls of heaven shot down</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Into a leafy sea;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">’Mid the wild herd’s rejoicing throng,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The nightingales accord—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">All nature raised its matin song,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And praised Thee—Nature’s Lord:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O Thou, who wast, and art, and e’er shall be!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Eternal One! all earth adoring stands,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And through the works of Thy Almighty Hands</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Feels grace and wisdom infinite in Thee!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">“And answer gives the sea,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The fathomless ocean—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">The waste without end—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Where, in ceaseless commotion,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Winds and billows contend;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where myriads that live without count, without name—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Crawling or swimming in strange meander—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fill the deep as it were with a quivering flame;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where the heavy whale doth wander</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Through the dumb night’s hidden reign,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And man unwearied with earth’s wide strife</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Still hunts around death’s grim domain—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The over-flood of life.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“To Thee! to Thee! Thou Sire of all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Our prayers in faith ascend,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All things that breathe, both great and small,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On Thee alone depend.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy bounteous hand Thou dost unclose,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And happiness unstinted flows</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In streams that know no end.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BREAKING UP THE ENCAMPMENT.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“To-day shall be spent in drinking,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">We need not spare the ale,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And we will set sail on the morrow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Nor will our good luck fail.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Svenska Folk-visor.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The whole party found their quarters in the Soberud valley
-so extremely comfortable, and the game so very abundant,
-that they were readily induced to prolong their stay; and the
-Parson struck up quite a friendship with the worthy Pfarrherr,
-and talked theology with the Candidatus. Torkel, who
-had had long, and, apparently, very interesting conversations
-with old Torgenson, the import of which did not transpire,
-had asked a temporary leave of absence, which was readily
-granted—the Parson having, no doubt, his own suspicions
-from what he saw at the sœter, but prudently holding his
-tongue about them. Indeed, he was no loser; for Torkel’s
-place, in every respect, except as an interpreter, was amply
-supplied by Karl Torgenson, who, having served his time of
-drill, had been just discharged from the corvette <i>Freya</i>, and
-had arrived, somewhat unexpectedly, on the Sunday evening.
-Karl spoke a little English, though not enough for conversation;
-but, on the other hand, he was as good a sportsman as
-Torkel himself, and much better acquainted with the localities
-of his own home.</p>
-
-<p>Under his guidance, the Parson’s flies lured many a trout
-from the blue waters of the lake; but the best fish—such fish,
-indeed, as he had never before seen—were caught by a discovery
-of his own.</p>
-
-<p>The lake lying in a broad valley, many of its shores were
-shelving and sandy, or slightly muddy, instead of plumping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-down in rocky sublacustrine precipices, and all these shallows
-were fringed with weeds. Coming home late in the evening,
-he saw a number of children in the water, ladling out, with
-tins and buckets, and vessels of every description, hundreds
-and thousands of little white glittering fish, which were
-feeding on the weed. These were the young of the fresh-water
-herring, which, whenever they can get them, which is
-not often, the Norwegians make into soup. The full-grown
-fish are not taken till later in the year, and this is never
-done except by nets, for they will rise at no bait of any kind
-big enough to put on a hook.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson was looking at the little glittering things as
-they sparkled in the moonlight,—and no fish is so brilliantly
-white as the fresh-water herring,—when, amid the shouts
-and screams of the children, a huge trout was tumbled on
-shore out of one of the buckets. “O! by George!” said the
-Parson to Karl Torgenson, who smiled as if he understood
-every word, “that is worth noting; that fellow came to
-make his supper off the herrings, and having ventured in too
-far, has got entangled in the weeds. There will be some of
-his great relations come to supper, also, for certain. Let us
-try.”</p>
-
-<p>A light fly-rod, such as the Parson carried, was not the
-weapon best adapted for the purpose; but he forthwith unlooped
-his casting-line, and taking a trace out of his fly-book—for
-he was never without trolling materials—fitted
-one of the little glittering gwineads on the litch; and wading
-quite as deep as was prudent, and a good deal deeper than
-was pleasant, considering the time of night and the coldness
-of Norwegian waters, he cast beyond the edge of the weeds;
-the bait had hardly began to spin, when a fish took him, such
-as required all his skill to master with his fly-rod, and long
-and arduous was the struggle before he succeeded in leading
-him captive through an opening in the weeds, and drawing
-him quietly into shoal water.</p>
-
-<p>The fact was, that the whole coast, like that of France
-during the late war, was in a state of strict blockade; the
-little gwineads, like the chasse-marées, were dodging about
-in-shore, while the great trout, unable, from their draught of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-water, to pursue them into the shallows, were grimly cruising
-about and snapping up any adventurous little youngster that
-showed his nose outside. The fly-rod was too feeble to do
-much execution that evening, for it took half an hour to
-master a fish with it; but the discovery was not lost on the
-Parson, and the next evening saw him with a twenty-two
-foot cane trolling-rod, commanding, at easy cast, the whole
-fishable water, and supplying the præstgaard, as well as the
-hall, with such trout as they had never dreamt of.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain and Birger were no less assiduous in their
-own particular calling, and from the quantity of game, including
-deer, which they brought in, might very fairly be
-said to have paid for their keep. The fjeld of Soberud was
-much more open, and better adapted for game, than the
-valley of the Torjedahl and its surrounding mountains, and
-also, as there were fewer thick trees, better adapted for
-getting at it.</p>
-
-<p>Pleasant as all this was, time wore on, and it became
-necessary for the party to resume their knapsacks and retrace
-their steps, Torgensen having first exacted a promise that
-they would visit Soberud once more before their departure.
-“Perhaps,” said he, mysteriously, “I may have occasion to
-muster all the friends of my house before the winter comes
-on, and whenever that occasion happens, I hope the present
-party will honour my roof-tree.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom, who interpreted this speech, could not conceive what
-it alluded to, though it seemed to make him very merry; but
-the mystery, if ever there was one, was soon explained by
-Lota’s blushes, when the Captain, on seeing her and the
-missing Torkel together, as the party arrived at the Aalfjer
-sœter that evening, shook his head at them with a knowing
-smile. In fact, Torkel had made such excellent use of his
-time, that while the party were occupied with the fish and
-game of the Soberud valley, he had contrived to settle, and
-definitely arrange, with the full approbation of Torgensen,
-that his marriage should take place in the autumn. No
-Norwegian ever thinks of marrying till the work-day summer
-is past; besides, Torkel was making a very good thing of it
-with his present employers, and if he were not, it is not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-altogether certain that even Lota’s attractions would have
-been sufficient to draw him away from the sports in which he
-was engaged. Apparently, he did not find those things which
-he had to settle with Lota herself, so easy of arrangement as
-those which had been the subject of his discussions with her
-father; for though the first Sunday evening was quite long
-enough to settle everything with him, it took him three or
-four whole days at the sœter to arrange matters with her;
-indeed, there the party found him when they encamped there
-on their return, and, notwithstanding this, he had so much
-more to say on the last morning, that the fishermen had
-arrived for some hours at their old encampment on the
-Torjedahl, and had had time entirely to change the whole
-plan of the campaign before they saw anything of him.</p>
-
-<p>During their absence the post had arrived, bringing
-letters for them all; these Ullitz had forwarded, and their
-first occupation, while their attendants were preparing the
-supper and exchanging news with those who had been left
-behind, was to read their respective letters. Birger had
-a whole heap—which he did not deserve—from a host
-of relations and friends, whom, in his ardour for sport,
-he had grievously neglected; all of these he postponed for a
-great, square, official looking document, with “Kongs ofwer
-Commandant’s Expedition” written in the corner: this he
-did deserve, for it contained, along with an acknowledgement
-for his valuable portfolio of military drawings, an
-extension of leave, which the dutiful lieutenant had asked
-for on the plea so well known in the British army, “family
-arrangements.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah,” said the Captain, “here’s a letter from Moodie;
-he wants us to meet him at Gotheborg, where he is bringing
-down a cargo of elks and reindeer, and Northern wild
-beasts, for the Zoological Gardens; and then we are to go
-back with him, he says, to some place which I can neither
-spell nor pronounce, where, the chances are, we shall get a
-crack at a bear.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have always had a weakness that way,” said the
-Parson, “I believe getting a crack at a bear, as you call it,
-was your principal reason for coming here at all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, but Moodie says there is capital fishing on the
-Gotha; the salmo ferox, my boy! what do you think of
-that? and you know the fish are beginning to run small
-here, there was not a full-mouthed salmon caught the last
-day we fished here, nothing but miserable grauls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Grauls give very pretty sport, though, and as for the
-salmo ferox, it is nothing but an ill-conditioned, over-grown
-trout, that has got a cross of the pike in it, and consequently
-will take nothing but the spinning bait. But I must say
-I should like to see old Moodie again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you go then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask Birger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hey! what?” said Birger, looking up from his letters,
-which, after all, seemed to be more interesting than he had
-expected. “Moodie? ah! yes! that’s the fellow my friend
-Bjornstjerna mentions; a terrible fellow he says, a very
-Hercules against the wild beasts—there is never a skal
-without him; Bjornstjerna says he had rather have him than
-a hundred men, any day.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who is Bjornstjerna?”</p>
-
-<p>“One of the Ofwer Jagmästerer, the officers, that is, whose
-business it is to call out the peasantry to keep down the
-wild beasts; he is very good authority on such matters, and
-I vote we accept your friend Moodie’s invitation, it is much
-the best chance we have of seeing sport.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain looked a little puzzled; he was anxious
-enough to go, but the invitation had been to him and the
-Parson, and of course had not included Birger, whose existence
-was necessarily unknown to Moodie; in fact, the
-Captain had not thought of that difficulty. Birger, who had
-spent a good part of his leave in England, where he had some
-friends, burst out laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that is just your English way, you think you cannot
-take me, because your friend has not sent me a written
-invitation in due form—that is not the way we go on here;
-my friend’s friend is my friend, and if your countryman has
-not learnt that in the four years during which, Bjornstjerna
-tells me, he has been living in the country, it is high time he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-should learn. When does he drive his flocks and herds to
-Gotheborg?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, if we would meet him, we must start directly, for
-he comes next week.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why not start directly? come Parson! one river is
-as good as another.”</p>
-
-<p>“Scarcely that,” said the Parson, laughing; “but I do
-want to see how Moodie carries on the war in your barbarous
-country; so let us go—Tom,” raising his voice so as
-to be heard from below, “when does the next steamer sail for
-Valö?”</p>
-
-<p>“The day after to-morrow, at day-break,” said Tom, whose
-head was a perfect register of naval events.</p>
-
-<p>“That will never do,” said the Parson, who contemplated
-a farewell visit to the Torjedahl salmon.</p>
-
-<p>“Not do!” said Birger, “why it is the very thing. Strike
-the tents to-morrow, early,—down the river without stopping
-at Christiansand Bridge,—run alongside the steamer, take
-our berths,—stow our goods,—and then we shall have half the
-day to land and visit our stores at Ullitz’s, kiss Marie, and
-make what changes we want in the baggage department. I
-must take my uniform for Gotheborg; we are not ashamed
-of our uniform in our country,” he added, significantly nodding
-at the Captain, who, like most English soldiers, was rather
-addicted to mufti; “and you too will want more baggage,
-now that you are going into a civilized country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not let Torkel hear you say that. He considers
-Christiansand the emporium of fashion and the centre of
-civilization. By-the-bye, what are we to do with our men?
-I will not leave Torkel behind,—I have quite an affection for
-the fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave Torkel behind!” said Birger; “why should you?
-you do not think the Swedes will eat him, do you? I mean
-to take Piersen myself; these Norwegians, rascals as they
-are, all of them, are a great deal smarter and handier in
-forest work than our Swedes; their education fits them for
-Jacks-of-all-trades; they get kicked out of doors, with a
-pack on their back, at ten years of age, to earn their livelihood,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-and learn smartness and knowledge of the world,—and
-they do learn it, and precious scoundrels they grow up:—however,
-they answer our purpose, for they can turn their
-hands to anything.”</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Torkel came up, looking a little confused
-and ashamed of himself, and not the less so that the
-Parson asked significantly for the latest news from the
-sœter of Aalfjer.</p>
-
-<p>His love, however, did not prevent him from being wild
-to go, as soon as he heard of the change of plans—a sentiment
-in which the rest fully participated; indeed there was not a
-dissentient voice in the camp, except that of the boatmen,
-who were to be discharged at Christiansand, and whose fun
-was thus prematurely cut short. A small pecuniary gratification
-set matters right in that quarter also, and when the
-evening closed on the last day of the encampment, the hopes
-and eager anticipations of a brilliant future had already
-effaced all regrets for a happy past.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was hardly above the horizon, when the whole
-camp was astir, and active preparations for departure were
-begun. These did not occupy any very great deal of time;
-they had not come up the river in very heavy marching
-order, and there were a good many hands at the work. The
-principal part of it was securing the smoked salmon, of which
-they had now a very fair cargo. This is a very acceptable
-present everywhere; for though salmon are plenty in
-Norway, the means of catching them are very imperfectly
-understood. There was also a goodly array of forest preserves,
-which, being too heavy for transport, and subject to a
-heavy duty into the bargain from jealous Sweden, were destined
-to swell the ample stores of Madame Ullitz.</p>
-
-<p>While all this was going on, the Parson, rod in hand, took
-a melancholy farewell of his favourite throws, in the course of
-which he caught two fish—both grauls, though, as the
-Captain took care to remark. By ten o’clock everything
-was ready, and the boats shoved off on their downward
-voyage.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, certainly it is much pleasanter to go with the
-stream than against it, in all the affairs of this life,” said the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-Captain, as the boats closed again, after racing down the
-upper rapids which had cost them so much time and so
-much trouble to ascend. “Here we have undone in half an
-hour and at our ease, what it took us half a day to do, and
-with harder work than I wish to meet with very often.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not an uncommon thing in this wicked world of ours,”
-said the Parson. “<i>Facilis descensus</i>;—you know the rest.
-However, that which is pleasant is not always safe,—so look
-out. Here we are, at the head of the Oxea rapid, and a
-touch of these rocks, going down stream, you will find a very
-different thing from a touch going up. Give way, boys!
-let me have good steerage-way through the water.”</p>
-
-<p>And he dashed into the very midst of the racing current—rocks,
-trees, and banks flying past him, till, before they
-seemed to be well in it, the three boats were floating side
-by side in the broad flat below, at the lower end of which
-the encampment had been made on the first night of the
-expedition. A short halt here, which they made, more for
-the pot than for sport, secured them a good catch of trout
-and a graul or two; and their rapid course down the deep,
-full-flowing stream was resumed, leisurely indeed—but so
-swift was the current under the deceitful show of its calm
-and quiet surface, that notwithstanding a little difficulty at
-the lower rapids, where there was not water enough in the
-boat canal to float them, the sun was still high when they
-rounded the dockyard point, and opened the harbour of
-Christiansand.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Tom, where is the steamer?”</p>
-
-<p>Tom rubbed his eyes, for he could not believe them, but
-no amount of rubbing will produce a vision of that which is
-not, and the fact became indisputable as they pulled on—there
-was no steamer in the harbour. The Parson, who
-after all, had left very unwillingly, and rather in compliance
-with the wishes of his companions than in accordance with
-his own fancy or judgment, began to feel sulky; the Captain,
-who had proposed the change, began to feel anxious, and to
-labour under the weight of his responsibility; and even
-Birger, who had nothing to reproach himself for, was not
-entirely at his ease.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<p>Things however, were not so bad as they had anticipated;
-there was no steamer certainly, but Ullitz, who was lounging
-on the quay—where indeed the good man spent the greater
-part of his summer hours, looking out for travellers and
-seeking whom he might entertain, and who certainly did not
-approve of a change of plans which deprived him of a very
-profitable commissariat,—informed them that the day had
-been changed, and that the steamer would not arrive till the
-following evening, nor sail till the day after.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Birger, “let us have one good supper,
-and one comfortable night’s rest more than we expected; I
-will be bound we strike out something for to-morrow, and
-after all we shall lose nothing, we may as well be at Christiansand
-as at Gotheborg.”</p>
-
-<p>Ullitz did not say, but looked as if he thought they had
-much better.</p>
-
-<p>“The sea is as calm as glass,” said Torkel to Tom.
-“Would not this do for eider duck-hunting.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a great pity that Fröken Lota has to make up her
-stores of eider down now,” said Tom, “and she to be married
-in the autumn.”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel could afford to laugh, for he knew very well—indeed,
-none had cause to know it better, he having supplied
-a good half of them—the extent of Miss Lota’s eider
-stores. All this was an aside, and Tom resumed aloud, “To
-be sure, there could not be better weather, we shall not have
-ripple out in the haaf<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> any more than in the fjord; and
-besides, we can take some cod-lines, and when we have
-killed or driven off the ducks we can fill our boats with rock
-cod.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is all that?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>Tom explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word I think it will do very well; what say
-you, Birger?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing better, I have never been duck-hunting myself,
-but they say it is capital fun; there are three or four fellows
-of ‘ours’ who always get leave in the duck season, and pass<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-a month or two on the islands of the Baltic; they say it is
-first-rate sport—I vote we go.”</p>
-
-<p>And so it was settled, and the details of the expedition
-were arranged as they walked up those sandy deserts of
-streets which they had traversed on the first night of their
-landing.</p>
-
-<p>Marie received them with smiles, and when she learnt
-the object of their sport, so worked on the Captain’s susceptible
-heart, that he vowed she should have every feather that
-fell to his gun. The Parson was rather affected to Lota, but
-Torkel, who had been a little stung by Tom’s joke, magnanimously
-transferred the offer to Marie, who, “poor thing,
-might perhaps want the down, and Lota would not know
-what to do with it, she had a great deal more than she
-could make up already;” which, considering his own fame as
-a hunter, as well as that of young Svensen, between whom
-Miss Lota had been coquetting (so Tom averred) till she
-ought to have been ashamed of herself, was not unlikely to
-be literally true.</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p>It must be remarked that this is the sporting way of collecting eider
-down. The business way is robbing the nests, which is done in spring,
-and is very slow work—though sufficiently dangerous.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">EIDER DUCK HUNTING.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“For now in our trim boats of Norroway deal</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We must dance on the waves with the porpoise and seal;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The breeze it shall pipe, so it pipe not too high,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the gull be our songstress whene’er she flits by;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We’ll sing while we bait, and we’ll sing while we haul,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the deeps of the Haaf have enough for us all.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Norway Fishing Song.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dawn was yet grey upon the mountains, and the light
-steaming mist was still resting on the glassy surface of the
-harbour, when the three boats slipped off noiselessly from the
-dockyard point. The fishing rods, now useless, had been
-landed, and the guns and rifles had taken their places, while
-the after-lockers were stored with cod lines and their gear,
-to say nothing of the långref that had done such good service
-at Mosse Eurd, and which was now converted into a spillet.
-The boats were well provisioned—that is almost an invariable
-rule in Norway, so far as quantity goes, but on this
-occasion, they were provisioned with all the delicacies the
-fair Marie could lay her hands upon; nay, so interested was
-she in the subject, that she came down with the party, in
-the grey of the morning, to superintend the packing herself;
-and, after carrying on a lively conversation with Birger, on
-the road, endeavoured, in vain, to make the Captain understand
-something or other; her anxiety to convey her meaning
-brought her cheek very much closer to his lips than perhaps
-she intended—how close it was impossible to say, for the
-morning light was still very faint,—in all probability, Birger
-might have come in for a share of the secret, whatever it
-was, but he was rude enough to burst out laughing, and to
-add something in Swedish, about bribery and corruption,
-which put the young lady to immediate flight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You need not look so conceited,” said he, (possibly the
-grapes were sour); “it was not you, it was the eider down
-she was thinking of.”</p>
-
-<p>No one knows what silence is, who has not been in the
-North—what we call silence, is a perpetual recurrence of a
-thousand familiar sounds, so familiar that the ear does not
-notice them; the chirp of hundreds of birds, and millions of
-insects go to make up English silence;—perhaps within the
-Arctic circle it may be deeper than that which, at that early
-hour, brooded over the harbour of Christiansand; but even
-that was a silence which made itself to be felt; and the
-regular and steady roll of the oars in the rowlocks, as the
-boats shot out into the fjord, fairly echoed among the cliffs
-like grumbling thunder. Nothing could be more calm and
-unbroken than the water, which seemed to be hot, for a
-slight steam kept slowly rising from the whole surface, and
-hung upon it like a veil which now began to whiten in the
-increasing light; every here and there a seal would put up
-his head, like a black oily bead, take a steady view of the
-boats, and then dip under, without a ripple to show where
-the surface had been broken.</p>
-
-<p>“Oars!” said the Captain, in a whisper, as one of
-these sheep of Proteus evinced a little more indiscreet
-curiosity than his neighbours, and as his boat, which had
-been leading, lost her way, he rose quietly, and his rifle
-thundered through the still air of the morning, as if it had
-been a six-pounder, while its echoes were caught and
-repeated, crack after crack, by a dozen sharp cliffs and
-wooded islands.</p>
-
-<p>The surface was sufficiently disturbed this time—for the
-Captain’s rifle seldom spoke in vain,—and the seal was struggling
-in the agonies of death; the men stretched out on their
-oars as if they were racing, but before the boat could reach
-the spot, all was quiet again, and a slight red stain in the
-water was all that remained to tell of the Captain’s accuracy
-of aim. The Captain gazed on the deep blue below.</p>
-
-<p>“It is of no use,” said the Parson, “they always sink, and
-it is a great shame to be firing at that which you cannot
-get when you have killed it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You used to shoot them, yourself, in Sligo Bay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did, but there was a tide there, and we shot them
-at high water, and picked them up when the sands were
-bare—even then, though, we lost a good many, but here
-there is not a chance; that fellow is food for lobsters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope the cockneys will profit by it when the
-next batch goes to the London market,” said the Captain,
-loading his rifle, “but have we no tide here?”</p>
-
-<p>“We have no sands that we can make available; but a
-tide there is, though a faint one. Did you ever hear how
-there came to be a tide in Norway—for originally there certainly
-was nothing of the kind? Thor was on a visit to
-Loki Uttgard, who, in all love, challenged him to drink his
-great horn out, and to turn it over to show there were no
-heeltaps, as is the custom in Norway. Thor had never been
-conquered yet in drinking, or in anything else; in fact, he
-had the hardest head, inside and out, of any god in Norway.
-He drank, and he drank, but there was no bottom to be
-found to the horn, and Thor put it down with shame, and
-acknowledged himself at last vanquished; but the Uttgarders,
-who were all giants of a very ferocious stamp, stood
-round, in speechless admiration. Loki had made a communication
-between the bottom of the horn and the sea
-itself, and what Thor had drunk was the ebb.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m! Hence the fine of a glass of salt and water,” said
-the Captain, “I have often inflicted it, but I never knew
-the high authority I had for so doing. Come, boys, give way
-for the Haaf.”</p>
-
-<p>But before so doing they had to stop at a shoal, well
-known to Tom, who now began to take the command, while
-Torkel sank into comparative insignificance. It was necessary
-to lay in a supply of cod-bait, which was not to be had
-in deep water. This was a species of large limpet, that clung
-to the rocks by thousands, and was dislodged by the boat-hooks,
-and stowed away in the balers. At length the swell
-of the open sea made itself to be felt, for ever heaving and
-setting and rolling along in vast mountains, and flashing in
-spray against the black rocks, though the surface was as
-glassy and unbroken as that of the harbour. The whole<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-swell of the North Sea, and of the Atlantic beyond it heaves
-against these coasts, and is never quiet in the calmest
-weather. The sun, which had now risen, gleamed against
-the white tower of the light-house, and flashed back in
-blinding rays from its lantern, as the boats pulled past it
-into the Haaf.</p>
-
-<p>They had now formed line abreast, at five or six hundred
-yards distance, and were pulling leisurely along, keeping a
-bright look out on every side. Calm as it was, the swells
-were quite heavy enough to conceal the boats entirely from
-each other as, from time to time, the huge mountains rolled
-between them.</p>
-
-<p>They had proceeded in this manner for about half an hour,
-without seeing anything, except gulls and cormorants—which
-latter, sitting in the water, and rising and falling on the
-swells, had more than once deceived them,—when, suddenly,
-Birger, who was on the extreme right, pointed with his
-hand to the westward of their course: all eyes were turned
-in that direction, and the line wheeled on Birger, as a pivot,
-when a dozen or so, of black spots were seen on the side of
-the swell, in the rare intervals when the boats and they
-were both rising.</p>
-
-<p>The centre boat, which was the Parson’s, pulled right on
-the objects, while the flankers having increased their distance
-to half a mile, pulled on some hundred yards in advance of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Onward as they came, the black spots grew larger and
-larger, and the distinct outlines of the ducks began to be distinguishable;
-still they sat on the water, rising and falling
-to the swell as unconcernedly as ever.</p>
-
-<p>The flanking boats were already ahead of them, and the
-Parson, with his long gun in his hand, had begun to calculate
-his distance—which, out at sea, is particularly deceptive,—when,
-with one accord, the dozen tails began to wriggle, and
-at once the whole flock were under water, disappearing simultaneously,
-and as if by signal.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">EIDER DUCK SHOOTING.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The men, who, much to the Parson’s impatience, had been
-pulling very leisurely indeed, now stretched out with all
-their might, and as they shot across the spot lately occupied<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-by the ducks, marked the chain of air-bubbles, which tended
-out to seaward. A signal conveyed this information to the
-Captain’s boat, which pulled into the line to intercept them;
-Birger, who was thus thrown out, closing in with all his
-might, and the Parson following up the track—each stood
-up as well as he could in the roll of the sea, and looked out
-with all his eyes. Six, eight, ten minutes elapsed, and nothing
-to be seen: it was impossible that the birds could be under
-so long. At last, far to the rear of even Birger’s boat, twelve
-black spots were seen rising and falling on the swell as unconcernedly
-as they were at first. The ducks had headed
-back under water, and the boats had pulled over them.</p>
-
-<p>The same manœuvre was repeated, and with the same
-result; the centre boat approached almost within firing
-distance, when the twelve tails again wriggled simultaneously,
-and the twelve bodies went under at once. This time, however,
-they rose within shot of Birger’s boat, but before he
-could get his gun to bear on them, they were under again.</p>
-
-<p>This was precisely what was wanted; the only chance of
-getting a shot, at this season of the year, is to make the birds
-dive till they are exhausted: they are said not to duck the
-flash like the divers—perhaps they do not, but, at all events,
-they are generally under water long before the quickest
-gunner can get a shot at them, and that, practically, comes to
-the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>The dive this time was a short one, though it carried them
-out of shot, for the Captain, catching the line of their chain,
-had pulled on their track, and headed them back to his
-friends. This time they rose among the boats, and one or
-two attempted a heavy lumbering flight, which was speedily
-put a stop to by the fowling-pieces. The rest dispersed,
-diving each his own way, and pursued by the boats independently.</p>
-
-<p>The object of approaching in a crescent, is to prevent the
-birds from doing this before they are too much exhausted to
-dive far. A separated flock can seldom be marked, inasmuch
-as it is more difficult to catch sight of one black spot than a
-dozen; and besides, under such circumstances, the boats can
-no longer act in concert. If a flock disperses early in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-chase, the chances are that not above one or two birds will
-be secured; if kept pretty well together, not above as many
-will escape.</p>
-
-<p>It is a singular thing that eider ducks should be so unwilling
-to take the wing in summer, for, though they rise
-heavily, they are by no means bad flyers; but so long as they
-have breath to dive, nothing will get them into the air; and
-this peculiarity, which in ordinary weather is their preservation,
-during the calms is their destruction.</p>
-
-<p>The chase was now an ordinary affair, very like rat hunting:
-the birds, confused and dispersed, kept poking their
-heads up in all sorts of unexpected directions, and, as their
-dives were now short, one or other of the quick and experienced
-eyes was sure to detect them. As for missing, when
-they were once within shot, it was impossible to miss a bird
-nearly as big as a goose, and almost as heavy on the wing.
-Ten out of the twelve were bagged, and two only were unaccounted
-for, they having slipped away during the heat of the
-chase. The boats then formed line-of-battle again, and
-cruised on in search of other adventures.</p>
-
-<p>Various little episodes occurred, in which one or two rare
-sea-gulls and other birds were brought down, as they hovered
-round the boats or crossed their course. Most gulls, indeed,
-evince a great deal of curiosity in their disposition, and a
-very dangerous quality this sometimes proves; but in this case
-the murders were committed exclusively for the sake of Science
-(who, by the way, must be a very cruel goddess), for the
-fishermen were a great deal too much of sportsmen to indulge
-in the vulgar gull-murder without object, which is called
-sport by maritime cockneys. Three or four other flocks of
-eider duck were sighted, and chased with various success;
-some, taking the alarm in time, contrived to dive and swim
-ahead of the boats, so as to elude them altogether; some,
-startled by too rapid approach, dived before they had time
-to draw together, and, breaking their order, appeared so many
-scattered black spots in different directions, most of which
-were necessarily lost while pursuing the others. But these
-mishaps were not of frequent occurrence, and a good heap of
-great ugly birds had already been collected, when, about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-noon, a light cat’s-paw ruffled the surface, frosting it over
-with little wavelets. At the time when this occurred it was
-quite unexpected; the boats were following a chain of bubbles,
-and all available eyes being fixed on them, no one was
-looking out into the offing.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the trace was lost; the birds might have
-risen, but the eye could no longer mark the clear, well-defined,
-black dot. Ten minutes afterwards all was calm again,
-but the flock were already safe.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all over for to-day,” said Tom, looking anxiously
-into the offing, where a narrow line of darker blue had
-already begun to mark the hitherto undistinguishable boundary
-of sea and sky; “here comes the breeze already.”</p>
-
-<p>And slowly but surely the line crept down, first widening,
-then throwing out ramifications before it; and then the
-sleepy surface of the sea seemed to shudder, as if touched by
-a cold breath; little wavelets began to ripple on the backs
-of the long swells,—then light airs fanned the boats uncertainly,
-and, at last, a steady breeze set in from the southward
-and westward.</p>
-
-<p>“Up stick, for the cod ground!” said Tom; “we are
-only wasting time here.” And in a couple of minutes the
-three boats were running away to the eastward, under their
-English lugs, which, having hitherto served as tents, were
-now for the first time applied to their legitimate use.</p>
-
-<p>The end of the chase had left them five or six miles to
-westward of the fjord’s mouth, and as far to seaward, while
-the fishing-ground was a sunken island or shoal, a couple of
-miles or so from the lighthouse near the outer range of
-islands;—it is called a shoal, and possibly, for Norway, it is
-a shoal; but there is not less than twenty fathoms on any
-part of it.</p>
-
-<p>The boats were slipping along through the smooth water,
-as if they were going up and down the hills of an undulating
-road; the breeze, though very light, was steady, and already
-the features of the outer islands were growing distinct; and
-Tom was looking out for the bearings of the shoal.</p>
-
-<p>“This is all very well,” said the Captain, steering his boat
-close to that of the Parson, “but I have had no breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then why don’t you set about it; I am sure Marie has
-not forgotten you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I will not stand that; why should we make a toil of
-pleasure? I mean to have a regular breakfast, and a pot of
-hot coffee—why not? we have the whole day before us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I do not mind; hail Birger—there is a dissolute
-island, as Jacob calls it, before us; we will boil your pot
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger was always ready for his grub, or, indeed, for anything
-else that was proposed; and the boats were made fast
-to some rocky prominences on the lea of the island, with a
-boat-keeper in each, to prevent them from grinding one
-another to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, many of these islets, which are mere rocks,
-contain fresh water, some of them in pools in the rocks, but
-many in regular springs, and in this particular case a very
-respectable little streamlet trickled down a crevice of the
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>Every beach, rock, and islet on the Norwegian coast is
-fringed with a layer of drift-wood, in pieces of every size,
-from the great baulk which in England would be worth five
-or six pounds down to the smallest splinters. The reason
-of this is, that each river is continually floating down its
-yearly freight of pines to the sea; these are caught by a
-boom at the mouth,—that is to say, by a floating chain
-of squared pine-stems,—but many dip under this and
-escape, many escape when it is opened to let boats pass,
-and occasionally a freshet breaks a link or draws a
-staple, in which case the whole boom-full of timber floats
-out to sea at once. All this is irrecoverably lost, for it is
-illegal to pick up timber floating; and a very necessary law
-this is, or the booms would find themselves broken much
-oftener than they are. Nevertheless, the quantity of timber
-lost annually in that way would pretty nearly supply all the
-wants of all the English dockyards put together. But “it
-is an ill wind that blows nobody any good;”—the wanderer
-on the sea coast need never be without a fire to warm himself
-by.</p>
-
-<p>“I like this,” said the Captain, as he lay on his back<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-looking up to the sky, watching the blue smoke as it came
-in wreaths above his head. “I should like to be a Robinson
-Crusoe now, with a desolate island of my own, like this,
-where the foot of man has never trod, and—Holloa! What
-the devil have we got now?” he said, jumping up;—“how
-came these little animals here?”</p>
-
-<p>The little animals referred to were half a dozen children,
-with rakes and hay-forks in their hands, who, attracted by
-the smoke and possibly by the smell of the fried ham, were
-peering over the edge of the cliff like so many sea-gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“These are the savages, Mr. Crusoe,” said the Parson,
-quietly; “but it really is a curious thing, so let us climb up
-the cliff and see what they are about.”</p>
-
-<p>The cliff was not difficult to scale, for the edges of the rocks
-were like steps; and at the top a very unexpected scene
-met their eye: a regular hay-field, with the hay in cocks,
-and five or six men and women at work at it; they were
-carrying their cocks on a sort of handbier down to their
-boats,—great, broad, heavy affairs these were, borrowed
-from the horse-ferry,—and upon these they were building
-hay-stacks, intending to take them in tow of their whale-boats,
-during the calm, and to bring them to the main land.</p>
-
-<p>The form of the island was a sort of cup, of which the
-cliffs round the edge were the highest parts, and the centre,
-from having no drain, had formed a fresh-water lake with a
-spongy, mossy border,—and this it was which supplied the
-streamlet. The outer rim was bare rock, but between these
-two extremes there was a boggy, black ring of vegetable
-mould, which produced in great abundance a coarse, rank,
-wiry grass, which the people were storing up for the winter,
-in order to deceive the poor beasts into the idea that they
-were eating hay. Poor as it was, they had come out a dozen
-miles to sea to get it: their boats, four in number, including
-the floating hay-stack, lay snugly in a little bay or inlet,
-on the shoreward side, where the water was comparatively
-quiet. They had evidently taken up their quarters on
-the island, and established a regular bivouac till the work
-should be finished, for there was a cooking place built up
-with stones, and two or three of the girls were spreading<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-out to dry, in the hot sun, the clothes they had been washing
-in the lake.</p>
-
-<p>“Who would have expected such a marine pastoral,” said
-Birger.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Här Necken sin harssa in glasborgen slaar,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Och Haafsfruar kamma sitt grönskende haar,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Och bleka den skinande drägten.”<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Heaven forefend,” said the Parson, hastily, “we are mad
-enough, some of us already; and Torkel is in love, which is
-worse; we do not want to see Haafsfruer. Remember Duke
-Magnus.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was not the Haafsfru that took away the senses of
-Duke Magnus,” said Torkel, “it was the curse of good Bishop
-Brask, that rested on the family of Gustavus from the day
-when he killed the two bishops and deceived our Bishop of
-Trondhjem, who had given them sanctuary; the whole royal
-family of Sweden have been crazy, more or less ever since,
-till they turned them all out and put our good father Karl
-Johann in their place.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger shook his head sadly; he was too highly born himself,
-and too aristocratic, not to feel a little shame at the idea
-of a French common soldier superseding the old family of
-Vasa, sprung, like himself, from Jarl Birger; but, for all that,
-he could not help admiring the worthy old king who, by his
-downright honesty and sincerity and his strict sense of duty,
-had painfully worked his way against all prejudices of rank
-and nationality, and had wound himself into the affections of
-the people who had chosen him. Still he had a kindly feeling
-for the old and glorious race, and though he could
-neither deny the fact of the sacrilege and breach of faith of
-Gustavus Vasa,—to which all the Norwegians, and many of
-the Swedes also, attribute the hereditary madness of his family,—nor
-indeed, the fact of the insanity itself, which was notorious
-in Eric his successor, in Charles XII., and Gustavus IV.,
-as well as the present exiled representative of the family,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-yet he did not above half like Torkel’s allusion to it. The
-Duke Magnus, whom they were speaking of, was the
-youngest son of Gustavus Vasa, and was the first in whom
-the symptoms of that disease about to be hereditary, had
-manifested themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, rather sympathising in his discomfiture,
-gave a turn to the subject by quoting the Swedish version
-of the Duke’s madness, to which he had himself alluded; for
-the Swedes ascribe it to the love of a mermaid, the sight of
-whom is invariably unlucky and is generally supposed to
-produce insanity.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Duke Magnus! Duke Magnus! bethink thee well,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Answer me not so haughtily;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">For if thou wilt not plight thee to me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Thou shalt ever crazy be.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Duke Magnus! Duke Magnus! plight thee to me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">I pray you still so freely,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Say me not nay, but yes, yes!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“There is no harm in <i>these</i> mermaids,” said Tom, “for
-they are as good and hard-working a set of girls as any in
-Christiansand, but I trust we shall never meet with the real
-ones; at least, not just before a voyage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not,” said the Captain, “my principal reason for
-coming here was the chance of seeing a mermaid in the only
-country in which they are still to be met with. Have you
-never seen one yourself, Tom?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, and God grant I never may; they are not seen so
-often now-a-days as they used to be, that is truth. If they
-are to be seen at all,” he said, after a pause, “I must say
-this is just the time and the weather for them; a calm, still,
-sunny day, with a mist on the water; through this they
-used often and often to be seen in old times, combing
-their hair, or driving their milk-white cattle to feed on the
-rock weed; sometimes, though not so often, they are seen at
-night, coming and shivering round the fishermen’s fires, and
-trying to entice away the young men and to get them to go
-with them to their deep sea-caves; and those that they carry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-off are never seen again in the upper world.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> But mermaids
-are never seen except in a still that comes before a storm,
-and no one ever catches a fish for the first voyage after they
-have seen them.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is just the same with the Skogsfrue,” (the Lady of the
-Forest,) said Torkel; “she is just as unlucky for us hunters,
-and when she can get any young men to go with her, she
-never lets them come back again. I have fancied more than
-once that I have seen her through the smoke of my fire in
-the wild fjeld, but she was not likely to catch me.”<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Ah! there spoke the bridegroom elect,” said Tom, “but
-I am not so sure of that either: I think, Torkel, I could
-tell Fröken Lota more than you would like her to hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you do, Tom, you deserve to be ducked,” said the
-Captain, “and I will help to duck you with my own
-hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may tell what he likes, and what he can,” said
-Torkel; “but it is quite true about the ill-luck in hunting
-and fishing, which follow the sight of the Skogsfruer and
-Haafsfruer both.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we will prove that, after Middagsmad, and there,
-in good time, goes Jacob’s shot, to let us know that all is
-ready.”</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon was spent in a lazy, lounging way; the
-shoal, if shoal it can be called, where the bottom was
-evidently jagged rock and the depth never less than twenty
-fathoms, lay just off the island where they were, and the
-boats had but to pull out a cable’s length to be in the very
-best of the ground; but it is not a very exciting amusement
-to be continually hauling in little fish about the size of
-whiting, as fast as the lines could run down. It did not
-take long to half fill the boats with that staple of Norwegian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-life, rock cod: the hands of the fishermen, hardened with
-forest work as they were, and tanned with the sun, were
-scarcely calculated to stand the salt water and the constant
-friction; the pleasure soon became a toil, and one by one
-the boats sought the shore of the island.</p>
-
-<p>The mermaids were soon characteristically employed in
-splitting and laying out in the hot sun the baby cod, which
-proved a very acceptable present; for this little fish, which
-swarms in every Norwegian fjord, is among the poorer
-families, the principal winter store, and in nine cases out of
-ten the only sea stock besides rö kovringer (or rye biscuits)
-which a vessel carries. A present, in the strict sense of the
-word, it could hardly be called, for Tom fairly sold his fish,
-and gravely bargained for them with the young ladies, at so
-many kisses the hundred, excluding Torkel from all
-competition, much to his disgust, by explaining to them
-that as an engaged man he was entirely shut out from the
-market.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson and Birger were in the meanwhile seated in a
-niche of the rock which formed a natural chaise-longue,
-sedately smoking their pipes and watching the picturesque-looking
-galliasses, which had endeavoured to work out
-against the mid-day’s spurt of breeze that had by this time
-entirely died away, and which now, with their great
-sails hanging idly, like so many curtains from their yards and
-gaffs, seemed, as well as the fishermen, to be basking and
-enjoying themselves in the evening sun.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sort of hurry to return. Christiansand had
-few attractions, and excepting Marie (and no one besides
-Birger could profit by that), Ullitz’s house had still fewer.
-The luggage was all packed, and probably by this time on
-board, their places taken, and their passage paid. Their
-intention was, not to land again but to go along side at once.
-In the meanwhile, a little tired with their morning’s work,
-they watched with half-closed eyes the beautiful and peaceful
-sunset and the glorious rising of the round full moon
-that threw a path of light across the glassy waters.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful!” said the Parson, who had just opened
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that is the work of the Ljus Alfar—Lys Alfir they
-call them here,—the Elves of Light. All elves work in metals,
-and these make a silver filagree so fine that it can only be
-seen by moonlight on a background of water. It is the floor
-of their ball-room, and if we were either of us good enough,
-which it seems we are not, we should see the little fairy
-beings dancing on it. When they are tired, they will go to
-sleep under the leaves of the limes, which tree belongs to
-them especially; the little spots of light which you see in its
-foliage on a moonshiny night are their bright eyes, which
-they have not yet closed in sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really,” said the Parson, “Prospero’s Isle ought to have
-been placed on the coasts of Norway; it would seem that the
-more scarce the visible inhabitants, the more numerous the
-invisible.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, yes, nature, nature abhors a vacuum, and these Alfar
-are by far the most numerous of all the supernatural beings.
-The White Elves, or Elves of Light, are seldom found out of
-Norway and Sweden, but the Brown Elf you have in Scotland
-as well. He works in metals of all sorts, though he delights
-most in silver and gold. It is the Brown Elf that is the fitful
-capricious being, which gives their meaning to the words elf
-and elvish: these are the creatures which pinch untidy
-maids, and drink up the milk, and light up their evening
-candles as Wills’-o’-the-Wisp, and lead men into bogs and
-marshes. When seen, they are dressed in brown jackets
-with crimson binding, and wear brown caps on their heads,
-whereas the Ljus Alfar wear always the helmet of the
-foxglove, and are dressed in white. It is the Black Elves
-that are malicious, though they often do good service to
-men; they, too, work in metals, but it is generally in iron
-and copper; they make arms and armour too, and sometimes
-filagree work, like the Ljus Alfar, but theirs is always black.”</p>
-
-<p>“Berlin iron?” suggested the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps so; at all events the chain armour that they
-make is a most valuable present, for, though no heavier than
-filagree-work, or, as you say, Berlin iron, it will turn a sword
-or a shot.”</p>
-
-<p>“The disposition of the elf, then, varies with its colour.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but one characteristic runs through all—all are
-capricious. All may benefit you, some may hurt you, but
-none can be reckoned upon, and that peculiarity, together
-with their universal horror of daylight, gives a key to their
-allegorical origin.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> These elves, or dwarfs, are the incarnation
-of mining speculations, a very general form of gambling
-both in Norway and Sweden. Mines are proverbially capricious;
-it is impossible to tell how they may turn out. Occasionally
-these spirits are beneficent in the highest degree,
-and their <i>protégés</i> become suddenly rich, but this is never
-to be relied on; the best are capricious, and the greater
-number are tricksy; while some—though even these are now
-and then capricious benefactors—are positively wicked and
-malicious. There, now you have my theory of the alfs and
-alfheim.</p>
-
-<p>“And there is another allegory about them, with a good
-Christian moral to it,” continued Birger, after a pause spent
-in cherishing the fading embers of his pipe; “these alfs are
-not baptised and have no part in salvation, but they are
-capable of baptism under certain circumstances; they are
-always anxious for it for themselves in their good moments,
-but invariably so for their children, though those instances
-in which they succeed are rare. The Icelandic family of
-Gudmund are cursed with a disease peculiar to their race,
-which originated—so the family tradition goes—in the curse
-of an alf frue, whom one of their ancestors had deceived in
-this particular. Andreas Gudmund had a child by an alf
-frue: at her earnest request, he promised that it should be
-taken in the church; and when the child was old enough, she
-duly brought it to the churchyard wall, which was as far as
-she might go herself, for no alf may enter consecrated
-ground. The sound of the bells was torture to her, but she
-bore it, and laid her child on the wall, with a golden cup as
-an offering. But Gudmund, fearing the censures of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-Church and the reproaches of his friends, would not fulfil
-his promise. The alf frue waited and waited, but the service
-was over, and the parting bells began to ring again. So she
-snatched up the child and vanished into her hill, and neither
-she nor it were ever seen again under the light of day. But
-from that time forward, the right hand of every Gudmund
-is leprous, in token that their ancestor was forsworn.</p>
-
-<p>“Now all this must be allegory; what should you say was
-the meaning of the spirits of the mine being capable of salvation,
-and being occasionally, though rarely, seen admitted into
-the Church?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose,” said the Parson, “it must be that wealth,
-though a temptation to evil, may be used in God’s service,
-and that it occasionally, though rarely, is so used. ‘Make
-to yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness,
-that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting
-habitations.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we may as well top our booms,” said the Captain,
-whose cigar was finished; “the people will be all asleep on
-board the steamer, and, besides—”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why we promised to let Marie have the eider down, and
-Ullitz’s people will be in bed, too. You know we sail at
-daybreak?”</p>
-
-<p>“O-ho, that’s the business is it? Well, then, call the men
-together, and see that they leave nothing behind them.”</p>
-
-<p>That was soon done, for nothing had been landed beyond
-the cooking and dining apparatus, and the boats dashed along
-the still fjord, leaving behind them three rippling lines of
-sparkling light, as if the Ljus Alfar were dancing in their
-wakes.</p>
-
-<p>In little more than an hour they were alongside the
-steamer, where their whole travelling paraphernalia had
-been stowed in their respective berths. Of these, the Parson
-and Birger, tired with their long day’s work, were very
-shortly the occupants; the Captain, more energetic, collected
-the ducks, and, accompanied by Tom and Torkel, landed at
-the wharf; but what Marie said, on receiving so large an accession
-to her stores, and what the Captain said to her, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-how he contrived to say it, are points upon which history is
-silent. Certain it is, that when the Parson awoke from his
-first sleep, which was not till the steamer began to tumble
-about on the swell outside, the Captain was snoring loudly
-in the next berth, while the three attendants were equally
-fast asleep on the cabin deck.</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p>While this book was in the press, the author met with “Lloyd’s
-Scandinavian Adventures,” in which there is not only a description,
-but a print of eider duck shooting <i>under sail</i>. It would be presumptuous
-in him to go against the experience of a sportsman who has
-resided in these countries for more years than the author has months.
-Possibly in the north, where the birds are less hunted, they may be less
-cautious, and may allow a boat to approach them in a breeze. The
-author can, however, write only from personal experience. The foregoing
-chapter, so far as the facts are concerned, is merely a transcript
-from his journal; and as far as his own experience goes, he would say,
-that the setting in of a breeze sufficient to enable the lightest boat to
-carry sail, would utterly preclude all chance of success in eider duck
-hunting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE COASTING VOYAGE.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Now launched once more, the inland sea</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They furrow with fair augury.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“So brilliant was the landward view,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The ocean so serene;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each puny wave in diamonds rolled</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O’er the calm deep, where hues of gold</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">With azure strove, and green.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The hill, the vale, the tree, the tower,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Glowed with the tints of evening hour,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The beach was silver sheen.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The wind breathed soft as lover’s sigh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, oft renewed, seemed oft to die,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">With breathless pause between.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O, who with speech of war and woes</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Would wish to break the soft repose</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of such enchanting scene.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Lord of the Isles.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>If an Englishman can ever enter into the feelings of a
-Neapolitan, and in any way connect the ideas of the <i>dolce
-far niente</i> with those of enjoyment, if he can ever bend that
-active, energetic mind of his, and that restless and industrious
-Anglo-Saxon body, to realize the faintest conception
-of the “paradise of rest,” in which the Buddhist places the
-sum of his felicity, it will be on board ship, after breakfast,
-on a calm, warm forenoon, and beyond the influence of the
-Post Office.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">SCENE ON THE SOUTH COAST OF NORWAY.</p>
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_220">p. 220.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That these words actually passed through the lips of the
-Captain, and escaped, what Homer calls, the protection of
-his teeth, we will not take upon ourselves to affirm—as
-indolently he reclined on the paddle-box of the <i>Gefjon</i>
-steamer, with his eyes shut, his muscles relaxed, his arms
-and legs sprawling about in all directions, while the indolent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-smoke of his cigar, that from time to time floated out lazily
-from between his lips, afforded the only sign of life about
-him; he seemed as if he was totally incapable of making
-any such exertion—but certainly, these ideas passed through
-his mind, and pictured themselves on the light grey clouds
-that proceeded from his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast, so far as the English portion of the guests was
-concerned, had long been over, and though some hardy
-Norseman or persevering Swede was still lingering over the
-scenes of his departed joys, and dallying with tempting
-morsels of raw smoked salmon, or appetizing <i>caviare</i>, the
-first great act of Northern daily life might be looked upon
-as completed.</p>
-
-<p>“You an artist,” said Birger, whose sketching tablet was
-already slung round his neck, and who was looking round
-him from the bridge, unable to choose, in such a panorama
-of beauty, which of all the lovely views he should attempt
-to transfer to his paper—“You an artist, and asleep among
-scenes like these? you are not worthy of them; as if you
-could not smoke your cigar while the rain was falling, and
-sleep in the night-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was not asleep,” said the Captain, lazily, “I was
-thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thinking,” said Birger, “look round you, and you may
-think that you are in fairy land, if fairy land, itself, has anything
-half so lovely. Look at that beautiful lake, which we
-are just opening, on the north—see how those wooded capes
-partly intercept the view, with their soft outline of birch,
-and that long reach of blue water dancing in the sunlight,
-and that little island, a single spot of shade, with its three
-picturesque fir trees, and that dark red rock that overhangs
-it, with its iron stains of brown and yellow starting up from
-among the bright green foliage; and look how the ash
-fringes the edge of that precipice: get up, and if you are too
-lazy to work, at least admire.”</p>
-
-<p>Really, the scene was a scene of fairy land, such as, in our
-most poetical of moments, we picture fairy land to be. The
-steamer’s course lay among the groups of islands that fringe
-the southern shore of Norway, and these, in that portion of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-the chain, at least, which lies between Hellesund and Lyngör,
-are, for the most part, bold rocks, clothed with every variety
-of foliage which Norway produces, and, being sheltered from
-the sweep of the sea breezes by the outer chain exhibit that
-foliage in its fullest perfection. The idea usually connected
-in our minds with Norwegian scenery, is that of wild and
-desolate grandeur; and fully is that idea realized in the
-mountains of the Hardanger and the Alpine deserts of the
-Fille Fjeld—wild, rugged, treeless scenes of utter desolation,
-almost beyond the limits of vegetable life. But it is far
-otherwise with the coasts—nowhere is seen a colouring
-half so vivid as among the sheltered islets of the southern
-shores; the turf with which their glades are clothed is more
-brilliantly green than anything that we have in England,
-where the grass is invariably interspersed with weeds. Take
-a square yard of any English turf whatever, and you will find
-in it, from ten to twenty different sorts of plants, all of
-which are, more or less, glaucous in their colouring, and
-these, though at a little distance undistinguishable in their
-forms, yet, blend their hues with the emerald green of the
-grass, and present what, side by side with Norwegian turf,
-would be but a soiled and faded picture. The foliage, too,
-is far more bright and luxuriant than anything in England,
-even in the interior of the country, but as different from our
-wind-worn and frost-nipt sea-side greenery as can well be
-conceived.</p>
-
-<p>There is no such thing as early spring in those latitudes,
-or those warm, sunny, deceitful days, which tempt forth the
-young bud and leaflet, only to be pinched and shrivelled by
-the April frosts. Week after week does stern winter bind
-up all nature in its iron fetters; all is still, and cold, and dead;
-and though the sun rises higher and higher, he seems to
-shine without power; and though the days lengthen, and
-the empire of night be invaded, winter still holds on, and
-the snows look even whiter in the stronger light—the Norway
-of April, is but the Norway of December: more bright
-and more chilly—When all at once, and without preparation,
-the scene is changed—the snows are gone, the ice is broken,
-the leaves are already green, and the country is in the garb<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-of full-blown summer. Spring is a season unknown in
-Norway.</p>
-
-<p>The consequence of this is, that the leaf, which has not
-begun to spring at all till the frost is thoroughly out of the
-ground and the air free from chill, is never blackened, or
-nipped, or dwarfed in its proportions, as it is in England,
-and therefore preserves, through the short summer, a greenness
-and depth of colouring which with us is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a beautiful legend about this,” said Birger, as
-he pointed out this peculiarity, “I do not believe in it myself,
-altogether,” added he, smiling, as the recollection of the
-Tellemarken legends and the sacrifice to Nyssen came
-across his mind; “I will not vouch, myself, for more than
-the allegory, but if we may trust to the fires of Walpurgis
-Night, my countrymen believe it implicitly: ‘Iduna, the
-goddess of youth, is among the Æsir, the guardian of the
-apples of immortality—gods, like men, are subject to decay;
-but whenever they feel any symptoms of it, they renovate
-their existence by the apples of Iduna. The possession of
-these apples was, as might be supposed, earnestly coveted
-by the Hrimthursar, or Frost Giants, whose territories,
-called Uttgard, surrounded on every side the sea that encompasses
-the earth. Time was when the earth enjoyed a perpetual
-spring, but Loki, who had not then forfeited his place
-among the gods, attacking, one day, the giant Thjassi, the
-chief of the Hrimthursar, whom he had taken for an eagle,
-found his hands frozen to his plumage.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Thjassi demanded as the price of his liberty that Iduna
-should be betrayed into his hands: this Loki agreed to do,
-and notwithstanding some secret misgivings, contrived to
-perform his promise; and thus it was that the goddess of
-youth, seduced beyond the influence of Asgard, was seized
-upon by the eagle giant and imprisoned in his castle among
-the rocks of eternal frost.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The gods, who had lost their renovating principle, were
-growing grey and wrinkled; the might of the Thunderer
-was paralysed, and the wisdom of Odin himself, the father of
-gods and men, was waning; the whole world was pining
-for want of that principle of life which continually restored<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-the inevitable decay of nature; Loki himself felt the universal
-loss which the world had sustained, and being as yet
-not entirely lost to shame or callous to rebuke, set himself
-in earnest to effect the deliverance of Iduna.</p>
-
-<p>“‘This—having borrowed from Freya her falcon plumage—he
-managed to effect, and was bringing back the goddess
-to Asgard, under the guise of a swallow, the bird of spring,
-when the eagle wings of Thjassi, who was rushing in pursuit,
-darkened the air and blotted out half the sky. The
-gods lighted fires round all the walls of Asgard to scare
-away the pursuer, who fell exhausted in the flames and
-perished under their vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But Skadi, his daughter, determined to revenge her
-father’s death, declared war on Asgard, and carried it on with
-such success that the gods were fain to come to a compromise
-with her, and she consented to peace on condition that
-she should take for her husband any one of the gods she
-should choose, and should be admitted into Asgard as an
-equal. From that time forward the earth has felt the influence
-of the Hrimthursar for a portion of the year; but
-their power is at an end<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> on the anniversary of that day,
-when Iduna is delivered from her captivity; and men
-kindle their fires on Walpurgis Night, the 30th of April, in
-memory of those which, kindled on the walls of Asgard, had
-baffled and destroyed the chief of the Hrimthursar.’”<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Ah! by the way, I saw them building up a great bonfire<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-as we rounded that point of land, coming out of Hellesund,”
-said the Captain; “there was a heap a dozen feet
-high, and they had put a whole boat upon the top of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but this is not Walpurgis Night,” said the Parson;
-“this is St. John’s Eve.”</p>
-
-<p>“We do not know much about St. John’s Eve in these
-parts,” said Birger, laughing. “I am afraid our legends are
-a good deal more Pagan than Christian. That which you
-saw was the ‘Bale-Fire,’ by which our people commemorate
-the death of Baldur, and the boat was his ship, the <i>Hringhorn</i>.
-You will see plenty more of them when the night
-draws on;—every town and every village, and almost every
-hut will have its bale-fire, and many of them its boat too.
-It is a singular thing that Pagan legends should have so
-much more hold on the minds of the people than anything
-derived from their Christian history, but so it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all singular,” said the Parson; “properly speaking,
-Norway was never converted; it was conquered by a
-Christian faction, and again it was conquered by a court
-party. The people succumbed to force; but in their thoughts
-and feelings—and therefore in their manners and customs—they
-were what they had been in the days of the sea-kings;
-and now their minds naturally revert to the time when their
-country was most powerful.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will give you a Christian legend, then,” said Captain
-Hjelmar, the Swedish commander of the steamer, who had
-been for some time talking with Birger on the bridge, and
-now came forward with his hat in his hand, after the
-manner of his country, and told his tale, very fluently, in a
-queer sort of French. This was also after the manner of
-his country, for, though that language is abominated in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-Norway, in Sweden it is much affected by those who would
-wish it to be supposed that they are <i>habitués</i> of the court;
-and thus it was that though—as it afterwards turned out—Captain
-Hjelmar could speak remarkably good English, he
-preferred addressing Englishmen in remarkably bad French,
-in order to show his court breeding.</p>
-
-<p>“You see that tall rock,” said he, “that looks so black and
-distant, in front of that green island?—that rock really is
-one of the Hrimthursar of whom Lieutenant Birger has been
-telling you; and when St. Olaf came to convert the Norwegians,
-the giant, who had been bribed by Hakon the
-Jarl, at the price of his young son Erling, whom he
-sacrificed to him, waded into the sea, and put forth his
-hand to stay the ship, that the saint should not approach
-the shore: but the saint served a higher Power than the
-gods of Asgard, and even as he stood, the giant froze into
-stone; and there he stands to this day, as you see him, with
-one arm advanced,—and there he will stand till the day of
-Ragnarök, except that once in a hundred years, on Christmas
-Eve, he is restored to life, in order to declare to the Hrimthursar
-that on that day their power was broken for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well done, St. Olaf,” said the Captain; “I thought
-that all his conversions were effected by the weight of his
-battle-axe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you Englishmen acknowledge him as a saint as
-well as we,” said Captain Hjelmar. “Have you not, in your
-great City of London, a church dedicated to him? and is
-there not also a place called Cripplegate?”</p>
-
-<p>“There certainly are such places,” said the Parson, “but
-what they have to do with one another, or with Norway, is
-more than I can see.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a man in Walland, so great a cripple that he
-was obliged to go on his hands and knees, and it was revealed
-to him that if he should go to St. Olaf’s Church, in
-London, he should be healed. How he got there, I cannot
-tell you; but he did, and he was crawling along, and the
-boys were laughing at him, as he asked them which was St.
-Olaf’s Church, when a man, dressed in blue and carrying an
-axe on his shoulder, said, ‘Come with me, for I have become<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-a countryman of yours.’ So he took up the cripple and
-carried him through the streets, and placed him on the steps
-of the church. Much difficulty had the poor man to crawl
-up the steps; but when he arrived at the top he rose up
-straight and whole, and walked to the altar to give thanks;
-but the man with the battle-axe had vanished, and was never
-seen more; and the people thought it was the blessed St.
-Olaf himself, and they called the place where the cripple was
-found ‘Cripplegate,’ and so they tell me it is called to this
-day.”<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Faith! I can answer for that part of the story myself,”
-said the Captain; “the place is called Cripplegate, sure
-enough, but I am afraid St. Olaf has long since ceased to
-frequent it, for we have not heard of any miracles done
-lately in those parts. But what is your story about the
-‘bale-fires,’ Birger, for I see another in process of erection
-on that cape?—that looks like a remarkably good boat they
-are going to burn in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That legend, like most of those from the Eddas, is purely
-allegorical, and, unlike most of them, is very intelligible.
-Baldur, among the Æsir, is the Principle of Good, and
-everything that is bright, or beautiful, or innocent, is dedicated
-to him, and among other things, that part of the year
-which begins at Walpurgis Night, when the reign of the frost
-ceases, and ends at this day, the summer’s solstice—that is
-to say, the whole of that time in which light and warmth
-are getting the mastery over cold and darkness. These
-commemorate the happy days of Asgard, before the Principle
-of Evil had crept in; and had they only continued, the
-whole world would have been by this time glowing in perpetual
-light, and spring, and happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“But Loki himself, one of the twelve of the principal Æsir,
-became envious of this, and was jealous that all the good in
-the world should be ascribed to Baldur; so he resolved to
-kill him. This the Nornir revealed to Baldur in a vision,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-and the goddess Freya took an oath of everything that
-walked on the earth, or swam the waters, or flew in the air,
-or grew from the ground, or was under it, that they would
-not hurt Baldur; and then the gods would laugh at the revelation
-of the Nornir, and would shoot at Baldur with
-stones, and masses of iron, and thrust at him with their
-spears, and cut at him with their swords and axes; but they
-all passed him by for the oath’s sake, which all nature had
-given.</p>
-
-<p>“So Loki said to the mistletoe, ‘Thou dost neither run, nor
-fly, nor swim, nor grow from the ground, nor lie under it;
-there is no oath for thee.’ So he gathered the stem of the
-mistletoe, and placed it in the hand of Hodur, the god of
-Blindness, and said, ‘shoot, like the other gods, and I will
-direct thy hand:’ and he shot, and Baldur fell dead in the
-midst of the gods, and innocence departed from the earth;
-and then the days which had hitherto been getting brighter
-and brighter, so that darkness had began to fly from the face
-of the earth, now began to close in again, and darkness began
-to increase.</p>
-
-<p>“In vain did Hermod, the brother of Baldur,<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> undertake
-the journey to the realms of Hela. So much was accorded, that
-if all nature would agree to mourn for the death of Baldur,
-he should be restored to earth; but though everything did
-so, as the Edda has it, ‘Men and animals, and earth, and
-stones, and trees, and all metals, even as thou hast seen
-everything weep when it comes forth from the frost into the
-warm air, yet the giantess, Thaukt, who it is said was but
-Loki in disguise, refused to weep.’</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Neither in life, nor yet in death,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gave he me gladness.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Let Hell keep her prey!’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and Hell will keep her prey, as the Norna revealed to Odin,
-till the day of restitution of all things; and then, when the
-new sun shall enlighten the new earth, Baldur, restored from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-Hell, and Hodur, no longer blind, shall reign for ever and
-ever.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
-
-<p>“But in the mean time it was necessary to prepare the
-funeral pyre of the god: his body was placed in his ship,
-the <i>Hringhorn</i>, and the pile was built round it, and his wife,
-Nanna, and his dwarf, Litur, and his father’s magic ring,
-Dropsnir, and his horse, and all his accoutrements, were
-placed on it, and amid a weeping concourse of gods and men,
-and Hrimthursar, and dwarfs, and witches, the fire
-was placed to it, and all nature mourned the departure of
-innocence.</p>
-
-<p>“And in memory of this, so soon as the days cease to
-lengthen, and nature feels the loss of its original innocence,
-and darkness begins to threaten the earth, men kindle their
-fires in memory of the death of Baldur.”<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Hallo! the Thousand take you! look where you are
-steering,” shouted out Hjelmar, in Swedish, to the helmsman,
-“are you going to run down the island?” And in truth it
-did seem something like it, for the branches of the overhanging
-trees rattled against the fore-topsail-yard, bringing down
-a shower of leaves and twigs; and a projecting ash so nearly
-brushed the paddle-box on which they were sitting, that the
-Parson broke off a branch as they passed.</p>
-
-<p>“Confound those fellows! they know the water is deep
-here, and think they cannot shave the point too closely, I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-suspect they wanted to astonish the passengers, and did not
-see me among them.”</p>
-
-<p>The point which they had rounded was just to the east,
-from off Osterisö, at which place they had just touched; and
-immediately afterwards they plunged into a deep, dark
-chasm of a passage between the two islands, which looked
-as if they had been split asunder by some sudden convulsion
-of nature, so evidently the projections and indentations of
-the opposite walls of rock seemed to fit into each other;
-while far overhead the trees looked as if they were overarching
-the chasm, and shutting out the light of day from
-its recesses. The churning sound of the paddles, and the
-hissing of the sea beneath their stroke sounded unnaturally
-loud, and the two little pop-guns which the <i>Gefjon</i> carried
-on her forecastle and took that opportunity for discharging,
-rolled and echoed like a peal of thunder.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” said Captain Hjelmar, as the steamer pushed her
-way into daylight, and opened out a wide expanse no less
-beautiful than those they had been passing through all the
-morning; “there lies the strength of our coast; the Norwegian
-navy consists principally of gun-boats, and these
-dodge in and out among these islets, just as difficult to catch
-as rabbits in a warren; the great lumbering cruiser of the
-enemy watches in vain on the outside, like a terrier at the
-rabbit’s hole, while the rabbit, meanwhile, has passed out by
-a back door, and is taking his pleasure elsewhere.<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In the days of the last war, I was a cadet on board the
-<i>Najaden</i> frigate, the commodore on these coasts: I used to
-be lent to the gun-boats, and capital fun we had with your
-merchantmen; pretty profitable fun too, for we brought
-them in by dozens. There were your big cruisers, every now
-and then getting a crack at us, and picking off here and
-there a clumsy fellow who let himself get caught outside,
-but never doing us much harm. It was glorious fun, certainly,—at
-first, I must say, I did not like firing at the old
-English flag, that so many of our people had sailed under,
-but after exchanging a few shots, and seeing a few of one’s
-people knocked over, one soon learns to forget all that; and
-I blazed away at the old red rag after a bit, just as readily as
-I would at a rascally Russ.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Captain Stuart put an end to all that, though, for
-one while; and before we had recovered from the drubbing
-he gave us, there was peace again, and no revenge to be had
-for it. I was not sorry for the peace, though; it is not
-natural to be fighting the English.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said the Parson, “I have heard something about
-Captain Stuart, of the <i>Dictator</i>; he got some credit for his
-services in these waters.”</p>
-
-<p>“And well he deserved it,” said Hjelmar; “he was a
-thorough sailor, he knew what his ship could do, and he made
-her do it. As for fighting, anybody will fight; but to run
-such a chase as he did, requiring skill, and science, and nerve,
-and firmness, as well as brute courage, which every man has,
-and most beasts besides, is what very few men would have
-moral courage to attempt, or seamanship enough to bring to
-a successful termination.</p>
-
-<p>“We used to laugh at the old <i>Dictator</i>; if a corvette could
-not catch our gun-boats, it was not very likely a line-of-battle
-ship would do the trick; for this water, for all it is so
-deep and looks so open, is studded all over with pointed rocks
-at a fathom or so under the surface; and some of these, not a
-yard square at the top, any one of which would bring up a
-gun brig, let alone a liner. Well, there was the <i>Dictator</i>
-cruising about and doing nothing, as we thought; we did not
-know that he was improving his charts, and getting bearings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-and soundings; still less did we suspect that one of his
-quartermasters had been the mate of a coasting jagt, and
-knew the coast as well as we did. I have met the fellow
-since; he got a boatswain’s rating for his services, and I think
-he should have got something better.</p>
-
-<p>“At that time I was on board the frigate. Old Hulm,
-our commodore, said I was too wild to be trusted with a
-separate command, and one morning we were dodging about
-where we are now, with a steady breeze from the westward
-that looked as if it would stand. There were the old
-<i>Dictator’s</i> mast-heads, just where we had seen them twenty
-times before, over the trees of Laxö,—that is, the island we
-are just opening, where those salmon nets are hanging up to
-dry.</p>
-
-<p>“‘By the keel of <i>Skidbladner</i>, that sailed over dry land,’
-says Hulm, ‘what is the fellow at now?’ as we opened the
-point of the island, and the line-of-battle ship, that had been
-lying with her main-topsail aback, squared away her yards
-and dashed in after us. ‘O, by Thor and by Mjölner! if
-that is your fun I will see what Norwegian rocks are made
-of. Keep her away a couple of points, quartermaster; and
-Mr. Sinklar (to the first lieutenant), turn the hands up.’ By
-this time we were running away dead before it; the enemy,
-who was all ready, had her studding-sails set on both sides,—it
-was beautiful to see how smartly they went up, it was like a
-bird unfolding her wings. ‘That’s a fine fellow,’ said Hulm;
-‘it’s a pity, too, to sink him, but we must, so here goes.’</p>
-
-<p>“Old Hulm, who was full of fight, all this time dodged
-along under plain sail, just as if he did not care for <i>that</i> the big
-fellow, and it is my opinion he would not have set his studding-sails
-had the distance been less. You see that green point
-just on the port bow, that one with the black stone lying off
-it:—by the way, I do not see why we should not run the
-very course ourselves. I have a passenger to Lyngör, and
-we may just as well go that course as any other. Starboard
-your helm, my man! that will do! meet her! keep her as she
-goes.</p>
-
-<p>“There, now, you begin to see that there is an opening to
-the eastward and northward of that point. As soon as we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-brought it abeam, down went our helm, and everything was
-braced as sharp up as it would draw; for the channel winds, as
-you see, to the southward of east. We thought to bother her,
-but those fifties on two decks are so short, they come round
-like tops. We were running free again to the eastward,
-outside the channel. When she came abreast of the opening,
-in came her studding-sails all at once, and there were her sails
-standing like boards, and her yards braced up as sharp as
-ours had been, and so much had he gained upon us, that as
-her port broadside came to bear, three or four shots, just to
-try the distance, came across the end of the island after us,
-skipping and dancing over the seas.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We must get Mjölner to speak to them,’ said old Hulm,
-rubbing his hands and looking delighted. ‘I think she will
-pitch her shot home now.’ Mjölner was a long French
-eighteen, a very handsome brass gun, ornamented with
-<i>fleurs-de-lis</i>, and all sorts of jigmarees; the private property
-of the captain. Where he had picked it up, no one knew;—people
-said it had been the Long Tom of a French pirate.
-Old Hulm had called it Mjölner, which I suppose you know
-is the name of Thor’s hammer; he was as fond of it as he
-was of his wife, and always kept it on the quarter-deck,
-under a tarpaulin, which he never took off except on
-Sundays.</p>
-
-<p>“It took some time to train the gun aft, and by this time
-the line-of-battle ship had cleared the channel, and was
-putting up her helm to follow us. The old skipper laid his
-pet gun himself, and squinted, and squinted over her breech,
-and elevated, and depressed, and trained to the right, and
-trained to the left, till we thought he never meant to
-twitch the lanyard at all. Crack went Mjölner. By this
-time we had pretty nearly got the line-of-battle ship’s three
-masts in one, and the shot striking just under the fore top-mast
-cross-trees, cut the topsail tie and the jib halyards at
-once; down rattled the yard, snapping the fore top gallant
-sheets, out flew the top gallant sail, and away went the jib
-dragging under her fore-foot; and up flew the ship herself
-into the wind again, letting drive her broadside at us, as if
-she had done it on purpose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The old skipper sent his steward for some bottles of true
-Cognac, and gave the men a tot all round, to drink Mjölner’s
-health.</p>
-
-<p>“The enemy had brailed up her driver, and braced by her
-after-sails, and got before the wind again in no time; and was
-not much longer in bending on a new tie and splicing her
-halyards; but we had got pretty well out of range now, and
-were bobbing in and out among a cluster of rocks as thick
-as porpoises. We had a man at the flying jib-boom as a
-look-out, and a couple more on the spritsail yardarms (for
-our ships had not whiskers in those days), and it was nothing
-but ‘Breakers ahead!’ ‘Rock on the port bow!’ ‘A reef to
-starboard!’ for the next quarter of an hour or twenty
-minutes, enough to make one’s hair stand on end. A-ha!
-thought I, when the last of them showed clear on the quarter,
-this is the skipper’s trap; here’s where the old <i>Dictator</i> is
-going to lay her bones! But she did not. She dodged
-through every one of them every bit as well as we had done,
-and there certainly was no doubt but that the distance between
-us was a good deal decreased. These tubs of fifties
-sail like a haystack on a wind, but before it they go like
-<i>Skidbladner</i> herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Old Hulm began to look grave; he had never dreamt of
-her following him within the islands like that, and he began
-to ‘smell a rat.’ The frigate had been caught on her very
-worst point of sailing. We might easily have worked to
-windward at first, but now she had got us fairly under her
-lee, and if we tried to tack under her guns, she would have
-stripped us of every rag of canvas we could show. Mjölner
-came into play again, as well as the stern chasers on the main
-deck, and to good purpose, too; but, on the other hand, the
-English shot were flying like peas about us—and they did
-not always fall short, either. Now and then there was a
-rope shot away, or a man knocked over, or a gun capsized,—for,
-at that distance, every shot that hit us pitched in upon
-the deck and trundled forwards, hopping here and there off
-the bulwarks without going through them, like so many
-billiard balls.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I will tell you what,’ says Hulm, ‘I will shove her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-through the Lyngör Channel, there is a rock in the middle
-that it will be as much as we can do to shave ourselves, and
-if we do get past it, the chances are, that it will bring up
-the liner; it is a desperate chance, but we must try it, and
-if the Englishman does get through after us (which she will
-not), we will reach out into the offing as close to the wind
-as we can lie. Port your helm at once, Mr. Sinklar—drop
-your main course, and haul out the driver.’</p>
-
-<p>“Up she came to the wind again, but the main-sail, which
-had been clewed up while we were running, had got a shot
-through it, exactly where the bunt-line gathered it into a
-bundle. The shot had gone through fold after fold of the
-canvas, cutting the foot-rope also, and before the tack was
-well hauled down, the sail had split from top to bottom; and
-then, just as she drew in under cover of the land, the mizen
-top-mast came clattering about our ears.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all up for beating to windward, unless we could
-shift our top-mast in time, and this the enemy was too
-close upon us to allow us do; everything lay on the rock
-bringing her up, and as I looked over the side as we passed,
-the rugged points looked so close to our own bends, that
-I thought they must have gone through; and the liner drew
-more water than we did.</p>
-
-<p>“All eyes were turned on the English ship, at least, on her
-sails, for a point of land concealed her hull, and prevented
-our firing; every moment we expected to see her sheets let
-fly;—not a bit of it,—on she came as steadily as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Just at the village of Lyngör the channel turns at right
-angles, and the islands that form it, being high, took the
-wind out of our courses; while we had been running it had
-drawn a little to the southward of west,—which, as we had
-been off the wind all day, we had not taken notice of—as
-we turned the angle it headed us. Whether, under any
-circumstances, we could have fetched clear of the northern
-cape is doubtful; without our mizen top-sail it was impossible,
-for as the courses were becalmed, we really carried
-nothing but head sail that would draw; and in fact, we could
-scarcely look up for the cape, much less weather it.</p>
-
-<p>“Down with the anchor! out boats, to lay out a warp<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-to spring her! we will fight it out here!’ said old Hulm.
-But the Englishman had seen us over the land from his
-mast-heads, and anchored by the stern, clewing up or letting
-fly everything, and passing out his cable from his stern-port,
-so as to check her way by degrees; when she came into
-sight round the point, at not a cable’s length from us, she
-had a cluster of men on her bowsprit with a hawser. On
-she came, as if she was going to leap over the town, and
-dropped her men on the houses, who, sliding down by the
-dolphin-striker, leaped on shore and made fast with her
-hawser forward, while her anchor brought her up abaft.
-And there she lay, as steady as a land battery, and opened
-her fire. The first broadside, loaded with grape, came
-rattling among the boats that were laying out the warp; what
-became of them I never heard; but the warp lay slack, and
-the current drifted us end-on to the line-of-battle ship’s
-broadside, and I felt our decks crumbling and splintering
-under me as her shot tore them up.</p>
-
-<p>“The next thing after that that I recollect, is a great
-rough hand pulling me out of the water by my collar, and a
-kindly English voice asking me if I was hurt. The smoke
-was still lying on the water, and hanging in little clouds
-upon the trees; but all that was to be seen of the old
-<i>Najaden</i>, was the main and fore-top gallant and royal masts,
-which, with their sails set, were still above water, and the
-blue and yellow pennant over all. We had gone down with
-our colours flying, and Captain Stuart would not have the
-pennant struck,—‘we had fought gallantly for it,’ he said,
-‘and we should keep it still.’</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old Hulm, he was a fine fellow: there now! that is
-the very spot of the action,” for by this time they had opened
-the point of Lyngör, and had come in sight of the beautiful
-little village. “Do you see that iron pillar on the point?
-that is Captain Hulm’s monument.”</p>
-
-<p>“He went down with his ship, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he did not; how he was saved I do not remember,
-but he was saved, and rewarded too for his standing up to
-the line-of-battle ship; for Father Karl is an old soldier,
-and knows that a man often deserves as much praise for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-being beat as for beating. The old fellow lived to a good old
-age; that was his house, that white fronted one on the hill,
-for Lyngör was his native place. It is not two years ago
-that he was capsized in his little schooner and drowned.
-There’s his monument, any how; and I always salute it,
-whenever I pass this way:” and as they came abreast of the
-point, the <i>Gefjon’s</i> swallow-tailed ensign dipped from her
-peak, and her little pop-guns again testified their respect to
-the old sailor’s memory.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">GOTHEBORG.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A cautious guest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When he comes to his hostel,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Speaketh but little;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With his ears he listeneth,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With his eyes he looketh,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus the wise learneth.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“No better burthen</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bears a man on his journey</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Than observation:—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No worse provision</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bears a man on his journey</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Than frequent drunkenness.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>High Song of Odin the Old.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Early rising is not pleasant at sea. Captain Basil Hall
-may talk of the joyous morning watch if he likes,—but there
-is nothing joyous in washing decks, and that is what most
-ships are occupied with at that hour. The Parson did not make
-his appearance on deck till after breakfast, and he was the
-first of the party.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer was now approaching the end of her voyage,
-for the land, closing on both sides, showed the estuary of the
-Gotha. Most of the party were not sorry for the conclusion
-of the voyage, enjoyable as the earlier part of it had been;
-for the steamer,—after coasting all the way to Christiania,
-where the party had supplied themselves with carioles for
-their land journey, which, with their wheels unshipped,
-were stowed away snugly forward,—had taken her course,
-southward, over the tumbling Skagarack—a part of the
-world notorious for sea-sickness.</p>
-
-<p>All the morning long, preparations had been going forward
-for making a creditable appearance on arriving in port, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-the discomforts of the early-risers had been considerably increased
-by a very liberal use of the holy-stone,—an amusement
-which, as the men were still employed in blacking the
-rigging, gave promise of an early repetition.</p>
-
-<p>Slung from a block at the mainmast head was a small
-triangular stage, made of three battens, on which sat a very
-dirty individual with a pot of slush before him and a tarring-brush
-in his hand, with which he was polishing off his
-morning’s work on the shining mast.</p>
-
-<p>Seated on the bitts below was a sturdy Norwegian, who,
-as if disdaining the compromise usually adopted by the coasting
-inhabitants, appeared in the caricature of a full-dressed
-Tellemarker, with a strip of jacket like a child’s spencer, of
-orange tawny wadmaal, great loose blue trousers with a
-waistband over his shoulder blades, crimson braces, and two
-strings of silver bullets dependent from the collars of a very
-dirty shirt. He was caressing a particularly ugly dog, which
-he called Garm,—an appellation which proved him to be
-what in England would be called a fast man; it is much as
-if an English young gentleman were to call his dog Satan.
-He was haranguing, of course, on the vast superiority of
-Norway to Sweden, and the infinite degradation which the
-former country had received from the union of the crowns,—that
-being not only the most favourite topic of Norwegian
-declamation, but, in the present instance, at all events, the
-most injudicious and unsuitable subject in which to exhibit
-before so mixed an audience.</p>
-
-<p>They behaved, however, exceedingly well, and rather
-trotted him out, much to the disgust of Torkel, who had
-sense enough to perceive what was going on, and would have
-infinitely preferred their beating him: after vainly endeavouring
-to draw his countrymen away, he had walked
-forward, and was looking moodily over the bows.</p>
-
-<p>“As for the Swedes,” said our judicious friend, “they are
-nothing better than swindlers. I have, for my sins, to go
-to Gotheborg every year, to lay in stores for the winter, and
-I am sure to be cheated. We don’t let Jews land on our
-shores, and I must go to Gotheborg to find them.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, but we have no Jews either.” said a bye-stander;
-“they do not come to us, they go to the Free Towns.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are all Jews; the real Jews don’t go to you, that
-is very true, but it is because they know that the Gotheborgers
-are hogs, and their law does not allow them to have
-anything to do with unclean animals. Yes, you are all
-swine together. Why, I tell you a Norwegian dog would
-not touch anything Swedish. Come here, Garm!”—and he
-pulled out of his pocket a bit of ham, evidently filched from
-the breakfast table.</p>
-
-<p>Here the Parson thought he detected a glance of intelligence
-between Captain Hjelmar and the man at the mast-head,
-who, much amused, had left off his work to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“Come here, Garm!”—placing the tempting morsel on
-the deck.</p>
-
-<p>The dog wagged his tail, evidently preparing to seize it.</p>
-
-<p>“Svenske!” said the man. The dog, who had been well
-trained in this common trick, turned up his nose with apparent
-disgust, and refused the meat.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” said he, “I defy any Swede among you all to
-make a true Norwegian dog eat a bit of it. Garm knows
-what you all are, don’t you, Garm?”</p>
-
-<p>Just then, by the merest accident in the world, the slush-kettle
-got unhitched from the stage above his head, and came
-tumbling over on the deck, and in its descent, taking the unfortunate
-Norwegian on the nape of his neck as he was
-leaning forward to caress his dog, pitched the whole of its
-contents between his jacket collar and his back.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Hjelmar rated the man severely for his carelessness
-in spoiling his decks, and, ordering him off the stage,
-directed the boatswain to put his name into the black list.
-The man, however, did not seem much cast down about it,
-but slid down the greasy mast with a broad grin on his
-countenance, while the Norwegians carried their discomfited
-companion forward to purify him; and Garm, profiting
-by the confusion, proved a traitor to his country, by not only
-swallowing down the Swedish ham, but also by licking up
-as much as he could of the Swedish slush that had poured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-from the head and shoulders of his master on the Swedish
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>The coast of Sweden and the banks of the Gotha below
-the town, offer a striking contrast to the lovely scenery they
-had left. There are the rocks and the fringing islets, as in
-Norway, but here they are all flat, and most of them
-absolutely bare. The coasts, too, where they could be seen,
-exhibited ledges of rock and wastes of sand, with just enough
-cultivation to make the desolateness painful, by connecting
-it with the idea of people living there. Eider ducks would
-dive before them, and wild-fowl in little knots would cross
-their course, and hoopers would go trumpeting over their
-heads, with their white wings reflecting the sun like silver,
-and dippers of all sorts would play at hide-and-seek with the
-waves, and seals would put up their bullet-heads to gaze at
-them as they passed. The water is always beautiful when
-the sun shines directly upon it; but the eye must not range
-so far as the shore, for no sunshine could gild that.</p>
-
-<p>There was a good deal of life, and traffic too, upon the
-waters, for Gotheborg, the nearest port to the Free Towns
-and to all foreign trade whatever, as well as the outlet of the
-river navigation, may be considered the Liverpool of
-Sweden.</p>
-
-<p>As they proceeded the scenery slightly improved: the right
-bank began to be dotted with houses and small villages,
-wretched enough compared with the picturesque places on
-the other end of the Skaggerack, but at all events showing
-signs of life. At length they became continuous, and at a
-couple of miles distance, the three churches of Gotheborg,
-with the close cluster of houses, came into view. The anchor
-was dropped opposite to the fishing suburb of Gammle
-Hafvet, and a shore-going steamer came alongside to receive
-the passengers; which steamer, much to the fishermen’s
-delight, contained their old friend Moodie, who, on hearing
-that the Norway packet had been signalized, had gone to
-meet her on the chance of seeing them.</p>
-
-<p>Moodie was a singular character,—a cadet of good family,
-and brought up to no profession; he had been from his
-childhood passionately fond of field sports, in all of which he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-excelled. At an early age he had become his own master,
-with a good education, some usage of the world, a handsome
-person, a peculiarly active frame and sound constitution, and
-two hundred a year, <i>pour tout potage</i>. Rightly judging
-that England afforded no fitting scope for his peculiar talents,
-without the imminent danger of a committal for poaching,
-he had expatriated himself to Ireland; which country, he
-had, in a sporting point of view, thoroughly studied, and
-made himself completely master of its resources; he knew
-when every river in the whole island came into season and
-went out, and the best and cheapest way of transferring self
-and encumbrances from one point to another. He knew the
-times at which the woodcocks and the snipes would arrive,
-and the out-of-the-way places at which they may be safely
-shot; he could give a catalogue <i>raisonnée</i> of all the wayside
-public-houses in sporting localities, and was hand-in-glove
-with half the disreputable squireens of Ireland. Certainly,
-he bagged more grouse annually than many a man
-who pays a rent of five or six hundred a year for the privilege
-of supplying the London markets.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the Erne that the fishermen had met him, and
-Moodie being an extremely well-informed and gentleman-like
-man, besides being a thorough sportsman, they had struck
-up with him what might be called an intimate acquaintance,
-which, now that they met as Englishmen on a foreign land,
-might be considered an intimate friendship.</p>
-
-<p>It was the railroads, and the consequent invasion of the
-cockneys, which had expatriated Moodie from his adopted
-country; people began to preserve, too, and to let their
-fishing and shooting-grounds; even the Erne was not what
-it had been, and Moodie, whose whole belongings, besides
-his live stock in the shape of dogs, were contained in
-two portmanteaus and as many gun-cases, packed them,
-and one morning found himself standing on the quay of
-Gotheborg.</p>
-
-<p>If, instead of the coast of Sweden, it had been the coast
-of the Cannibal Islands, Moodie would soon have found
-himself at home; but here he had letters of introduction, and
-Karl Johann, who had a high opinion of the English, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-very anxious to get an infusion of English blood among his
-Swedes. Moodie’s peculiar talents, too, which in England
-might have consigned him to the county jail, in Sweden
-found their legitimate outlet; he soon found a beautiful
-little country house on the banks of the Gotha; had no
-difficulty in renting the exclusive right of fishing for some
-miles above and below it; paid the rent and all expenses of
-boats and boatmen, and put a handsome sum into his pocket
-besides, by supplying Gotheborg with lake salmon (salmo
-ferox). He then got the rangership of a royal forest, by
-which he kept his numerous hangers-on in what he called
-butcher’s meat, and traded with the Zoological Gardens and
-private collections in the wild beasts and birds of the country,
-by means of which traffic, he had furnished himself with the
-choicest collection of sporting fire-arms and fishing tackle
-to be found in the north. Besides which, Moodie had
-become a public character. Sweden has its wild beasts as
-well as its ordinary game,—he who destroys a wolf or a
-bear is a public benefactor, and Moodie had a peculiar
-talent for tracking them. Every farmer within a hundred
-miles of Gäddebäck would pull off his hat to him; but that is
-not saying much, for a Swede is always pulling off his hat,
-and if he had nothing else to pull it off to he would be
-making his salaams to the cows and sheep.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a great deal of Gotheborg the fishermen saw
-that evening; their experience of the country was confined
-to a march by the shortest road from the landing place to
-Todd’s Hotel, and their subsequent view to a sort of Dutch
-interior, of which pipes, tobacco, bottles, glasses, juniper
-beer of native manufacture, and thin vinous importations
-from Bordeaux, made up the accessories; but the fishermen
-had much to inquire after, and Moodie had much to tell.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast, always a luxurious meal in the north, at least, in
-summer time, on account of the quantities of berries and the
-abundant supply of cream, brought a visitor,—a young artillery
-officer, a friend of Birger, by name Dahlgren, and by
-rank Count, who had his quarters in the inn,—for the
-Swedish officers have no mess like ours, but lodge permanently
-in the hotels, paying a fixed sum per week, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-dining at the <i>table d’hôte</i>. Like Birger, he was a painter,
-but whereas the guardsman exercised his art simply as an
-amateur, or at most, in the public service of his country, his
-friend, Count as he was, exercised his as a profession, and as a
-means of eking out his scanty pay.</p>
-
-<p>There would be a grand review that afternoon, he said,
-and it would be well worth seeing, for Gotheborg is the
-great artillery station of Sweden, and the Commander-in-Chief,
-with his staff, who were on a tour of inspection, had
-arrived by the canal steamer from the new fortress of Wanås,
-on the Wetter.</p>
-
-<p>This piece of information, which the artilleryman detailed
-with great glee, was received by Birger with a wry countenance,
-as certain to detain him within doors as long as the
-General remained at Gotheborg,—for it will be remembered
-he was at that very time unable to join his regiment on account
-of <i>pressing family affairs</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This did not affect the others, so, leaving their friend to
-amuse himself as best he might, by improving his sketches
-or watching the magpies from the window, they started,
-under the pilotage of their new ally, for a tour of observation.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever else Gotheborg is famous for, certainly the
-most remarkable thing in it is its flocks of magpies,—birds
-which, in our country, are extremely wild, and by no means
-fond of town life. Gregarious, in the proper sense of the
-term, they are not, but they are as numerous as sparrows in
-London, very nearly as tame, and much more impudent.
-This by no means arises from any affection which the inhabitants
-have for the bird—for magpies are ugly and mischievous
-all the world over, and quite as mischievous in Gotheborg
-as anywhere else,—but from a popular superstition they are
-under the especial protection of the devil—and truly the devil
-cares for his own: they build their nests and bring up their
-young under the very noses of the schoolboys; they feed
-them with stolen goods, filched from every kitchen,—and
-often and often, among the delicacies of the season, they
-regale them with spring chicken of their own killing. But no
-one molests a magpie; Heaven only knows what would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-the consequences of killing one; and, though Government has
-set a price on their heads, they sleep in safety, under the
-protection of their great master.</p>
-
-<p>The town ought to be handsome, but it is not; the description
-would look well on paper. A great broad canal
-through the centre, with quays all the way on both sides, as
-at Dublin, only twice as broad, forming a very wide street;
-and from this five or six similar canals, similarly furnished
-with quays and streets, branch off at right angles. The banks
-of all these canals are planted with trees, and arranged as
-shaded footways. All this sounds as if the place ought to be
-pretty, but, though every word of this is true, the reality falls
-far short of the ideas it conveys. The houses are mean
-and low, and, the windows being flush with the sides, the
-whole appearance is pasteboard-like and unsubstantial, which
-the reality is not. The Swedes build their wooden houses
-in very good taste, and they harmonise very well with
-the scenery, but they should stick to that—<i>ne sutor ultra
-crepidam</i>: let not the carpenter aspire to be a mason.
-Every house, large or small, in town or in country, has very
-large panes of glass,—the very cabins have them; the glass
-is as bad as bad can be, full of flaws and waves, and very
-thin besides; even this produces a bad effect; besides, it is
-impossible to admire the finest of towns, when walking over
-streets so roughly paved that eyes and thoughts must be continually
-directed towards the footing.</p>
-
-<p>There is a capital market, and the canals bring the hay,
-and the fuel, and all other heavy articles from the interior,
-to the very doors of the houses. It was singular to see
-floating haystacks and faggot piles—for so they looked, the
-hulls of the boats being completely hidden by their freight,—towed
-up in strings by the little steam-tugs, and moored to
-the quays. If Gotheborg is not a prosperous town, Sweden
-will not support one at all, for it is impossible for any
-situation to be more favourable for trade. The river itself
-forms a secure harbour, its only fault being that vessels of
-heavy draught cannot anchor within a mile of the town.
-The interior water communications comprehend all the midland
-provinces, and the landing and shipping of goods is as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-easy as art can make it; besides, it is the outermost port of
-the whole country.</p>
-
-<p>The markets, certainly, are well supplied, especially
-that of fish, both salt and fresh-water. Beef and mutton
-are among its articles of export to the southern coasts
-of Norway, and there is not a bad display of vegetables
-for so northern a country. The quantities of spinach which
-are seen everywhere, and which mingle with every dish,
-rather surprise the traveller, till he finds out that the sandhills
-which he has seen on each side of him all the way up
-the river, are covered with it, growing wild—wild as it is,
-English garden spinach is not at all better flavoured. Singularly
-enough, melons are plentiful; one would almost as soon
-expect to meet with pines in these latitudes,—but the short
-summer of Sweden is peculiarly favourable for them.</p>
-
-<p>The trade of the place does not look very lively, and the
-bustle in the streets is nothing at all like that of Bristol or
-Liverpool. What little stir there was just then, seemed to
-be rather military than mercantile. Dirty, slovenly-looking
-artillerymen, with ugly blue and yellow uniforms, putting
-one disagreeably in mind of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>; overalls
-patched extensively with leather that terribly wanted the
-blacking-brush; and dingy steel scabbards, that did not
-know what emery-stone was, were clanking about the streets,
-followed by little crowds; and groups of officers were standing
-at the doors of the hotels and lodging-houses. Evidently a
-review was not an everyday business.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson and Captain were soon deserted by their military
-cicerone, who left them, to prepare for his part in the
-military display, having directed them into the street that
-leads to the scene of action. This was a large meadow, or
-small park, to the east of the town, rather a pretty promenade,
-enclosed with trees, which was now crowded with
-people. Towns, especially trading towns, are not remarkable
-for costume. The people, seeing such a variety of foreigners,
-get to be citizens of the world themselves, and so lose their
-nationalities. But there were a few fancy dresses, too, from
-the country round; short round corduroy jackets, sometimes
-a sort of tartan, too, but which invariably had rows of buttons<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-sewed as thick together as they could stand. Among the
-women, a handkerchief was frequently tied round the head
-instead of a bonnet; but every one, almost, carried his or her
-bunch of flowers, an article which abounded in the markets;
-these were very often carried in the hats, or stuck through
-the knots of the kerchiefs.</p>
-
-<p>And now the bugles of the artillery were heard, and the
-rumbling of wheels, and the trampling of horses, as battery
-after battery rolled into the park. The Swedes call them
-horse artillery, but they are, in reality, only field batteries;
-for of horse artillery, properly so called, that most beautiful of
-military toys, they have none. Their guns, twelve pounders,
-are drawn by six horses, each of which carries a man. In
-bringing the guns into action, the off-man of each pair dismounted,
-and these were joined by three others, whose seat
-was on the limbers. These are hardly men enough to work
-so heavy a gun, allowing for the casualties of action, but on
-emergencies the driver of the middle pair also lends his
-services.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing showy in the review, the manœuvres
-of which were confined to advancing and retreating in line,
-and forming column, and deploying into line again; but all
-at a foot’s pace, or at a very slow trot. They had no idea of
-changing front, or retreating in echéllon, or any of those
-showy manœuvres in which the prolong is used. In fact, so
-far as display went, it was a very slow affair indeed; the
-men, however, seemed to know their work pretty well, and
-though individually dirty and slovenly and without the well
-set up carriage of our own soldiers, they bore, as a body,
-rather a soldier-like appearance. They ride very forward,
-absolutely on the horse’s withers—this is said to give the
-horse greater facility of draught; and it may, but at all
-events, it gives a most awkward and unsoldier-like appearance
-to the men, which is in no way improved by the
-manner in which they carry their swords—the elbows sticking
-out at right angles to the body, and their knuckles thrust
-into their sides, as if they had a pain in their ribs.</p>
-
-<p>The guns seemed to be very much under-horsed, but
-perhaps this is more apparent than real; for the Swedish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-horses, though small, are strong and wiry, and their enclosed
-country is not only not calculated for horse artillery
-manœuvres, but does not admit of them. The chances are,
-that a whole campaign might be fought in Sweden without
-the artillery being required to move faster than at a foot-pace.
-So far as numbers went, they mustered at least three
-times as many guns as can be got together at Woolwich for
-love or money at the best of times.</p>
-
-<p>The army of Sweden is very curiously constituted, and it
-is not easy to reckon up its effective strength. The regular
-army does not consist of above 10,000 men; the guards—than
-which no finer body of men is to be seen in Europe,—the
-artillery, and three or four garrison regiments, who are
-stationed at Wanås, in the interior, and Carlscrona, and one
-or two other fortresses on the coast.</p>
-
-<p>The militia, which is called Beväring, consists of every
-man in the country between the ages of twenty and twenty-five;
-these have regular days of exercise, generally Sunday
-evenings in the summer, which is with them by no means a
-popular arrangement, for those are the hours which the
-ingenuous youths of Sweden devote to dancing, an amusement
-of which they are passionately fond. This really is a
-much more effective force than it seems, for the Swedes are
-natural soldiers; besides which, it gives them all a habit of
-drill, which might be rendered serviceable in case of invasion;
-for, as every man in the country has been drilled in his
-youth, they are all capable of immediately taking their
-places in the ranks of the regular regiments. It would be a
-very great improvement if they were drilled to ball practice,
-like the Swiss and Tyrolese, for a Swede is terribly clumsy
-with fire-arms, and on a skal, is just as likely to shoot himself
-or his comrade, as a bear or a wolf.</p>
-
-<p>But the strength of the Swedish army lies in its Indelta,
-a description of force peculiar to that country—unless the
-military colonies of Russia be considered a parallel case.</p>
-
-<p>The crown possesses large estates, and these are leased
-out, like the knight’s fees in old times, on man service, and
-for that purpose are divided into hemmans, each hemman
-furnishing a man, who has a portion of it by way of pay—the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-hemman is not a measure of size, but of produce. Fertile
-hemmans are small, waste or barren hemmans are large; and
-thus it often happens, when a crown estate has been cleared
-and brought into cultivation, though quite as productive as
-some other estate, it furnishes a much smaller quota.</p>
-
-<p>The holder of such a property, is then bound to serve
-himself, if capable, and to furnish a certain number of
-efficient soldiers, horse or foot, according to the size of his
-estate. The whole country is divided into military provinces,
-under colonels; these are subdivided into districts, under
-captains, with their proper complement of subaltern and
-non-commissioned officers, who are paid by the tenure of
-certain reserved farms, which they hold in virtue of their
-commissions.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever the Indelta is called out—and a third of them
-assemble in camp every summer,—the crown tenants of the
-estates that furnished it are bound, at their own expense, to
-cultivate the farms which the soldiers hold, and to return to
-them their lands, when they are dismissed from active service,
-in the same condition in which they took charge of them,
-accounting for any sale of produce which they may have
-made.</p>
-
-<p>The service of the Indelta is very popular, and for every
-vacancy there are at least half a dozen candidates. No
-application is ever received without written testimonials from
-the clergyman of the applicant’s parish, and no man is ever
-admitted who has been convicted of any crime. Many of
-these crown holdings have been purchased and re-purchased,
-and transferred from hand to hand so often, that they are
-regarded as a sort of private property, and their tenants very
-often complain of being burthened to a greater extent than
-their countrymen. This, however, is as unreasonable as that
-a tenant should complain that in paying rent he is not on
-an equality with the proprietor in fee. The sale of crown
-lands is merely the transference of a beneficial lease.</p>
-
-<p>So far as the morals of the people are concerned, the
-patronage of the Indelta, and the reward it holds to good
-conduct, act very beneficially; as to the efficacy of the force,
-the wars of Gustavus Adolphus and of Charles XII., may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-form a pretty fair criterion. The strength of this contingent
-to the Swedish army, may be reckoned at 20,000
-infantry, and 5,000 cavalry, and has the advantage of being
-always available.</p>
-
-<p>“You may come out of your hole now, Birger,” said his
-friend, the artilleryman, who, arriving hot and dusty from
-the barracks, was lounging down the streets, with his jacket
-open and his stiff military stock in his hand, a free and easy
-style of dress, in which an English officer would think it
-just impossible to put his nose beyond the barrack gates.
-“The General and all his staff are gone in a body to Arfwedsen’s
-Villa, so you are safe for to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“And for to-morrow, too,” said Birger, “for the steamer
-starts for Stockholm to-morrow morning early; while you
-were amusing yourselves, I have been doing business. As soon
-as I heard from the sound of your guns that the General was
-safe, I stepped down to the quay, went on board the <i>Daniel
-Thunberg</i>, and engaged two cabins—we will toss up who is
-to have the cabin to himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, where’s Moodie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Moodie!” said Birger, taking out his watch, “why, by
-this time Moodie is at Agnesberg.”</p>
-
-<p>“And where is Agnesberg?”</p>
-
-<p>“The first stage to Trollhättan. He had transacted his
-business, and transferred his herd of deer to the Zoological
-men before we came, so he said he would start at once for
-Gäddebäck, and prepare to receive us. I rather think there
-is some bear hunting afoot, for the Stockholm post came in
-while you were at the review, and I am sure I recognised
-Bjornstjerna’s great splash of a seal, and his scratchy hand.
-At all events, off started Moodie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why! is it not necessary to lay a forebud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not on the main road; there is traffic enough between
-this and Wenersburg to keep holl-horses (retained horses)
-always at the stations. He will be at Gäddebäck, I will
-venture to say, before daybreak.”</p>
-
-<p>“And when do we sail?”</p>
-
-<p>“At ten to-morrow; we can see the falls and the canal
-before nightfall, and sleep at Trollhättan to-morrow night;
-and on the following morning Moodie is to send his boat for
-us. And now for dinner, I have ordered it at the Prinds
-Karl; Todd’s is a very good house to sleep at, and not bad
-for breakfast, but I want to shew you what Swedish
-cookery is, as far as you can get any worth eating in the
-provinces.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_251">p. 251.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah! there spoke the guardsman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it is very true, as you will confess, if ever I get you
-to Stockholm; is it not, Count Dahlgren?” addressing the
-artillery officer. “You dine with us, of course; in with you,
-and wash off the stains of war, which are pretty visible at
-present. You have not more time than you know what to
-do with. If we do sail to-morrow, we will make a night of it
-to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like our first night at Mosse Eurd?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, hang it, no; not so bad as that;—that was all very
-well for the men, but we do not make such beasts of ourselves
-in this country. I have told them, though, to put
-plenty of champagne in ice, and to provide the best claret
-they have got; we will be merry—and wise, if possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if not possible?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, then, the merry without the wise.”</p>
-
-<p>Whether mirth, or wisdom, or a judicious mixture of the
-two prevailed that evening at the Prinds Karl, need not be
-related; but the next morning saw the party on the clean
-white deck of the elegant little river steamer <i>Daniel Thunberg</i>,
-dashing along its broad, still stream, between rows of feathering
-rushes, sometimes so tall as to eclipse the still flat and
-uninteresting country beyond them. Ducks there were,
-in such numbers, that the fishermen half repented their
-engagement with Moodie; and Jacob, to whom every spot
-was familiar, kept up an incessant chorus of regrets, pointing
-out here a spot where he had made a fortune with the
-långref, having hauled up a three-pound eel on every hook,—there
-a corner where he had caught a pike so big he could
-not lift it into the boat, but was obliged to tow it astern all
-the way to Gotheborg,—and there a bay in the rushes in
-which he had bagged five swans, eight geese, and more ducks
-than he could count, at a single shot,—with as many more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-stories, equally veracious, as he could get people to listen to;
-and in fact, could be stopped by nothing short of that grand
-event in a Swedish day, dinner, which, announced by
-the steamer’s bell, was served with great magnificence in the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p>These little steamers form as luxurious a conveyance as
-can be imagined; they are galley-built, that is to say, the
-quarter deck is two or three feet higher than the waist; the
-after part is divided into ten or twelve little private cabins,
-each possessing its own port, and each furnished with its
-two sofas and its table; the fore part contains the saloon,
-or common cabin. They do not carry very powerful engines,
-but they burn wood, and are as clean and as free from disagreeable
-smells as if they were sailing vessels.</p>
-
-<p>At the locks of Lilla Edet, where a reef comes across the
-river, forming a low but very picturesque fall, the fine
-scenery commences. The fall itself is singular. The water
-of the Gotha, fresh from the great lake of Wenern, which
-acts as an enormous cesspool, is as clear and bright as
-that of the Torjedahl, but with ten times its volume; it
-slips off the smooth ledge of rocks as if it were falling over a
-step; the ledge off which it slips is seen through it as distinctly
-as if it were enclosed in a glass case, for the water
-preserves its unbroken transparency till it reaches the bottom,
-and then spreads out into a broad border of foam, like a fan
-with swansdown fringe.</p>
-
-<p>From this point, a very perceptible difference was remarkable
-in the run of the current, which retarded considerably
-the way of the steamer through the belt of highlands which
-separates the low tract bordering the sea-coast from the
-higher level of Wenersborglan; and it was not till past five,
-that the low rumbling, earth-shaking sound of the great
-falls began to tremble on the ear.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">TROLLHÄTTAN.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Gefjon drew from Gylfi</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Rich stored-up treasure,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The land she joined to Denmark.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Four heads and eight eyes bearing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While hot sweat trickled down them,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The oxen dragged the reft mass</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which forms this winsome island.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Skald Bragi the Old.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“It was a wondrous sight to see</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Topmast and pennon glitter free,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">High raised above the greenwood tree—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As on dry land the galley moves,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By cliff and copse and alder groves.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Lord of the Isles.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Birger, what is the Swedish for ‘Go to the devil?’ I
-cannot make these little brutes of boys understand me,”
-shouted the Captain, who was not in the best of humours,
-having already made half a dozen slips on very dangerous
-ground. In all Sweden, there is not a more slippery bit of
-turf than that which clothes the cliffs and highlands of
-Trollhättan. The bank along which he was scrambling to
-get a good view of the falls rounded itself off gradually,
-getting more and more out of the horizontal and into the
-vertical at every step, till at last it plunged sheer into the
-foaming turn-hole of the middle fall, in which the very best
-of swimmers would have had no more advantage over the
-very worst than that of keeping his head above water till
-he went down the third leap, and got knocked to pieces on
-the rocks below. There was not a root to hold on by
-stronger than those of the dwarf cranberries, whose smooth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-leaves only aided the natural slipperiness. Heather is not common
-anywhere in Sweden; but here there was quite enough
-not only to give a purple brown hue to the scenery, but also
-to add to the difficulty of keeping one’s feet, in a way which
-any one who has walked the side of a highland hill in very
-dry weather will fully be able to appreciate. It was very
-irritating when one at last had attained a point of view—after
-traversing what to a leather-shod stranger was really
-a dangerous path—to have the current of one’s thoughts interrupted
-by a parcel of bare-footed urchins, who came
-frolicking over the very same ground, and insisting that the
-visitor should see everything, from the orthodox point of view
-set down by Murray, and from no other whatever, and moreover
-should pay for being tormented and unpoeticised, the
-regulated number of skillings.</p>
-
-<p>The rush of waters was certainly very grand and very
-magnificent. Much has been written about it in books of
-travels, and much more in the album kept at the inn for the
-purpose of enshrining and transmitting to posterity the
-extasies of successive generations of travellers; but the
-Parson, who ought to have been lost in admiration—to his
-shame be it spoken—appeared chiefly solicitous to procure
-bait, which he and Torkel had been diligently hunting for
-in the shallows. It was not without considerable difficulty
-that a trout sufficiently small to fit the snap-hooks of the
-trolling-litch could be found, and when it was found, we are
-happy to say, it met with no more success than it deserved;
-for though at very considerable personal risk he tried as
-much of the rushing water as his longest trolling-rod would
-command, he was not rewarded with a single run.</p>
-
-<p>But for all that, there certainly are fish in all the pools
-about these tremendous falls, and that he had the opportunity
-of satisfying himself about before he left off; for
-just as he was giving it up for a bad job, Torkel, who had
-an eye for a fish like that of a sea-eagle, caught sight of
-something alive that had poked itself into one of the runs
-from the saw-mills, a place not three feet across; and unscrewing
-the gaff which he was carrying, and substituting
-for it the five-pronged spear, he plunged it into the water<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-and brought out a black trout (<i>salmo ferox</i>) of ten pounds
-weight at the end of it. From the nature of the water it
-is impossible that trout can abound at Trollhättan in any
-great numbers. The river has scarcely any tributaries below
-the falls; and as it is absolutely impossible for a fish to surmount
-them, the breeding ground is very limited; but, on
-the other hand, the clearness of the water is precisely that
-which best suits the constitution of a trout; bleak and
-gwinead, which form their principal food, are very plentiful,
-and from the depth of the water, there is scarcely any limit
-to the growth of the fish; a man, who is satisfied to catch
-now and then a monster, will do very well at Trollhättan,
-and in the course of the season will have a few stories to tell,
-which in England will be set down as altogether fabulous,—but
-it does not answer for a day’s fishing. The traveller
-may as well make up his mind to admire the scenery at his
-leisure,—it will not answer his purpose to wet a line there.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson having convinced himself of this, and, moreover,
-having had one or two very narrow escapes, reeled up
-his line and contentedly sought out his friends, who, by
-this time, had succeeded in explaining to the swarms of
-guides that their services were not required, and were sitting
-on a heathery bank feathered with birch, exactly in front of
-the middle falls, comfortably eating gooseberries, which grow
-there in such plenty that, though the place swarms with
-children—a whole regiment of soldiers with their wives and
-families being hutted in the vicinity,—the bushes were still
-full of them.</p>
-
-<p>“That is a curious cave,” said the Captain, pointing to a
-hole which seemed to enter the face of the precipitous rock
-by the side of the great fall, and to penetrate it for some
-distance; at least, the depth was sufficiently great to be lost
-in darkness; the bottom of it was on a level with the water,
-and was not accessible without a boat.</p>
-
-<p>“That!” said Birger, “that is Polheim’s grave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say that any man was buried there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not the man himself, only the best part of a man—his
-reputation. Polheim was an engineer, and when the first
-idea of making a practicable communication between the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-Wener and the sea was entertained, he attempted to carry
-it into effect by burrowing out that hole. If he had succeeded
-in boring through the rock, he would have accomplished
-the largest <i>jet d’eau</i> in the world. However, Government
-were wise enough to put a stop to it, and to employ
-a cleverer man. Polheim died—it is said of grief,—his body
-buried at Wenersborg; what became of his soul, I will not
-take upon me to say; but as for his reputation, there is no
-doubt about that—that lies buried there.”</p>
-
-<p>“That canal certainly is a wonderful work for a country
-like yours, where the extent of land is so great, and the produce
-from it so small.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would have been more wonderful still,” said Birger,
-“for it would have been done when the country was still
-poorer, had it not been for the Reformation.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Reformation!” said the Captain. “What, in the
-name of Tenterden Steeple and the Goodwin Sands, has the
-Reformation to do with the Gotha Canal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much with the canal, but a good deal with Bishop
-Brask who planned it—the man whom Geijer calls, and
-very deservedly, ‘the friend of liberty, and the upright
-friend of his country.’ The present canal, nearly as you see
-it now, was sketched out in a letter still preserved, which
-was written in the year 1526, by the Bishop, to stout old
-Thurè Jensen, whom men called King of East Gothland—that
-gallant old fellow, who, when he saw how the Diet of
-Westeras was going, struck up his drums and marched forth,
-swearing that no man in Sweden should make him heathen,
-Lutheran, or heretic. Before the Bishop’s scheme could be
-converted into a reality, stout old Thurè was a headless
-corpse, and Brask a voluntary exile. But the good which
-men do, lives after them. Gustavus, who had always
-respected Brask, and would fain have retained him in his See
-of Linköping, carried out many of his plans—and in the
-course of time this, as you see, was carried out too, though
-it was not for a hundred years or more after the successful
-king and the deprived bishop had gone to their respective
-accounts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jacob has just been giving us another version of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-story,” said the Captain, “something about Gefjon and
-Gylfi.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, the Gylfa-Ginning. Stupid old fool!—that did not
-happen here, but down in the south, between Sweden and
-Denmark. So far, however, he is quite right,—at least,
-if you believe the Prose Edda; the Goddess Gefjon was the
-first canal maker in Sweden, and the event happened in the
-reign of King Gylfi.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus it was:—</p>
-
-<p>“King Gylfi ruled over the land of Svithiod (Sweden),
-and at that uncertain date which is generally known as ‘once
-upon a time,’ he recompensed a strange woman, for some
-service she had done him, with as much land as she could
-plough round with four oxen in a day and a night; but he
-did not know, till the share struck deep into the earth and
-tore asunder hills and rocks, that it was the Goddess Gefjon
-that he was dealing with. So deep were the furrows, that the
-place where the land had been became water, for the oxen,
-which had come from Jötenheim (the land of the Goths),
-were really her sons, whom she had yoked to her plough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Phew-w-w,” whistled the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter?” said Birger.</p>
-
-<p>“Only that as Gefjon is the northern Diana, I thought
-you might have made a mistake; her nephews, possibly, not
-her sons?”</p>
-
-<p>“O, that goes for nothing in Sweden,” said the Captain,
-laughing; “there are plenty of cases in point. I have no
-doubt Birger is quite right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you come to scandalising national divinities,”
-retorted Birger, “I am sure that story about Endymion was
-never cleared up very satisfactorily.”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear up your own story, at all events, and place the
-oxen in any relationship to the maiden goddess which you
-may think best suited to her fair fame.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will call them what the Edda calls them,” said
-Birger, gallantly, “her sons, and never sully the fair fame of
-the maiden Gefjon either. The whole is an allegory. Sweden
-achieved the sea-path, or inland navigation by the labour of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-her own sons, and that is what the old Skald Bragi means
-when he likens them to oxen, and says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Four heads and eight eyes bearing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While hot sweat trickled down them,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The oxen dragged the reft mass</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That formed this winsome island.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And now Gefjon and her sturdy sons have been at work
-again. The whole south of Sweden is an island now, and it is
-this canal from the Cattegat to the Baltic that makes it so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so it is; and though it is a long while since the
-days of the Goddess Gefjon, or even of good Bishop Brask,
-the work is complete at last, and a very creditable work it
-is. I think, by-the-way, that we English had something
-to do with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“England had a hand, and a very considerable one, in the
-other end of it,” said Birger, “but these locks are home
-manufacture, and the thing really has answered very well.
-See what a trade it has opened with the Wener only, which
-was the original plan; the communication with the Baltic
-being a sort of after-thought of the Ostergöthlanders, carried
-out by Count Platen. This part of the canal, which was
-opened in 1800, has made four of our inland counties, Wenersborglan,
-Mariestadslan, Carlstadslan, and Orebrö, into so
-many maritime states; and now the other end has done the
-same for Jonköping and Linköping. In national wealth, it
-has paid a dozen times over. There is no one who has ever
-lived, since the days of Oxenstjerna, to whom we owe so
-much as we do to Count Platen. In the very heat of the
-war—that is to say, in 1808—he conceived the idea of prolonging
-the water communication to the Baltic. He went
-over to England to inspect, with his own eyes, the Caledonian
-canal. He engaged Telford, returned to Sweden, and, within
-two months, sent in his plans, with their specification and
-estimates, which, strange to say, have not been exceeded in
-the execution. It is this old part of the canal, however,
-which is, at all events, the most showy job; here are two
-miles of solid rock cut through, and, as you see, these falls
-are pretty high—not less than a hundred and twenty feet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-of them, besides the rapids,—they require, therefore, a good
-many locks; in fact, as you see, it looks more like a staircase
-than anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>“It certainly was a singular sight,” said the Captain, “to
-see our steamer high above our heads, and the masts of the
-brigs sticking out from the tops of the rocks, and far above
-the highest trees.”</p>
-
-<p>“This part of the canal is the most showy,” said Birger;
-“no doubt but Platen’s work was not altogether so easy
-as it looks. Any one can appreciate the skill of an engineer,
-who sees a great body of water surmounting a steep wall of
-rock; but a still greater amount of skill is evidenced in laying
-out a plan; so as to render such tedious and expensive works
-unnecessary. When I was a youngster, I was sent by the
-Kongs-Ofwer-Commandant’s Expedition, to survey, by way
-of practice, the two lines from our fortress of Wanås-on-Wettern
-to the two seas, and I really do not know which is
-the most wonderful conception. The original plan was only
-eight feet deep, but they are deepening it two feet more, and
-making the width of the locks twenty-two feet throughout.
-We shall see the Linköping battalion at work on this to-morrow.
-I must go and pay them a visit while we are
-staying at Gäddebäck. I know a good many of the officers.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a military work, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly, though, like most other large undertakings,
-it is done by soldiers. It is a speculation, something like
-those in your own country, which is taken in hand by shareholders,
-with a board of directors, though I believe Government
-gives them a lift of some sort or other; but in this country,
-in time of peace, you can always get as many soldiers as you
-want for labourers, from a corporal’s party up to a battalion,
-or a brigade, for matter of that. You lodge so much money
-in the hands of the Government officer appointed for that
-purpose, and a regiment, or a company, or a detachment, receives
-orders to march and hut themselves in such a place.
-Your engineer, or foreman, or bailiff, as the case may be,
-gives his orders to the officer in command, who sees them
-carried into effect. It costs more in hard money—and, what
-is a worse thing for us Swedes, <i>ready</i> money—than any other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-sort of labour, but it answers exceedingly well for those who
-can afford the first outlay, for the men are under military
-discipline, and Government are responsible, not only that you
-shall have so many men to work, but so many <i>sober</i> men, <i>fit</i>
-to work, which, in this country, as you know, is not exactly
-the same thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how do the soldiers like it?” said the Captain, who,
-though he did not say so, certainly was thinking that it was
-not precisely the situation of an officer and a gentleman, to
-do duty as foreman of the works for some speculating farmer,
-or builder, or engineer.</p>
-
-<p>The idea never seemed to strike Birger, who, by-the-way,
-belonging to the Royal Guards, was himself exempt from
-such service. “It is rather popular,” said he, “with all
-classes; the men like it because they have a considerable increase
-of pay, and as for the officers, except one or two who
-are on duty for the day, they have but a short morning and
-evening parade, just to see that their men are all right, and
-then they may do what they please. They lose nothing,
-either, for all places are equally dull in the summer, when
-everybody is at work; there can be no festivities going on
-anywhere, and so they shoot, or fish, or lounge, or make love,
-at their leisure. But here we are at the parade-ground,” he
-continued, as they came upon a cleared space in the forest,
-surrounded by very neat and compactly-built huts, some of
-considerable pretensions, framed with trunks of pines, and
-walled and roofed with outsides from the saw-mills, arranged
-as weather-boards; others, more humble, were constructed of
-pine-branches and heather; but all alike compact, neat, firm,
-tidy-looking, and arranged in military order, in straight lines,
-with their officers’ huts in front.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was not far from its setting, and the soldiers
-having put aside their tools, were throwing on their belts in
-a way that certainly would not have satisfied an English
-adjutant, and were hurrying, with their muskets in their
-hands, to their respective posts. There was a short private
-inspection by the non-commissioned officers, while the band,
-a pretty good one, were tuning their instruments; after
-which the companies formed into line, faced to the west, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-as the lower limb of the sun touched the horizon, the officers
-saluted with their swords, the men presented arms, and
-accompanied by the band, sang in chorus, every man of them
-joining in and taking his part in it, the beginning of Grundtvig’s
-glorious hymn to the Trinity.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O mighty God! we Thee adore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From our hearts’ depths, for evermore;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">None is in glory like to Thee</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Through time and through eternity.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy Name is blessed by Cherubim—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy Name is blessed by Seraphim—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And songs of praise from earth ascend,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With thine angelic choirs to blend.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Holy art Thou, our God!</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Holy art Thou, our God!</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Holy art Thou, our God!</div>
- <div class="verse indent20">Lord of Sabaoth.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The air was simple enough, though beautifully harmonized;
-but there is nothing in the whole compass of music so magnificent
-as the combination of some hundreds of human voices
-trained to sing in harmony; the band would have injured
-the effect, but in truth it was hardly heard, overwhelmed as
-it was by that volume of sound,—except, indeed, the roll of
-drums which accompanied the final “Amen,” swelling and prolonging
-the notes, and then dying away like a receding peal
-of thunder. The men recovered arms, were dismissed, and in
-ten minutes were dispersed over the parade ground, playing
-leap-frog, fencing, wrestling, foot-ball; while not a few were
-lighting fires, and boiling water for their evening gröd.</p>
-
-<p>Birger stepped on, to see if he could meet with his
-friend, while the other two, thinking that they should most
-likely be in the way among people who, if they spoke
-English or French at all, spoke it with difficulty; turned
-into the well-beaten track that led to the inn and landing
-place of Trollhättan.</p>
-
-<p>Before they arrived there the night had already closed in;
-that is to say, it had faded into twilight, for that is the
-nearest approach which a northern summer’s night makes to
-darkness. All that the travellers then saw of the inn was
-the light which, glancing from every window, beamed forth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-a welcome which it had evidently been beaming forth to
-others before them; judging from the din which arose from
-the evening relaxations of a dozen or so of jolly subalterns.
-These, who had money enough, or who fancied they had
-money enough to spend in luxury, had fixed their quarters
-at the inn, instead of the pretty looking green huts which
-their less wealthy or more prudent comrades had run up in
-the camp.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, the sitting rooms of the inn offered at that time
-fewer temptations than the very clean, bare bed-rooms, with
-their very white sheets, and very warm down coverlets.
-Winter and summer alike, the feather bed is uppermost, and
-here it was still; though the only reason why the windows
-were not left wide open all night, was the clouds of musquitos
-which, entering by them, menaced the repose of the
-sleepers.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob, whom the party had somewhat inconsiderately left
-in charge of the baggage, had, much to their surprise,
-deceived them all in making no mistake, and leaving nothing
-behind; the carioles had been landed, and were ready packed
-for their journey on the morrow, as duly as if the fishermen
-had seen to them themselves; but in his own country Jacob
-had become quite a different character, and piqued himself
-in showing to the Norwegians in his own person how vast
-was the superiority of the Swedes.</p>
-
-<p>Birger was not seen again till the party was collected at a
-sufficiently early hour of the morning round a magnificent
-breakfast of fruit and fish, which had been laid out under
-the verandah of the inn,—a narrow esplanade which looked
-out upon the yet quiet waters of the brimming Gotha, at
-the very point where they were gathering their strength for
-their first furious plunge.</p>
-
-<p>Most cataracts commence with a rapid: so still and calm
-was the Gotha at this point, that the esplanade in question
-was the general landing place from Wenersborg, and was
-furnished with iron rings for the purpose of mooring the
-boats, several of which, very fair specimens of Swedish boat-building,
-were hanging on to them, scarcely stretching out
-their respective painters, so gentle was the current. Among<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-them lay a very handsome gig with bright sides, well scraped
-oars, and a white English ensign fluttering in the morning
-breeze; from which Moodie, who had come in state with
-four rowers, had just landed, and by means of which, the
-travellers were to complete their journey.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, Gäddebäck was not very accessible in any other
-way; it had been originally built as a pic-nic house by the
-Mayor of Wenersborg, who, when he had been half-ruined
-by the great fire that had taken place there the year before,
-was glad enough to contract his expenses, and to find a
-person to take it off his hands. It suited Moodie well
-enough, and its low rent suited him also, but there were not
-many men whom it would suit at all. It had been built
-exclusively for pleasure parties, and these were expected to
-arrive there either by boat or by sledge, according as the
-surface of the river was, water or ice. No one had ever
-troubled themselves with any other entrance, and it was no
-sort of drawback to the place in its original state, that communication
-with the main land was entirely cut off. The
-still, deep brook which gave to the place its name (pike
-brook), had spread out behind the house into a broad reedy
-morass, which in spring, during the floods, was a broad reedy
-lake, but in summer a sort of neutral ground, between land
-and water, through which was led a precarious track, which
-might be passed on wheel, or indeed on foot, provided the
-traveller did not object to very clear water, not much above
-his knees. The actual spot on which the house was situated in
-the middle of all this, was a patch of parky ground, abounding
-in beautiful timber, which was five or six feet above the
-general level; that part of it which lay next the river was
-firm, and hard, and covered with short green turf, but this
-subsided to landward, first into wet sponge, secondly into
-bog, and lastly into reedy water, in proportion as it receded
-from the river. The brook, divided by this patch of dry land,
-soaked into the main stream, on either end of it, completely
-insulating the domain.</p>
-
-<p>This suited Moodie exactly, for the little park was full of
-all sorts of grouse and other birds, which looked as if they
-were at perfect liberty, as indeed they were, only that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-having had their pinions cut, and not being able to swim,
-they could not pass the girdle of water—herons, and cranes,
-and bitterns, were stalking about, or watching for fish in the
-shallows, like their wild brethren, for though excellent
-waders, and quite in their element on the soppy shores to
-landward, they could not swim any more than the grouse.
-There were some deer, also, of various kinds, but as these had
-no sort of objection to take the water, they were confined in
-little paddocks, those being classed together who would keep
-the peace.</p>
-
-<p>On the esplanade, between the house and the river, lay a
-dozen dogs, mostly English, on excellent terms with the
-great brown bear, who, though perfectly tame, was secured
-from paying any inquisitive visits to the deer paddocks by a
-collar and chain, with which he was made fast to a substantial
-post at the door.</p>
-
-<p>The whole front of the house had been occupied by a ball-room,
-with windows opening into a verandah. This verandah
-had become a general marine store—oars, boat-hooks, masts,
-sails, were arranged along it on hooks; but so tidily and
-regularly were they disposed, that they looked as if they had
-been placed there for ornament;—fishing rods of all lengths
-were there, and a large assortment of eel-lines and night-lines,
-and trimmers, and gaffs, and pike-wires, and spears,
-and other poaching implements, together with a goodly
-assortment of drags and flues in the back ground; while
-a full-sized casting net, hung up to dry, displayed its
-leaded semi-circle to the sun: for be it remembered,
-Moodie made a profit of his pleasure, and not only kept
-his own establishment in fish, but very seldom allowed the
-Gotheborg steamer to pass without dispatching in her a
-heavy birchen basket, consigned to Jacob Lindegren, the
-fishmonger.</p>
-
-<p>Neither was the interior at all out of character: the ball-room
-had been divided by wooden partitions into three
-very tolerable apartments—an ante-room or broad passage in
-the middle, and on either side his dining room and what he
-called his study, that is to say, the place where he made his
-flies. The passage, which was sufficiently littered, contained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-little other furniture than a turning-lathe and a carpenter’s
-bench, with shelves and pigeon-holes round the sides for the
-necessary tools; but both rooms were pictures of tidiness;
-the furniture was plain enough, certainly, but the walls were
-covered with sketches, of Moodie’s own drawing, and with
-sporting trophies of every kind: huge bear skins and wolf
-skins occupied whole panels, surmounted, perhaps, by the
-grinning skull of a lynx, or a huge antlered head with the
-skin on; between these were cases containing most of the
-wild birds found in the country, all stuffed by his own
-hands; together with specimens of eggs, hung up in a pattern,
-but each labelled with the name of the bird it belonged
-to. Between the windows was a formidable armoury, while
-over one door was a stuffed otter, and over the other a wild
-cat, and the rug itself was formed of badgers’ skins bordered
-with fox; for Moodie had imported an English grate and
-had built a fire-place, besides the invariable stove.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the sportsman’s paradise, into which Moodie
-welcomed his guests. There was accommodation, such as it
-was, for an unlimited number of them; for there were several
-empty rooms of one sort or another; and a rough box, hastily
-run up with planks from the saw mills, filled with dry poplar
-leaves and covered with a bear skin, was a bed much
-better than any of them had been accustomed to. As for
-washing, their toilet apparatus was laid out every morning
-on the stage to which the boats were moored, and a dive
-into the river was the very best way of washing the face
-after shaving,—at least, so Moodie seemed to think, for
-though his room was pretty well fitted up, inasmuch as such
-toilet would be difficult in the winter, when the river was as
-hard as a stone, in summer he always chose the boat
-stage for his own dressing room, as well as for that of his
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>No one was sorry for a rest; journals had to be written
-up, notes had to be compared; there was something, too, in
-lounging lazily in the sun, or smoking a peaceful cigar under
-the shade of the awning, or teasing the bear, or feeding the
-grouse, and knowing all the while that there was no duty
-neglected, and no opportunity lost. Not but that excursions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-in a quiet way were made—now upon the water with the
-trolling tackle, now on the high grounds of the royal forest,
-now on neither land nor water, but on the marshy debateable
-land, astonishing the ducks that swarmed among the reed
-beds which divide the left bank of the river from the sound
-land; but nothing very particular was done, beyond existing
-in a very high state of quiet enjoyment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">GÄDDEBÄCK.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“I hung fine garments</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On two wooden men</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who stand on the wall;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Heroes they seemed to be</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When they were clothed;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The unclad are despisèd.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The day had been oppressively hot, more actual heat,
-perhaps—reckoning by the degrees of Reaumur or Farenheit—than
-had been experienced on the fjeld of the Tellemark;—but
-that was dry, bracing, exhilarating heat, such as
-is felt on the mountain side; this was the moist, feverish
-warmth, caused by the sun’s rays acting on the wide expanse
-of the Wener Sjön and its marshy shores, and secretly
-and imperceptibly drawing up vapours, which would eventually
-fall in rain,—not, perhaps, on the spot from which
-they had been raised, but on the cold distant mountains of
-Fille Fjeld, which at once attracted and condensed them.
-There was not a cloud in the sky, but the sun would not
-shine brightly or cheerily either.</p>
-
-<p>The long summer’s day was, however, drawing to a close,
-and the party were sitting at the extreme end of a little
-jetty which Moodie had built out into the river on piles of
-solid fir. This was covered with an awning of striped duck,—of
-little use as an awning so late in the day, for the sun
-was low enough to peep under it, but still kept up, partly to
-tempt the air of wind, which every now and then fluttered
-its vandyked border, and partly as a preservative against the
-dews, which would be sure to fall as soon as the sun dipped
-below the horizon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<p>From a flag-staff, stepped on the outermost pile, hung a
-huge red English ensign, every now and then stirring in the
-breeze, half unrolling its lazy folds and then dropping
-motionless against its staff. Moodie was very particular
-about this flag, and hoisted it every morning with his own
-hands,—for ever since he had fairly turned his back upon
-his native land, he had become intensely national.</p>
-
-<p>In the front and beneath them the broad, clear, deep, still,
-brimming river, full four hundred yards from bank to bank,
-glided quietly along with a calm unbroken surface, and a
-motion hardly sufficient to bring a strain upon the chain
-cable of the little cutter that was moored some twenty yards
-off the head of the pier, with her triangular burgee fluttering
-out in the breeze that was not strong enough to move the
-heavier ensign, and displaying the red cross and the golden
-R.Y.S. so well known in every port in Europe. It was a
-singular thing to see it here though, a hundred miles in the
-heart of Sweden, with the tremendous Falls of Trollhättan
-between it and the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Made fast to the rails of the jetty were half a dozen
-boats, of all shapes and sizes—from the long narrow galley
-with its four well-scraped ashen oars, to the little white flat-bottomed
-duck-punt,—for Gäddebäck, though not, strictly
-speaking, an island, except during the freshets of early
-summer, was so perfectly insulated by the sluggish brook
-and the marshy ground through which it flowed, as to make
-all communication with the main land, except by boat, extremely
-precarious.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner had been over for some time, and the party had
-adjourned to the jetty, as the coolest place they could find.
-They were sitting with their wine glasses before them,
-while two or three bottles of light claret were towing overboard,
-suspended in the cool water of the river by as many
-night-lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the Captain, throwing open his
-waistcoat, “the West Indies is a fool to this; and it is not
-unlike a tropical climate either,—moist, damp, and hot,—stewing
-rather than broiling.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span></p>
-
-<p>“To tell you the truth,” said the Parson, “I am surprised
-at your selecting this spot for your residence, beautiful as it
-certainly is; with all this marsh land about it, it cannot fail
-to be unhealthy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I do not know,” said Moodie, “they do talk of
-agues, certainly, but these things never hurt me, and the
-place suits me well enough; there is plenty of shooting—ducks
-and snipes without end; and on the other side of that
-range of heights, not three miles from us, is a royal forest,
-well preserved, in which I have full permission to kill anything
-I like, except stags, elks, and perhaps peasants, though
-they do not make much fuss about a man or two either;
-and, besides, the Ofwer Jagmästere is a particular friend of
-mine. And as for fishing, it is not altogether such as I should
-choose, no doubt, for it is mostly trolling,—but there is some
-capital fishing, such as it is. I will show you what we can do
-to-morrow at the upper rapids,—we have not been there
-yet. It is a singular sort of sport, certainly; but if you
-are half the poacher you used to be, you will like it for its
-novelty. However, the greatest attraction that the place has
-in my eyes, lies in its situation: this river is the high road
-from Gotheborg to Stockholm, and steamers pass it every
-day. Living on this Robinson Crusoe island of mine, I can
-command the best market in the country, and in fact, I do
-realize a very fair income by my fish and my game. Look
-at my yacht, too, where else could I put it to so great use.
-A short canal and a single lock passes me into the great lake
-Wener, where I command some of the best rivers and some
-of the best bear-country in Sweden. If I want to smell salt
-water again, I have but to put my cutter in tow of the
-market-tug, and to steam away to Gotheborg; and when I
-want to be sulky, here I am, looking after my menagerie of
-Scandinavian birds and beasts, and adding odds and ends to my
-museum. I dare say people wonder at the old flag ‘that braved
-a thousand years, the battle and the breeze,’ as they pass
-backward and forward in the steamers; but no one stops
-here, and you may be sure no one would find me out by
-land. This is just the place for me; besides, it is not always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-so hot as it is now,—I have driven my cariole across this
-river, many a time.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, what do you do with yourself in the winter?”
-said the Captain; “you were never very much given to
-reading, and your shooting and fishing must fail you then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fishing, yes; shooting, no,” said Moodie; “the finest
-bear shooting is in the winter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! do you meet with bears in the forest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh, nonsense! you Englishmen are always fancying
-that we kick bears out of every bush in Sweden.”</p>
-
-<p>“You Englishmen!” said Birger, glancing at the flag.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,—you Johnny Raws, I should say,—you
-freshmen—you griffins. I was just as bad myself, though:
-I remember the day I landed at Gotheborg, marching off
-with my gun over my shoulder to a little wooded valley at
-the back of the town where the Gotheborg cockneys have
-their villas, and attacking a Swede, dictionary in hand, with
-‘Hvar er Bjornerne’—how the scoundrel laughed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but what do you mean by bear shooting then,—where
-do you meet with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you travel a hundred miles to get a shot at a bear,
-and think little of it too. The bear hunter must keep up a
-correspondence with the Ofwer Jagmästerer of the different
-provinces, and get information whenever the peasants have
-ringed a bear as they call it—that is to say, ascertained that
-he is within a certain circle, and then out with the sledge
-and the dogs, and the rifles, and away up the river, or
-across the lake, as it may be. You do not meet with a bear
-at every turning, I can assure you. I have killed a pretty
-many though, one way or other, since I have been here.”</p>
-
-<p>“That you have,” said the Captain,—“at least, if all those
-trophies that ornament your walls are honestly come by;
-but by your own showing, you cannot be hunting every day
-in the week; what do you do on the off-days?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to tell you the truth, I was dull enough the first
-winter; you will hardly believe it, but I took to reading—I
-did indeed; you may laugh, but it is quite true. I got
-up the natural history of the country thoroughly, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-crammed Linnæus. But I soon found something better to
-do, when I began to get acquainted with the people, worthy
-souls that they are. I had invitations without end, and got
-on capitally with them,—quite a popular character I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“The English are popular,” said the Parson, certainly;
-“high and low we have found that, wherever we have been.
-What we English have done to deserve it is more than I can
-say; but Norway and Sweden, agreeing in nothing else,
-agree at all events in doing honour to the English traveller.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not be taking the conceit out of Moodie”, said
-Birger; “it is evident that he would have you to understand
-that it is he, the individual,—not he, the Englishman,
-who is thus honoured and caressed.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need not be afraid of doing that,” said the Captain;
-“ever since I have known him, Moodie has been a very great
-man,—in his own eyes, at all events.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you must know I am a great man here,” said
-Moodie, “whatever I was in my own country. I am a
-kammerjunker—no less.”</p>
-
-<p>“A what?” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“A kammerjunker; and, in virtue of it, I have a right
-to go before every one of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but how came you to be a what-do-you-call-him?
-‘Who gave you that name?’ as the Catechism says.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not ‘my godfathers and godmothers,’ certainly,” said
-Moodie, “and I hadn’t it ‘in my baptism;’ but I will tell you
-how it was. Sweden, in the winter, is as different from the
-same country in the summer as Connaught from Paradise.
-In the winter, they are fiddling, and dancing, and singing,
-from night to morn, and from morn to snowy eve. There is
-not much else to do, as you say, that is the truth of it, unless
-one happens to hear of a bear; so when I came to understand
-a little of their lingo, I was very glad to go to their
-jollifications. The people were always very civil in asking
-me, wherever I was—that I must say for them. Now we,
-in England, don’t care much about precedence, as you know.
-Most of us do not know who is first and who is last, and the
-rest do not care; and those who feel most secure of their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-rank, are generally too proud to take the trouble of asserting
-it. But it is not so here; they all know their places, like
-schoolboys, and fight for them like dogs at a feeding-trough
-if you happen to make a mistake about them—a thing which
-the natives never do. I did not care much about this at
-first, no Englishman would,—in fact, I did not understand
-it; but after a bit it got to be very unpleasant—it made me
-a marked man. Here was I, an English gentleman, as noble
-as the king—and a little more so than that Brummagem
-article of theirs,—shoved down, not only by counts and
-barons, which I did not like over and above; for half the
-people you meet with here are counts and barons,—and precious
-queer ones, some of them; but, besides this, there were
-their confounded orders of knighthood: there are knights
-of the Cherubim and Seraphim<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>, and knights of the
-Elephant and Castle, and knights of the Goose and Gridiron,
-and Heaven knows what besides. Then came the officials,
-from the prime minister down to the post-master, and their
-sons and grandsons. Why, there was not a tradesman I
-dealt with, hardly a beggar I gave a shilling to, who had
-not a clear right to go before me—aye, and showed every
-disposition to exercise it, too!</p>
-
-<p>“One day I was ass enough to be vexed because my tailor,
-who was knight of the Shears and Cabbage, or something of
-the sort, elbowed his way before me; and one of my friends,
-I think it was this very Bjornstjerna, the Ofwer Jagmästere,
-offered to get me a settled precedence. ‘Yours is not a new
-family,’ says he.—Of course it was not, everybody knew the
-Moodies, of Hampshire.—Well, that was all right; I had
-only to get my sixteen quarters blazoned, and he would see
-that I was made a kammerjunker. Sixteen quarters! thought
-I. I had had a great grandfather, that is certain, for there
-he lies in Havant Church, with a ton of marble over him,
-and his arms on the top of that, a chevron ermine between
-three mermaids ppr. to cheer him up on his road to Paradise.
-He was a great man, too, and looked as if he was the son of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-somebody, as the Spaniards say, to judge by the picture of his
-coach-and-six, and outriders with French-horns, which is
-hanging up in our hall, at Havant Manor. But he had
-played ‘ducks and drakes’ with his guineas, and as for his
-quarters, you know we don’t greatly trouble ourselves with
-such matters.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I told my difficulty to one of my friends in Stockholm—an
-idle young scamp of an <i>attaché</i>. ‘Why the devil
-don’t you write to the Herald’s College,’ said he, ‘they will
-trace your descent from the Preadamite Grants,<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> if you pay
-for it. Tell them to make you up a pedigree for Sweden,
-and, my life for it, they will get it up well.’</p>
-
-<p>“I could not lose by it, you know, so I wrote, and, sure
-enough, they found out that the old family had come over
-with Duke Rollo, and had a hand in that conquest of ‘Normandie,’
-which your fellow Torkel is continually dinning into
-our ears. They found out, too, that our name originally was
-spelt ‘Modige,’ which, in old Swedish, means ‘dashing,’ and
-that it was a title of honour, given to us for our gallantry in
-the said conquest. And, what was pat to the present purpose,
-Duke Rollo had conferred on us the honour of hereditary
-chamberlains, as soon as ever he had a court to appoint us to.
-How we came to England I forget—I suppose, though, it was
-with Duke William,—and what we did there I do not know,
-unless it was plundering the Saxons, like the rest; but, at all
-events, I got a string of shields, fit to roof Valhalla, and a
-beautiful tree—rather an expensive plant it was, though, for
-I paid sixty pounds for it. However, Bjornstjerna and my
-friend the <i>attaché</i> marched off with the chevron ermine and
-the three mermaids to the Hof-Ofwer-Something-or-other, and
-brought me back a sheet of parchment with a big seal hanging
-from it, giving me the privilege of pulling off the inexpressibles
-of the third prince of the blood royal—whenever it
-should please Providence to bless his Majesty with one,—and
-in virtue of that office to style myself kammerjunker.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So you are a greater man than your tailor, now?”</p>
-
-<p>“O yes,” said Moodie, “I take precedence of all manner
-of people, and moreover wear, whenever I please—which is
-not very often, you may be sure,—a concern in my button-hole,
-something like what I used to wear when I was Noble
-Grand of the Julius Cæsar Lodge of Oddfellows, at South
-Marden. You may depend upon it I am something very
-great indeed, though I must admit I do not know exactly
-what.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very great indeed!” said Birger, who, as may be supposed,
-did not feel his country particularly flattered by
-Moodie’s absurd—not to say ungrateful—description of his
-honours, and retorted with a bit of Swedish slang: “I am
-sure you are something ending in ‘ral,’ as the Karing’s wife
-said to her husband; it certainly is not admiral—perhaps it
-is corporal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, Birger, I beg your pardon,” said Moodie,
-in some confusion. “You speak English so perfectly, and
-look so like an Englishman, that I forgot we are not all
-countrymen together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said Birger, good humouredly, “I must confess
-there is a great deal too much of truth in your satire,
-and that is what makes the sting of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind him, Birger,” said the Parson; “you Swedes
-are uncommon fine fellows, and carry your honours in your
-history; I should like to know what Europe would have
-done in the thirty years war, if it had not been for Gustaf
-Adolph and Oxenstjerna? Why, it was you who thrashed
-Czar Peter and all the Russias into something like civilization,
-and were the making of his armies by licking them.
-Gallantly, too, did you hold your own, under the other
-Gustaf, against the giant you had made; and I have no
-doubt but that you would have thrashed the French giant
-Nap., as well as the Russian giant Peter, if you had only
-made up your minds in time which side you meant to fight
-on. But for all that, it is a fact, as Moodie says, that, like
-the girls, you are a little too fond of ribbons.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very true,” said Birger; “we depreciate our own
-honours by our over-lavish distribution of them. That which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-is plentiful, is cheap—that which is little, valued. It is the
-law of nature, and as true of stars and ribbons as it is of
-green peas and early potatoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure it is,” said the Captain; “what regiment in
-our service cares a button for the distinction of ‘Royal,’ which
-it shares with the Royal African condemned corps? Who
-prizes the Waterloo medal, which places in the same category
-the Englishman who fought and the Belgian who ran?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Moodie, who had by this time done blushing
-at his blunder, “at the Congress of Vienna, Lord Castlereagh
-sat among the starry host of plenipotentiaries in a plain blue
-coat, without one solitary decoration. ‘Ma foi! c’est bien
-distingué,’ said good Bishop Talleyrand, who himself had a
-star for every oath he had broken, and whose tailor could
-not find room on his coat for all of them!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was ‘distingué,’” said the Captain; “he belonged to
-a country whose citizens do their duty for their duty’s sake.
-That is distinction enough for any man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Birger, “<i>if they do</i>—but a good deal depends
-on that little particle;—however, even if citizens could be got,
-whenever wanted, to do their duty for their duty’s sake, which
-I doubt; distinctions, which of course involve precedence, are
-useful in themselves. In your country, people are always
-jealously guarding their position in society; you are always
-on the look out, lest some interloper should thrust you out,
-or refuse you the honour you consider your due. This is
-what makes you Englishmen so unsociable and exclusive;
-you are always on guard, walking sentry over your own
-honour. Now look at our people—our barons and our
-tradesmen, our princes and our farmers, all meet together
-without fear of losing caste, because every one has his
-position secured to him, beyond the possibility of invasion.
-You dare not do this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not say, ‘you,’” broke in the Captain, “I, thank
-God! am a gentleman born, and have not to work for my
-daily dignity.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is only another instance of what I assert—‘a gentleman
-born!’ you can afford to do what we all do, because,
-by birth or by accident, you find yourself in the very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-position in which we Swedes are all placed by the customs
-of our country.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is all very true,” said the Parson; “for the amenities
-of life, I grant your system is by far the best; men live
-happier and more contentedly under it; and it certainly does
-produce a much more genial and social intercourse among
-all classes, that men are dependent for their dignity on something
-else than their wine merchant and their pastry-cook.
-Still, yours is not the condition of progress; your people live
-content, perhaps happy, in their fixed position; but every
-man of ours, who is working for his daily dignity, as the
-Captain calls it, is, in a very unpleasant and uncomfortable
-manner, pressing onward and improving his own condition.
-Now, that nation in which every man is continually excited
-to improve his condition, is nationally progressive; that, in
-which every man is content in his own place, is nationally
-stationary. I do not say which is the best principle, only,
-there is something to be said on the other side. One thing
-is certain, our principle is not the same as yours; and it is
-excusable, when we do borrow from the continent, if we
-make a generous blunder in a science which we do not
-understand, and in the largeness of our heart, give medals to
-runaway Belgians, without remembering that the honour of
-the medal lies not in the silver, but in the action which the
-silver commemorates, and that, in truth, what we have given
-to the cowards who ran, we must have filched from the
-brave fellows who had earned for that medal its value.”</p>
-
-<p>“So far, at all events, you are right,” said Birger, “that
-your nation does not understand the science of decorations
-any more than ours. You helped to spoil your own
-Waterloo medal much more than ever the Belgians spoiled
-it, and that not altogether from your largeness of heart. If
-I had been a pink-faced ensign of that day, I should have
-been ashamed to wear my medal in the presence of a Peninsular
-veteran, who had done five hundred times as much as
-I. It was a better feeling than that of being ranked with
-the Belgians that made your people shy of their Waterloo
-medals. And now that you begin to distribute your decorations,
-you do not know how to do it: first of all you give it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-for any little trumpery affair, like sticking those Chinese
-pigs, and then you give it to all who have seen the smoke of
-the gunpowder.”</p>
-
-<p>“We presume that every one present does his duty, and
-that none can do more,” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“A very pretty poetical fiction,” said Birger, “pity that it
-is a fiction. However, one thing is certain—that will never
-be prized that is shared by all alike; you see that at once
-in our case—it is equally true in you own.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then the Stockholm steamer, <i>Daniel Thunberg</i>, hove
-in sight, with her light blue pennant of smoke, so unlike the
-black volumes that roll from the chimneys of coal-burning
-Englishmen.</p>
-
-<p>“They have got something on board for us,” said Moodie;
-“that calico concern on her foremast is their best Swedish
-imitation of our English jack, and they always hoist it
-whenever they have got a letter or parcel for me. There
-goes a gun; those rascals are always glad of any opportunity
-for making a bang. Hallo, there! Nils!” continued he, in
-Swedish, to the master of his yacht, who had gone to sleep
-against the heel of the bowsprit, with his pipe in his
-mouth; “answer that signal, and send a boat on board the
-steamer.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke as if he had a frigate’s crew at his command.
-Nils started up, and as he happened, at that moment at
-least, to be the captain and the whole ship’s company in his
-own person, he proceeded to obey both orders personally—in
-a few minutes was alongside the gay little craft, and returned
-with a letter, the writer of which, to judge from the superscription
-he placed upon it, must have considered Moodie a
-very great man indeed, so many titles did he prefix to
-his name—High-born and Illustrious were the very least of
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Moodie, a little afraid of the Captain’s satire—though the
-direction, after all, was nothing more than the ordinary
-Swedish form in which one gentleman addresses another,
-and quite as appropriate as our much mis-used esquire,—crumpled
-up the envelope in great haste.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” said he, flourishing the letter over his head,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-“this is the very thing for us—you are in high luck; look
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” said the Captain, for the letter, which was in
-Swedish and written in the Swedish character, might as
-well have been Cyrillic or Uncial, for anything he could
-make out of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there is to be a skal in Wermeland, next Tuesday;
-a grand bear hunt, in which they drive twenty or thirty
-miles of country; this letter is from the very man I have
-been speaking of—Bjornstjerna, the Ofwer Jagmästere, and
-my own particular friend. Some half dozen respectable
-farmers have made oath to him that they have been annoyed
-by bears, and he tells me he has written to the præster of
-the neighbourhood, to give notice from their pulpits, and to
-turn out the whole country. That is the legal form on such
-occasions, and there is a heavy fine for any man who does
-not obey it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” said the Captain, in his turn, “then we shall
-kill a bear at last.”</p>
-
-<p>“That you will,” said Moodie; “Bjornstjerna knows his
-business as well as any man in Sweden; there are people
-who fancy his patronymic a nick-name<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> of his own earning.
-He would not be turning out the country for nothing, you
-may depend on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is this to take place?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, in Upper Wermeland, as I told you, near Lysvic,
-not very far from the banks of the Klara, a river I know
-well, as full of grayling as it can hold; not that that has
-much to do with bear hunting. It is not above a hundred
-and fifty or two hundred miles from this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite in the neighbourhood,” said the Captain, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“O that is nothing, we never mind a hundred miles or so.
-If we get anything like a breeze, we will run across the
-Wener, in the yacht, we can send the carioles on by land
-to Amal, and we will pick up a waggon, or something, for
-the men, at there or at Carlstad; and then you will see how<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-we will rattle up the country. We must send a boat, though,
-to Wenersborg this very night, and tell the post-master to
-make out a forbud for us; it will not do to trust to chance
-on such an occasion as this, for we shall have to collect a
-good many horses at every station. Let me see, we shall
-want one for each of us, and three for the waggon, that will
-make seven; and I suppose they will charge half a horse
-more besides the forbud; for we shall have four men with us,
-and we must take things enough to make us comfortable, for
-I dare say we shall have a week in the forest, one way or the
-other. Come, finish that bottle, and we will go in and have
-some coffee; it is not so well to stay out here at night
-when that blue mist is hanging on the swamp; besides,
-these rascally musquitoes are anything but pleasant.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">WENERN.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Night has covered her beauty. Her hair sighs on Ocean’s wind.
-Her robe streams in dusky wreaths. She is like the fair Spirit of heaven
-in the midst of its shadowy mist.</p>
-
-<p>“From the wood-skirted waters of Lago ascend at times grey-bosomed
-mists, when the gates of the West are closed on the Sun’s eagle eye.
-Wide over Lara’s stream is poured the vapour dark and deep. The
-Moon, like a dim shield, is swimming through its folds.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Spread the sail,’ said the King; ‘seize the winds as they pour
-from Lena.’ We rose on the wave with songs,—we rushed with joy
-through the foam of the deep.”</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Ossian.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“So peaceful, calm, and leaden grey,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath our keel the waters lay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Parting around the vessel’s prow</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With rippling murmur, sweet and low,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And rising slowly from the lake,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The wreathing mists asunder break—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Revealing all concealed before</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of forest, hill, and rocky shore.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Anon.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was no great stir next morning at Gäddebäck, considering
-the importance of the expedition; as for preparations,
-no more preparation was necessary than is necessary for a
-detachment of soldiers that has received its route; the guns
-and ammunition were paraded, and the knapsacks were
-packed in light marching order; the carioles had been
-despatched over night to the post-master at Wenersborg,
-under the charge of Piersen and one of Moodie’s people,
-with directions to send on a forebud, and then to proceed
-by land to Amal; and the cutter having received her freight,
-had, on the preceding evening, hauled out into the stream in
-order to be taken in tow by the night steamer, for Wenersborg.
-Moodie had determined that there was no need of disappointing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-himself or his friends of their day’s fishing at the upper
-rapids, seeing that they might easily be taken on the road.
-He proposed, therefore, joining the cutter at Wenersborg in
-the evening, and making the passage to Amal by night, observing,
-that by getting what sleep they could while at sea, they
-would lose no time, and might start immediately on landing.</p>
-
-<p>“This is rather close shaving, Moodie,” said the Captain, as
-they sat at breakfast the following morning,—rather an early
-breakfast, for Moodie meant to give the fishing-ground what
-he called a full due.—“You have made the evening breeze
-an element in your calculation; we shall be in a mess if this
-night is anything like the last.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, but it will not be, ‘you see ghosts by daylight,’ as our
-people say; there is always a breeze on the open lake, it is
-not like this valley; besides, if it does fail us, we have only
-to post; there is a regular posting track across the lake,
-with stations on the islands, where they keep boats in the
-summer and horses in the winter. If the breeze does fail
-us, which I tell you it will not, we have only to send the
-dingy to Leckö or Lurön, whichever we may be nearest to,
-and get boats enough to carry us all.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson made no opposition, though in his heart he
-agreed with the Captain that the experiment might very
-possibly involve the loss of their ultimate object, the skål;
-the salmo ferox was, however, a new fish to him, and notwithstanding
-all he had said in its disparagement on the
-banks of the Torjedahl, he would not much have liked to
-lose his chance of landing one. By his advice a light rod
-or two were added to the baggage,—for the rivers north of the
-Wener abound in grayling, though, strange to say, these
-delicate fish are never found south of it.</p>
-
-<p>The four-oared gig being the fastest pulling boat, carried
-them up the stream to the point at which the great canal
-leaves the river; beyond this it ceases to be navigable on
-account of its rocks and rapids, but for this very reason
-becomes much more valuable as a fishing preserve. At these
-rapids, which was the crack station of all Moodie’s fishery,
-was a sort of out-post, where he had a keeper’s house, with a
-separate establishment of boats. The Captain turned up his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-eyes a little at hearing of this fresh proof of his friend’s magnificence;
-but it sounds grander to English ears than it is in
-fact, for Moodie made money by his fishery, and of course
-required men, not only to preserve it, but to catch the fish
-while he was absent on any roving expedition like the present;
-and as for boats, where planks may be had at the saw-mills
-for almost nothing, and where every man is more or
-less of a carpenter, rough fishing punts are articles of very
-small expense indeed, and are generally built at home.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that the great lake, Wener, even now the largest
-in Europe, was once much larger; that it once extended to the
-falls of Trollhättan; that all the low-lying and marshy shores,
-which are now the delight of ducks and the glory of musquitoes,
-were once under water, but that the stream having
-gradually worked its way over the falls, like a saw, continually
-wearing away the rock from which it fell, and
-carrying it off, portion by portion, opened a deeper passage,
-and that the lake has gradually receded to its present
-limits.</p>
-
-<p>This of course, happened in Preadamite times, or, to use
-the language of the allegorical history of creation supplied by
-the prose Edda—in those days, “before the sons of Bör had
-slain the giant Ymir.”<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> And certainly the formation of the
-valley afforded some grounds for the conjecture: two low
-lines of hills, steep and cliff-shaped, suggested readily the
-idea of Preadamite banks; while the flat bottom of the
-valley, in many places irrecoverably marshy, in all liable to
-be covered with water whenever the river is in flood, looked
-quite as much like the bottom of a drained pond as it did
-like the real land. It was not without its beauty, either;
-if ever it had been a lake, it must have been a lake studded
-with low islands, and these, as well as much of the marshy
-ground, were covered with forests, hiding, by the luxuriance
-of their growth, the numerous cultivated spots which intervened.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very different description of scenery to that of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-Norway certainly, for the hills of Hunneberg and Halleberg,
-which bound the view to the east and contain some very
-valuable limestone quarries, are, what limestone soil invariably
-is, tame and monotonous. They, however, abound in oak—a
-very rare tree in the north,—and also in deer and roe-bucks,
-which are not common either, but this being a royal forest,
-they were probably better looked after than they are in private
-lands, and Moodie, who, practically, had the rangership, as
-he was the only man allowed to shoot there, was scrupulously
-particular, and would as soon have thought of shooting a
-keeper as of shooting a deer.</p>
-
-<p>The rapids are formed by a ridge of rock which crosses
-the river, over which it pours down one or two steps leaving
-deep broad pools of eddying water between them. The
-whole of this part of the river is overhung with trees of the
-largest growth which Sweden affords, and is as beautiful a spot
-as any they had seen. As the rocks are extremely rugged,
-the river is of very unequal breadth,—the banks, at one place,
-approaching so near to each other, that an Alpine bridge is
-formed of pine trees thrown across it. Four of the longest
-firs that could be found, with their stems resting on the
-rocks, are tied together in pairs, at their upper ends, by
-means of two iron bands, forming a broad Gothic arch. This
-is the skeleton of the bridge; the horizontal timbers, which
-were laid for the footways, passed them at about a third of
-their height, like the cross-bar of the letter A, and formed
-ties to steady them as well as to support the rest of the
-structure. It was an exceedingly picturesque affair, and told
-well for the ingenuity of the architect.</p>
-
-<p>This bridge was their first stage. The keeper’s hut commanded
-the pools both above and below the bridge, and had
-establishments of boats for both divisions of the river—for
-there was considerable difficulty in getting a boat from one
-to the other.</p>
-
-<p>The salmo ferox, when small, is often caught with a fly,
-and may be so caught when fourteen or sixteen pounds
-weight, but this is not a very common occurrence. The
-usual way of fishing for him is with a large litch of six pairs
-of hooks and a lip-hook, very heavily loaded and baited with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-a bleak or a gwinead, of which there are plenty in the river.
-A boat is absolutely necessary. The fisherman stands in the
-stern, and runs out some thirty yards of the line heavily
-loaded, with a short stiff pike-rod; the boat must be kept
-continually traversing the stream, beginning at the head of
-it and quartering it down to the foot, while the troller at the
-stern, with the point of his rod low, keeps his bait spinning
-in jerks,—the object being to imitate a sick or wounded fish.
-At each turn of the boat, the line must be gathered in by
-the hand, or the edges of the rapids, which indeed are the
-most likely parts, would be untried; four out of five fish are
-caught while the boats are in the act of turning.</p>
-
-<p>This rather monotonous description of sport had gone on
-for some time, when the Parson felt the rod nearly taken
-out of his hand by the rush of a fish. The battle was furious,
-for the salmo ferox does not belie his name, but it was a mere
-trial of tackle, without any opportunity for the exercise of
-skill,—carried on, too, at the bottom of water twenty feet
-deep; and when, after a quarter of an hour’s boring against
-the bottom, the Parson succeeded in bringing to the gaff his
-huge capture, he declared he had done enough for fame,
-struck up his rod, sought the lower pool in pursuit of gös
-and id, with which, as well as with trout, it was said to
-abound.</p>
-
-<p>The Swedes say that gös is a fish very difficult to catch;
-to an Englishman, by far the most difficult part of the business
-is to name the fish when he has caught it. Certainly, no
-one is qualified to do so who speaks of Göthe under his
-English appellations of Goth and Goaty: the dotted o affects
-and softens the preceding consonant as well as the vowel, and
-the name of this fish is pronounced much as if it was spelt
-“yeus,” in French letters. The difficulty experienced by
-the Swedes in catching it, arises from the fact of its requiring
-fine tackle in the clear waters which it frequents, instead of
-the coarse gimp or wire which is sufficient for the rash and
-headlong pike; in all other respects the habits of the two
-fish are very similar, except that the gös is a much smaller
-fish, and very much more prized. For him, the Parson was
-content with setting lay-lines with live baits and considerable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-length of fine gut, while he directed his personal attention
-to the id.</p>
-
-<p>In every particular, except one, the id is a chub; his
-haunts, his habits, his food are those of a chub; in looks, too—though
-certainly not altogether so clumsy, and, so to speak,
-chubby,—he reminds one forcibly of the chub family. He is
-something like the half-polished parvenu in his transition
-state of existence, just admitted into aristocratic circles, but,
-as yet, unable entirely to lay aside his brandy-and-water
-habits and feelings. In every particular, <i>except one</i>, the id
-is a chub, and that is, that he is by far the best eating of
-any of the cyprinæ; in fact, so far as the pot goes, he is a
-very respectable prize. The Parson, who, in his youth, had
-caught many a chub, and was fully aware of the zoological
-affinity of the two fish, was by no means at a loss for subjects
-of mutual interest between himself and his new introduction;
-a fly, resembling, as near as it could be made on the spur of
-the moment, a humble-bee, was tied on his finest gut, and the
-boat, anchored in the stern, was by slow degrees permitted
-to descend within long-cast of a still, over-shaded pool: the
-fly, thrown from as great a distance as he could command,
-fell as lightly as so clumsy a combination of fur and feathers
-could be expected to fall, and was moved very slowly and
-regularly over, or rather through, the water; for, as it may
-be supposed, the length of line caused it to sink a few inches
-below the surface.</p>
-
-<p>His science was not unrewarded, for, before long, a sluggish
-roll in the waters, and a strong, obstinate, pig-headed
-pull at his line announced a capture. This was quickly followed
-by others, for id, though gregarious, are quite as indifferent
-to the troubles of their neighbours as if they were
-human creatures; provided you do not show yourself and
-alarm them for their individual safety, their friend may kick
-and struggle before their eyes, without causing a single wag
-of their selfish tails.</p>
-
-<p>It was not bad fun upon the whole, for the id, though not
-possessing a tithe of the life and activity of the salmo genus,
-pull like donkeys, and might have lasted some time longer,
-for the Parson was getting interested, when Jacob was seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-making his leisurely way along the bank, for the purpose of
-announcing “mid-dag’s mad.” The ground was sufficiently
-tangled, and Torkel, who was managing the boat and landing
-the fish, was extremely amused at the air of vexation and
-annoyance with which he dipped under a low-spreading fir
-branch, or put aside a too affectionate bramble. About a
-hundred yards above the id pool was a little beach of the
-whitest and smoothest sand that ever fairy danced upon.
-From the point where the boat was anchored, it was evident
-that this was caused by a little dull-looking stream, which
-had brought the white particles from the hills during the
-floods; but which then, very suspiciously, did <i>not</i> run into the
-river, but lost itself behind the white beach. All this was
-lost upon Jacob, who was in the wood, and who, not liking
-the tangled ground, made a valorous jump on to the white
-beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Der var et spring af en Leerovn!” shouted Torkel, quoting
-a Danish proverb (“there was a jump for a tile-stove!”)—as
-poor Jacob flopped through the thin crust of white sand into
-a bed of black, tenacious clay, in which he seemed planted up
-to his middle, with his long flowing coat-tails spread out
-upon the unbroken sand.</p>
-
-<p>The more he screamed with fear, the more they screamed
-with laughter. There was not the slightest danger, for he
-had evidently got as far as he meant to sink; but as for
-getting out without a purchase from something solid, the
-thing was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>“We must have another fish,” said Torkel, to make up the
-dozen; “and it will be impossible to get Jacob out without
-spoiling the pool by pulling the boat across it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson coolly took another cast,—Jacob screamed
-louder than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Bother that fellow,—I have missed him,” said the Parson,
-meaning not Jacob, but the fish.</p>
-
-<p>“Try again,” said Torkel, coolly, “you will get him next
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>A despairing shriek from Jacob.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! that is in him!—this is the biggest we have had
-yet! mind what you are about with the landing-net,—do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-not let him run under the boat! Well, really, we must
-pull out poor Jacob, or he will poison us with bad cookery,
-out of revenge. Up killick! or whatever you call it in your
-language, and shove across to him.”</p>
-
-<p>But when they landed, they seemed as far from the
-rescue as ever. Jacob had jumped vigorously, and the
-bank from which he had jumped was high. To reach him
-was impossible, and to get out on the sand would be to
-share his fate. While Torkel was trying to slip down the
-bank, the Parson took out his knife to cut a branch.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop! stop!” said Torkel, who, unsuccessful, had scrambled
-back. “What are you doing?—we shall all suffer for
-this; it is elder that you are cutting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, if we take it without asking for it, the elves will
-have power over us for nine days, and the chances are, some
-of us will die suddenly.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson was inclined to laugh, but he did not, and
-turned to look for a branch of less dangerous wood; but
-Torkel, placing himself before it, taking off his hat and
-bowing three times to the tree, said, “Elf-mother! elf-mother!
-let me have some of thy elder, and I will give thee
-something of mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The elf-mother certainly did not refuse, and Torkel took
-silence for consent, which it proverbially is, and cut away at
-the bough, which, stripped of its side branches, formed a
-communication with the imbedded Jacob, who, black without
-and sulky within, and, as Torkel said, looking more like
-a pig than ever, was dragged floundering to the shore,—not
-at all the more pleased when Torkel reminded him that, as
-they were in light marching order, he would have to wash
-his shirt, trousers, and stockings, and to sit without them
-till they were dry.</p>
-
-<p>When the party met at their mid-dag’s mad, which was not
-till long after the Swedish time for mid-dag’s mad had passed,
-there was a very respectable show of fish—not only enough
-for the cutter, but also a very handsome basket for the
-Gotheborg steamer that evening, which was duly packed
-and forwarded in a light cart to the locks; while the party,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-shouldering their weapons and that part of their prize which
-they had reserved for themselves, took the forest path to
-Wenersborg. Before sundown they were safely established
-on board the little cutter, who immediately tripped her
-anchor, hoisted jib and foresail—for the mainsail was already
-set,—payed off slowly before it, and stood out into the lake,
-which was glowingly reflecting the red beams of the setting
-sun, but still faintly rippling under the easterly breeze.</p>
-
-<p>“Did not I tell you so?” said Moodie, who, seating himself
-with his legs dangling down the well, had assumed the
-tiller just as a gentleman drives his own carriage; “we
-have had a capital day’s sport, and got a glorious breakfast
-for to-morrow. I have turned a few bancos, which will help
-to pay for the trip, and here we are, resting from our labours
-while the wind is carrying us on our journey.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope it will stand,” said old Nils, “but it is easterly,
-you see, and the sun is setting; the wind does not like to
-blow in the face of the sun.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to the—Strömkarl—your old croaker, and check the
-main-sheet; you have got the sail a fathom too flat. The
-wind is drawing round to the southward, as any one may
-see; ease off the jib and foresail too, while you are
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>The fact was, that the wind had stood steady enough, but
-Moodie, in his anxiety, had let her fall off a couple of points,
-which Nils saw, but was too sulky to mention, and which the
-rest of the party did not see, because, as strangers, they were
-ignorant of the true course, and there was no binnacle, or,
-so far as they could see, compass of any kind, besides those
-they had in their pockets.</p>
-
-<p>The cutter was half-decked, with a tidy little cabin forward,
-and a couple of bunks for sleeping—one on each side of
-the well; in these the party very shortly disposed themselves,
-for they knew that a pretty stiff day’s work lay before
-them; and having established the best defence in their
-power against the musquitoes, slept as campaigners sleep, in
-right down earnest.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo, Nils! where are we?” asked a sleepy voice next
-morning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Captain, who had curled himself into the opposite
-bunk, was not quite certain whether it was not still a part
-of his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>The next call was quite enough to settle this fact.</p>
-
-<p>“Nils!” roared Moodie, “why Nils! confound the fellow,
-I believe he is asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>And so, sure enough, he was, with his head on the rudder-case,
-as fast as any one of the seven sleepers of Ephesus; and
-poor Nils was by no means singular in this respect—passengers
-were asleep, attendants were asleep, dogs were asleep,
-Jacob was asleep and snoring, the winds were asleep, everything
-was asleep but the sails, and they were waving to and fro
-with the knittles pattering against their surfaces, and shaking
-the night dew on the deck like rain, while over all, like an
-eider-down coverlet, had sunk on them all a steaming white
-fog, so thick that the sharpest eyes could not see the little
-burgee at the mast-head, or the out-haul block at the bowsprit
-end. It was not dark, it never is in summer, but no one
-could tell whether the sun had risen or not.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a go!” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith! I wish it was a go,” said the Parson, putting
-his head out of the cabin door; “it seems to me just the
-reverse.”</p>
-
-<p>Moodie, whose clever plan seemed to promise anything but
-success, was as sulky as Nils had been overnight, and rated
-the poor fellow soundly for going to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Nils represented, not altogether unreasonably, that the
-wind had gone to sleep first.</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be done now?” said Moodie, breaking off a
-discontented and reflective whistle, the last notes of which
-had been singularly out of tune; “I cannot send this sleepy
-old fool to Leckö, or anywhere else, for I do not know where
-Leckö is, or where we are, or anything about it in this fog;
-who was to have thought of this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said the Parson—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The wisest schemes of mice and men</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Gang aft ajee;”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I suppose this fog will clear off some time or other, and
-we are well provisioned, at all events.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Moodie, “but we have sent on a forebud,
-and we shall have to pay for the horses all the way
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is a bad job,” said the Parson, “as far as it
-goes; but the worst that can come of it is to pay double,—once
-for the failure, and once for the real journey.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that is not the worst, by any means; we have not
-only lost our money, but our forebud; we shall be kept
-waiting for an hour or two at every station, and shall most
-probably arrive when the fun is over. At such out-of-the-way
-places there is not a chance of holl-horses, that is to say,
-horses which the post-master keeps himself on speculation,
-and we shall have to send to the farms, whose turn it is to
-furnish them. I have been kept waiting that way for four
-hours at a single station.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Nils, who had been up to the mast-head to see if he
-could make out anything (for these fogs very often lie on
-the surface, not a dozen feet thick, looking from above like
-so much cotton wool in a box, while the sun is shining
-brightly above them), slid down the back-stay, and declared
-he could feel a light air aloft on the starboard beam; “his
-cheek felt quite cold,” he said, “though the heavy main-sail,
-dripping with dew, did not acknowledge the breeze
-at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“How is her head; why, confound you, you have forgotten
-the compass” (not at all an unlikely piece of forgetfulness in
-a river yacht.) This was soon remedied, for the Parson put
-his own little pocket affair on the deck, which, as it was a
-calm, did quite as well as her own.</p>
-
-<p>She was looking a little southward of east, having probably
-turned round and round a dozen times during the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>“That would do, the wind was southerly then; but where
-were they?”</p>
-
-<p>The day was now getting bright, and the fog was looking
-like a silver veil; the tiresome pattering of the knittles had
-ceased, or was renewed only at intervals; she was evidently
-gliding through the water,—but which way were they
-to steer? Amal certainly must be somewhere to the northward,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-but within six or eight points it was impossible to tell
-where after such a sleepy watch as had been kept during
-the past night. Reluctantly, Moodie brought her to the
-wind, and hauled his foresheet to windward.</p>
-
-<p>But the breeze increased, and the fog began to lift now
-and then; it could be seen under, as it were, and though just
-as thick about the mast-head as ever, a hundred yards or so
-of the surface could be seen plainly on either side.</p>
-
-<p>Nils rubbed his hands at this infallible sign of the rising
-of the fog, and Moodie, somewhat easier in his mind, ordered
-coffee.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s land on the port-beam,” said the Captain,
-during one of these lifts. “I am sure I saw land, whatever
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“There ought to be no land there,” said Moodie; for, lying
-as she did now, close to the wind, she had brought the east,
-that is to say, the great expanse of the lake, to her port-side,
-and was looking exactly on the opposite direction to her
-course; “get a cast of the lead, and keep a bright look out
-for rocks.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then the curtain of the fog rose in earnest, and disclosed
-a cluster of rocks and islets, among which they had
-got themselves completely entangled. “Why, what is this?—it
-is! no, it can’t be! yet it is—”</p>
-
-<p>“It is Lurön,” said Nils.</p>
-
-<p>“Lurön,” said Moodie, “why, that is miles to the eastward
-of our course! Where have you been steering to during
-the night?”</p>
-
-<p>“You told me to ‘keep her as she goes,’ and so I did.”</p>
-
-<p>And so he had; the fault lay with Moodie himself, who
-from the first starting had steered two points to the eastward
-of his course; the fog and the current—for the Wener is big
-enough for current—had done the rest.</p>
-
-<p>It did not however signify, the breeze blew merrily and
-promised to stand; the fog now lay in light fleecy clouds far
-above their heads; the sun, not far from the horizon, began
-to smile upon them and to chase away the dangers of the
-night, and with them the ill-humour they had engendered;
-the fore-sheet was let draw, and as she gathered way she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-tacked, fell off on the port-tack, and with a jolly breeze on
-her quarter, buzzed away through the water to the northwest.</p>
-
-<p>Soon a line of trees appeared on the horizon, as if they
-were dancing in the air, or floating in the water; then the
-trunks began to form and unite with something below them;
-then the line of land, real firm land, began to manifest itself;
-then red, and white, and black, and brown, and striped cottages
-began to show out; and before ten the anchor was
-let go before the little town of Amal.</p>
-
-<p>The horses were still awaiting them, for the allotted three
-hours, during which they are bound to remain, had not yet
-elapsed and they escaped on payment of the regulated fine
-for being after time. The men were sent on immediately in
-the waggon which Moodie had spoken of, and which he had
-written to his friend the farmer to borrow, sending his note
-by the forebud. In half-an-hour the carioles were harnessed,
-and as they plunged into the forests at the back of Amal,
-the last thing they saw was the pretty cutter, close hauled,
-lying as near to her course to Wenersborg as the wind would
-let her look.</p>
-
-<p>The trees of Western Carlstadtlan, which they were now
-traversing, are said to be the finest in Sweden; this is due
-partly to the depth and goodness of the soil—a circumstance
-which will eventually secure their destruction, by offering a
-temptation to convert the fjeld into arable land; that they
-stood, even yet, was principally on account of the absence of
-any great rivers, which afford the only means of conveying
-timber to the coast. The land is quite as good on the banks
-of the Klara and Swedish Glommen, the latter of which runs
-into the lake a few miles eastward of Amal, but there is a
-sensible difference in the growth of the timber. There was
-fir, no doubt, in plenty—there is no Swedish forest without
-fir,—but there were also huge beech trees, and a sprinkling
-of not very happy-looking oak, that put one in mind of the
-English in India: they lived in the country, but they did
-not enjoy it.</p>
-
-<p>The whole country looked like an enormous park—rather
-too thickly planted, to be sure,—one kept looking, at every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-turn of the road, for the mansion; and the road, too, though
-not one of very great traffic, was very good, winding along
-with a great border of short turf on each side, comparatively
-level on the whole, but occasionally interrupted by a descent
-so sharp that it seemed as if the carioles were going to cut
-a summerset over the horses’ ears,—more particularly as
-the horses invariably chose those portions of the road for
-going as hard as they could lay legs to ground, a peculiarity
-sufficiently trying to the nerves; and as those portions of the
-road were invariably cut to pieces by the rush of the water,
-and were full of rocks besides, sufficiently trying to the
-bodily feelings.</p>
-
-<p>On the opposite sides of these ravines, the horses would
-creep at the rate of about a mile an hour, the passenger being
-so absolutely expected to walk up them, that many of the
-horses came to a dead halt at the bottom, and refused to
-proceed at all till disencumbered of their weight.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not without reason,” said Birger, as they sat on the
-roadside, at the top of one of these descents, watching the
-slow progress of their carioles, under the care of their respective
-schutzebonder—little boys or girls, as the case may be,
-who sit on the foot-boards, and bring the horses back after
-they have done their stage;—“it is not without reason that
-the ancient Swedes have invented the legend that in certain
-places the elves and the trees are identical; that these forest
-elves are intensely patriotic, and that in times of invasion they
-assemble their bands and fight by the side of their human
-countrymen, in defence of their common country. Many of the
-trees in Carlstadtlan, as well as in other places, are trees only
-by day, but are armed soldiers by night. Of course the idea
-is that the forests fight for the country in case of invasion,
-and add to the numbers of its defenders; and so they do.
-Russia might pour her thousands upon us, and sweep us off
-the face of the earth, by mere force of numbers, in an open
-field; but how would she ever force her passage through a
-forest like this, filled with a few thousand riflemen? The
-trees would fight for us even by day; but by night our numbers,
-counting the elves, would be irresistible.</p>
-
-<p>“The slight variety that there is in the legend in Denmark,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-bears this out there also; where the deep Sound and fjords
-intersect the kingdom, the stony promontories are its best
-defence, and the elf kings are called Klintekonger, or Promontory
-Kings. There are several stories about their
-parading their elf soldiers, with fife and drum, on the breaking
-out of a war, and driving over the sea, with snorting
-horses, in clouds and blackness, from one promontory to
-another. The elf king of Bornholm will not allow any
-earthly prince to sleep more than three nights within his
-dominions, nor will King Tolv permit any king besides himself
-to pass the bridge of Skjelskör. This is all part of the
-same allegory; the elves are the spirits of the woods, and
-the Grims of the cataracts, and the Haaf manner of the sea,
-and the Strömkarls of the rivers. They all bear the same character;
-they are capricious as the elements are over which
-they preside, and often injure most those who are most
-accustomed to them, but in case of an invasion become rivers,
-and lakes, and fjords, and forests, and unite to repel the invader.
-Bother that little schutzebonde of mine; I wish she
-were a boy, that I might whip her instead of the horse;”
-and Birger strode down the hill to infuse fresh spirit into
-the post-horse and post-girl.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they travelled on, at the rate of five or six miles an
-hour on the average, bowling along through the forest, but
-interrupted, whenever they came near cultivation, by timber
-fences and swing gates across the road, living mostly on their
-own provisions, with the help of a little gröd which they got
-from the post-houses, sleeping when they would in the haylofts,
-sometimes in the open air, and occasionally on peculiarly
-dirty sheepskins in the post-houses. Oh those sheepskins—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ye gentlemen of England,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Who live at home at ease,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">How little do you think upon</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The dangers of the fleas!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MEET.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A various scene the clansmen made—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some sate, some stood, some slowly strayed,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But most, with mantles folded round,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were couched to rest upon the ground—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Scarce to be known by curious eye</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the deep heather where they lie;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But when, advancing through the gloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They saw their chieftain’s eagle plume,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their shout of welcome, shrill and wide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shook the steep mountain’s steady side,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thrice it arose, and lake and fell</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Three times returned the martial yell.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It died upon Rochastle’s plain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And silence claimed her evening reign.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Lady of the Lake.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Evening had already begun to close in, and the dark
-branches of the firs, which for the last five or six miles had
-canopied the road, were beginning to grow darker still, when
-the carioles emerged from the great forest into a green park-like
-glade, studded with feathering clumps of birch and
-spruce; and rattled up to the door of the little inn that stood
-on the borders of it, which was the place appointed for the
-meet.</p>
-
-<p>The inn, which, after all, was little better than a post-house,
-was evidently not large enough to contain a tenth
-part of the crowd collected in front of it; nor did the half
-dozen wooden houses, which formed the village, afford much
-more extensive accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>Few, however, of those there assembled seemed to care
-much about the matter; the evening was warm, the sky was
-clear, and the stars were beginning to twinkle merrily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-through the calm blue sky; the good green wood was shelter
-enough for the hardy peasants and their equally hardy
-landlords, and would have been shelter enough though the
-ground had been white with snow.</p>
-
-<p>Fires were beginning to rise here and there, bringing into
-view the gipsy-like groups collected round them, as they sat,
-stood, or lay at full-length upon the turf—some busied about
-the little tin kettles, in which they were mixing their rye
-gröd, some bringing in fuel, some returning from the inn and
-the temporary stalls that had been established round it for
-the sale of bread, cheese, butter, brandy, and other necessaries;
-though most of the party had brought good store of
-provision in their own bags. Some—and they mostly the
-elders of the parish—were quietly smoking their pipes, and
-discussing the events of former skals, and prophesying good
-or bad of the present one, according as their dispositions
-were sanguine or the reverse; but all were talking, laughing,
-hand-shaking, imparting or listening to little pieces of
-domestic news, or parish scandal—for, in the forest parishes,
-(and in Sweden most parishes are of that character), a skal
-brings together men who have but few other opportunities
-of meeting.</p>
-
-<p>A few old stagers, indeed, were trying to get one good
-night’s sleep, in order to prepare themselves for the fatigues of
-which the morrow was but the beginning, and were stretching
-themselves on the turf, with their feet towards their
-fires; but new arrivals were continually rousing them up, and
-some fresh Calle Jonsen, or Swen Larssen, or Nils Ericsen,
-would be continually dropping in with fresh inquiries, fresh
-news, and fresh greetings.</p>
-
-<p>From the windows of the inn, which were wide open, a
-broad, bright glare of light was streaming across the glade,
-obscured now and then by the shadow of some great head
-and shoulders—for the room was full of people,—but strong
-enough, notwithstanding, to light up the boughs of the old
-lime trees that shaded the porch, glittering among their soft
-green leaves, as if they really were what the Swedes suppose
-them to be, the roosting places of the Spirits of Light.</p>
-
-<p>This was evidently the head quarters of the skal, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-the generals and field officers were holding high council,
-receiving information, arranging plans, and issuing orders;
-and Birger, springing from his cariole and throwing the reins
-of his horse to his schutzebond, or post-boy, and committing,
-with utter recklessness of consequences, the whole department
-of quartermaster-general, and commissary-general
-to boot, into the hands of Jacob, rushed into the room,
-followed by his three friends.</p>
-
-<p>This opportune reinforcement was greeted with shouts of
-welcome: Birger himself was an old friend of the Ofwer Jagmästere,
-and had, before this, signalized himself as a hunter.
-Englishmen are invariably popular both in Norway and Sweden;
-and besides, the value of English rifles, and English sportsmen
-to carry them, was universally acknowledged. Moodie,
-however, was the great prize; he had been now, for four years
-in the country, and had been there quite long enough to be
-known and appreciated as the best shot and the most sagacious
-and inventive leader in the province. With a natural
-turn for the chase in all its varieties, he had thrown himself,
-heart and soul, into the business of bear hunting, had studied
-it theoretically and had worked out his theories practically,
-till he was universally acknowledged to be a fair match for
-the “gentleman in the fur cloak, who has the wisdom of ten
-and the strength of twenty,” as the Swedes periphrastically
-term their great enemy, the bear.</p>
-
-<p>He had remained in the porch for a minute or two, giving
-some directions to his followers, so that the greetings, and
-introductions, and first inquiries had a little subsided when
-he entered; but the moment his well-known green cap was
-seen in the doorway, there arose such a shout of welcome,
-that it made the flitches of bacon and strings of onions
-tremble from the rafters.</p>
-
-<p>“Modige! Modige!”<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> for so they had naturalized his
-name into a word which, in their language, signifies courageous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>The well-known cry was caught up among the parties out
-of doors, and echoed back again from tree to tree, while the
-glare of the camp-fires shewed dark shadows of insane figures,
-waving arms and hats, aye, and handkerchiefs, too, for every
-woman who can possibly slip away from home, turns out on
-a skal.</p>
-
-<p>“Modige! Modige!” again came thundering and screaming
-back in all sorts of voice, old and young, male and female;
-now dying away, then bursting forth, as some distant post
-took it up again.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the Ofwer Jagmästere Bjornstjerna,
-speaking in French, out of compliment to the strangers—for
-this language, though utterly despised in Norway, is pretty
-generally spoken among the Swedish aristocracy; “upon my
-word, the people have decided the matter for us; I wanted
-some one to take charge of the hållet, and was going to offer
-you the command the moment I saw you, but the people seem
-to have taken the matter into their own hands now; you
-cannot possibly refuse, you are elected by acclamation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am delighted to be of any use,” said Moodie,—in
-fact, he did look delighted in good earnest,—“and will do my
-best; but you are aware that I am not very familiar with
-the ground here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind that,” said Bjornstjerna; “we will soon find
-some one to be your quartermaster-general; what we
-want is, a man that the people look up to, who knows his
-business, and is accustomed to command.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many shall I have under me in the hållet?”</p>
-
-<p>“We cannot spare you above five hundred,” said Bjornstjerna;
-“but the ground is easy enough, at least so far
-as the hållet is concerned. See here,” and he produced a
-rough but well-executed military sketch of the ground,
-which he had surveyed and mapped that morning; “this
-plain is the country we mean to drive,—there is about three
-miles of it in length, that is to say,” he added, parenthetically,
-nodding to the Englishmen, “what you would call in your
-country, one or two-and-twenty. On the west, as you see,
-it is bounded by the river which I have marked here in
-blue; this, in its course, expands into these two lakes, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-just by the water-side the country is comparatively open,
-with a few farm houses and hamlets about it; the forest,
-however, closes it all round, getting thicker as you approach
-the mountains. On the east is this range of heights which,
-as luck will have it, I find are scarped by nature into cliffs,
-so that nothing but a bird can get up them—except at these
-passes, which I have marked on the map with a cross.
-These are mostly the dry or half-dry beds of torrents, and by
-the side of almost all of them there is a passage into the
-upper fjeld, practicable for men, and, consequently, for beasts
-also, when they are frightened. At this point, where we
-intend stationing our dref, the range of hills is about six of
-your miles distant from the line of the river, but it gradually
-approaches it; and at this point, where there are some falls
-and rapids, the distance is very trifling—not above a thousand
-eller—somewhere about half an English mile; and,
-besides, there is a spur of rock here which causes the falls
-of the river, and upon this the forest is very thin and open.
-Here I propose placing you with the hållet. You will
-establish yourself on the reverse slope of the spur, so that
-our shot will pass over your heads; you will then only have
-to clear away sufficient of the under-stuff from the front of
-your position to give you a fair shot at anything that
-attempts to cross.</p>
-
-<p>“About a thousand or fifteen hundred eller in front of
-your position, and parallel to it, runs a cow-track to the
-upper säters, which, upon the whole, is pretty open, and
-upon which you may as well set a hundred or two of your
-men, to improve to-morrow into a shooting line. Here we
-shall take our stand after we have driven the country.
-There is a thickish bit between this path and your position;
-the game will not object to enter it, and if they do, we
-ought to get every one of them, for to the left the rock is
-absolutely perpendicular, and on the right the rapids are
-such that nothing can cross them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have no skal-plats?” said Moodie.</p>
-
-<p>“Why this is a skal-plats,” said Bjornstjerna, “rather a
-large one, to be sure; but we shall not run much risk of
-getting our men shot in driving it, because you will be on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-the reverse slope; and, by the way, you must be very particular
-in cautioning all your skalfogdar to keep their men
-from showing themselves on the crest of the hill. I did
-at one time think of making a skal-plats here, on the banks
-of this lower lake, and driving from both ends at the same
-time; but the ground is not favourable; a good deal of it is
-cleared, and every bear will make for the roots of the mountains,
-where the under-stuff is thickest; they cannot get up
-the perpendicular cliffs, to be sure, but we should have them
-creeping up a little way by the branches, and then stealing
-back as soon as the dref has passed the place,—upon the whole,
-though, I think my present plan is the best.”</p>
-
-<p>“I really think it is,” said Moodie, “as far as I can judge
-from seeing it on paper; but you seem to have a pretty large
-country to drive, not less than twenty miles English in
-length. What number do you muster?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not above fifteen hundred or two thousand at the most,”
-said Bjornstjerna, “though I have called out five parishes;
-but look at the place, it seems cut out for a skal,—half-a-dozen
-boats will guard the river, which is navigable in its
-whole length till you come to the rapids which flank your
-position, and not a bear will go near the houses, as you
-know, or face the open ground, if he can possibly help it,—so
-much for our right flank; while for the other, a small
-picket at each of the water-courses, will be quite sufficient to
-guard them till the dref has passed, and then the picket can
-either strengthen the other guards farther on, or reinforce
-our line, or join you at the hållet, according as they are
-wanted. Then, since the cliffs keep approaching the river, in
-proportion as we drive forward so our line will be strengthened
-by the men closing on each other, till, in the end, when the
-beasts begin to break out, we shall be able to send you a reinforcement
-of two or three hundred men, for we shall have
-more than we want.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will do,” said Moodie; “we shall have a glorious
-skal, I see, and I give you great credit for making the most
-of your men.”</p>
-
-<p>“The truth is, I have quite as many men as I want—I
-have never been at a loss for them; what I have been at a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-loss for, hitherto, is officers, for the Indelta has been unexpectedly
-summoned to Stockholm, and with them I have lost
-almost every man who knows how to command.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not wait till they come back?” said Birger; “they
-never keep the Indelta out for more than three weeks, and I
-am sure the ‘Fur-clothed Disturbers’ would wait for you:” (no
-Swede ever mentions the bear’s name, if he can possibly
-help it).</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Bjornstjerna, “but after that the militia is
-to be called out, and if I get my officers I should lose my
-men—aye, and two-thirds of the women, too. How many
-women do you think would turn out, if you took away all
-the men between the ages of twenty and twenty-five? And
-let me tell you that the women, though the law does not
-allow us to press them into the service, are just as useful as
-the men,—and in the dref, where all you want is to drive
-the game forward, a great deal more so, for they talk twice
-as much, and their screams, and squalls, and laughter, are
-heard as far again as the men’s shouts. O, by the Thousand!
-I had rather lose my men than my women. But you gentlemen
-are a perfect Godsend; I shall do very well for officers
-now. Herr Modige is kind enough to take the hållet,
-and, whether you like it or no, Master Lieutenant, you
-will have the charge of that skal-arm which furnishes the
-pickets.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I suppose I must obey my superior officer;
-I wish they treated us Lieutenants of the Guards as
-well as they do those of England, and then I should be
-Captain as well as you—commanding you, perhaps, if I happened
-to be senior.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you, my boy? I would have you to know that
-I rank a Colonel now,—I write ‘Hof’ before my name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my soul, old fellow, I congratulate you; I do
-not know any one who deserves it better.”</p>
-
-<p>“No more do I,” said Bjornstjerna, “and I must say
-that it is not often that the Förste Hof Jagmästere shows
-such a specimen of discrimination. However, to business.
-Along the left flank of the dref, you will see that in the
-course of our beat there are some fifteen or twenty places<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-where game can escape by climbing up the water courses.
-At each of these you will post a picket, strong or weak,
-according to the nature of the ground. Herr Länsman, can
-you furnish the Lieutenant with a man who knows the
-country?”</p>
-
-<p>The Länsman, or tax-gatherer, who in these remote districts
-acts as police officer, and is, in fact, the sole representative
-of majesty, offered his own services in that capacity.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” said the Ofwer Jagmästere, “then you will
-point out the particulars; but, to help you, I have marked all
-the more practicable passages with red crosses. Here, however,
-is your principal danger—in fact, it is that which made me
-hesitate about establishing the hållet where it is. You see
-where this cow-path leads to the hills—the path, I mean,
-which I have just pointed out to Herr Modige as the place
-where I wish him to arrange the shooting line; carry your
-eye onward to where it ascends the hills; that is an easy
-pass, such as you can ride up, and it is so close to the hållet
-that any beast that turns at the line, would naturally dash
-at the opening. Here you must post a very strong force.”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot do better than put my English friends there,”
-said Birger, who saw at a glance that this was the very
-crack post of the whole line; “I will venture to say that
-their rifles will not allow anything to pass alive through that
-opening, from an elk to a rabbit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, not a word about elks,” said Bjornstjerna;
-“neither they nor stags must be touched—the new law is
-very strict about that.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very difficult to tell one beast from another, in the
-thick juniper,” said Birger; “I never could myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The Ofwer Jagmästere laughed, but put on an official frown.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know, Birger,” said the Parson, “I should like
-to be your aide-de-camp better than to hold any definite
-post; I could carry your orders, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“And deliver them in English or French,” said Birger;
-“I shall have a very effective aide-de-camp indeed. However,
-if you like it, I will give you the post, and I think you
-are right; you will see more in that way than in any other,
-and you can reinforce the post of danger whenever you are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-tired. Indeed, you may as well consider it your home
-during the skal. Would the Captain, then, take charge of
-that point?”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain was quite willing, and promised to give a
-good account of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Birger, “I shall not want Piersen to-morrow,
-so you may have him, and your own man Tom, and
-Jacob for cook. The Parson will probably take Torkel, but
-I dare say the Länsman can find you an intelligent Swede,
-who knows the ground and can understand a few words of
-English, and three or four fellows for sentries; that will be
-quite enough for you, for the Parson and Torkel will join you,
-and be under your orders before there is anything serious.”</p>
-
-<p>Here the Ofwer Jagmästere spoke a few words in Swedish to
-Birger, who laughed and replied—“No, no, certainly not; I
-am confident he would consider it an honour of no small
-magnitude to bear a commission in our service. The fact
-is,” continued he, addressing the Captain, “everything in
-these skaller is arranged according to military discipline,
-and everyone here has military rank. And as you have to
-command a picket, you would not object to hold a temporary
-commission, not quite equal to your own in the English
-service.”</p>
-
-<p>“Object!” said the Captain, “O, no—delighted, of course!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then give me your cap,” said Birger. “Hand me over
-that chalk, Bjornstjerna;” and he wrote upon its peak the
-mystic letters, “S.F.,” being the initials of Skal Fogde;
-and accordingly the Captain took rank as full sergeant in the
-Swedish army.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then,” said the Jagmästere, “as I have arranged
-matters so satisfactorily here, I will start at once for Lysvik,
-where I have ordered the dref to assemble. I shall have
-enough to do to-morrow morning, as you may imagine,—what
-with numbering the men, and appointing their skalfogdar,
-and seeing them at their stations, the commander has
-no easy life of it. As for you, Moodie, I need not tell you
-your business—you know it as well as I do myself,—but
-begin appointing your skalfogdar the first thing to-morrow.
-You need not wait for your full complement of men, they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-will drop in in the course of the day; but as your best men
-are sure to be the first, appoint at once; at twelve precisely
-write the numbers in their hats, as they stand, and we will
-fine all that come later than that. That, Mr. Länsman,
-must be your business; but first of all look out for Lieutenant
-Birger fifty of your best men. That,” turning to Moodie,
-“will leave you nearly five hundred, which is quite as much
-as you can want, as the boats will be manned from my party.
-You, Birger, will march at daybreak, for I must have every
-picket posted by twelve, at which time we move forward
-with the dref. Now, Lönner, my horse, as quick as you
-please, for we have seven quarters to go before we sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>The Ofwer Jagmästere might almost be said to “exit speaking,”
-for he continued his speech into the porch, and the last
-words were lost in the canter of his little hog-maned pony, as
-he floundered off, followed by Lönner and a couple of orderlies,
-together with the Länsmen of the two other parishes, who
-had met him by appointment at Ostmarkand, and now
-formed his personal staff.</p>
-
-<p>Moodie, who was now in command, hesitated for a moment
-whether he should exercise it by clearing the inn for the
-sleeping accommodation of himself and friends, but, on turning
-the matter over in his mind, the interior looked so dirty and
-stuffy, and was withal so redolent of tobacco, brandy, and
-aniseed, while the exterior was so fresh and green, and the
-moon was shining down so softly, and the air was so still, and
-the camp fires so bright and inviting, that, with universal consent
-and approbation, he adjourned the divisional head-quarters
-to a spreading fir-tree, whose branches were illuminated
-by a fire worthy of a General; while the provident
-Jacob, who had tilted the carioles on end, to form a sort of
-screen, spread out before them the contents of his ambulatory
-larder.</p>
-
-<p>This was soon discussed, and then a quiet pipe, a moderate
-horn of brandy and water, a hopeful good night, a roll in
-their cloaks, and before their heads were well on their knapsacks,
-the whole four were in the fairy land of sleep and
-forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SKAL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“When shaws beene sheene and shrads full fayre,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And leaves both large and long,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Tis merry walking in the fayre forest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To hear the small birde’s song.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Robin Hood.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“These mounds I yet may clamber,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And look on the rocks so grey,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On these huge stones on the summits</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I can lie, as oft I lay.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And if it soughs in the forest,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In the beechwood’s native land,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And if the wave roars deeply,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I nod to sea and strand.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O, never my heart forgetteth</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The cairn, the wood, and the strand,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For my heart is only at home in</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The warrior’s fatherland.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Holger Danske-Ingemann.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sun had not yet lighted up the spires of the fir-trees,
-when a buzz of voices and a shuffling of feet broke the slumbers
-of the head-quarters party. Länsman Matthiesen, true
-to his word, had not slept before he had picked out his fifty
-mountaineers, chalking their hats at the back with the letters
-“H.F.,” standing for hög fjeld, or the high forest, indicating
-the position they were to occupy.</p>
-
-<p>While Birger was still rubbing his eyes and kicking up
-Jacob to boil the morning’s coffee, Matthiesen was numbering
-them from 1 to 50, with chalk, in the front of their hats,
-and selecting their skalfogdar, who were marked, as the Captain
-had been on the preceding evening, with the letters “S.F.”
-It is usual to appoint a skalfogde to every ten men; but, as
-these were to be divided into small parties, it was thought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-expedient to appoint one to every five, it being understood
-that, whenever any of these parties were united, the skalfogde
-whose number was lowest should reckon as senior, and
-command the whole.</p>
-
-<p>Fire-arms are not very plentiful in any part of Sweden,
-but Matthiesen had so picked his men, that about one-fifth
-of them had something of the sort,—most of these weapons
-looking very much more formidable to the sportsmen who
-carried them than to the game at which they were pointed.
-The rest were armed with poles, many of which had spikes
-at the end. Here and there was an old sword or a pistol
-that had seen service in the Thirty years’ War; but most of
-the men carried very efficient axes,—an excellent weapon
-against a tree, and not a bad one with a bear in close conflict,
-if such a thing ever does take place in a skal; but the
-fact is, the beasts on these occasions are so completely cowed,
-that they rarely, if ever, show fight.</p>
-
-<p>The men had been searched that morning, and all their
-brandy taken from them, and the rest of their provisions
-examined, to see if there was enough to last out the number
-of days for which they had been summoned. But, before
-starting, Birger served out to each a horn of hot coffee from
-Jacob’s soup kettle, with a double allowance of sugar in it;
-for if there is anything that comes near to brandy in the
-estimation of a Swede, it is sugar, which he eats and drinks
-whenever he can get it, like a very child.</p>
-
-<p>Birger then, having first taken a careful survey of the whole
-plan of the skal, a copy of which Matthiesen had placed in
-his hand, summoned the Parson and Torkel, and, placing
-himself at the head of his party, gave the word to march.
-This was obeyed in a very military fashion,—for every Swede
-is or has been a militia-man, and is very proud of his soldiering,—and
-the party was soon lost among the green shades of
-the forest.</p>
-
-<p>Moodie watched them very composedly, and then quietly
-set himself down to breakfast, not a little to the discomposure
-of the Captain, who, if he had had his will, would have been
-walking sentry on his post with his rifle in his hand, looking
-out fiercely for the bears,—a proceeding which, as the dref<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-or driving party was not to move till noon, and then would
-be twenty miles from the scene of action, evinced, to say
-the least of it, more zeal than discretion.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain need not, however, have disquieted himself,
-for the preparations all that time were going steadily forward.
-Moodie, having selected six of the most experienced hunters
-as Adjutanter or lieutenants, left them to nominate and chalk
-off the fifty Skalfogdar which his party required, and to distribute
-the men into tens in such a way that every part of
-the line should be equally provided with fire-arms. The
-farmer who owned the land had offered his services as personal
-attendant, or what the Jagmästere had called Quartermaster-General;
-and Moodie, quite aware that the authorities
-of the place, who knew the characters and capabilities of the
-men, would set in order these details much better than he
-could, permitted them to manage things their own way, and
-interfered but little with their arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>It was not before ten that everything was put into proper
-order, and the little flags prepared which were to mark out the
-ground; but then Moodie readily enough got his men into
-marching order, and proceeded to take up the position. This
-was distant about four miles (English) from the place of
-meeting; the road to it leading down the glade, and at right
-angles to the direction taken by Birger and his party that
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>If Moodie had seemed apathetic and dilatory while others
-were capable of doing the work, there was no want of energy
-in him when the party had arrived at the ground. His
-orders were given with that distinctness and decision which
-evinces an intimate acquaintance with the business in hand,
-and ensures the prompt obedience of all engaged in it.</p>
-
-<p>Two of the Adjutanter, with three men from each skalfogde’s
-command were detached to establish the line which
-the hållet was finally to occupy, and to mark out with little
-flags of white calico, on which were painted their numbers,
-the post of each subdivision. In the meanwhile the main
-strength of his party were engaged in preparing the mountain
-road which the Jagmästere had pointed out for what is
-termed the shooting line,—that is to say, the line on which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-the dref or driving division was finally to halt, having thus
-enclosed the game in the patch of wood between it and the
-hållet, which is called the skalplats.</p>
-
-<p>The shooting line was formed, by cutting down the junipers
-and lower branches of the trees for about twenty yards
-on each side of a mountain road which ran parallel to the
-front of the position; but the great labour was to remove
-everything that had been cut, for, had such evident traces of
-man’s work been left, not one single head of game would
-have ventured across the clearing. For this reason, also,
-Moodie began his work in this place, leaving the clearing of
-his own line for future operations, in order that he might
-give time for the scent to clear away,—and therefore it is,
-that when the shooting line is once formed, no one is ever
-permitted to cross till the dref arrives, driving the game
-before them.</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar kind of the ground had, in this instance,
-caused the skalplats to be made very much larger than is
-usual; in fact, it was nearly half a mile deep, and very much
-more than half a mile in front width—and from this it would
-be difficult to dislodge game which had been thoroughly
-frightened. But Moodie’s English education had suggested
-a remedy: besides the main shooting line, the axe-men
-were instructed to subdivide the skalplats by parallel
-“rides,” as they are called in an English cover, running from
-front to rear, so that a marksman placed at the end of any
-of these would have a fair shot, as the game moved from one
-block of forest to another.</p>
-
-<p>All this, however, was a work of time as well as labour,
-and though four hundred men were employed about it, and
-though they worked as men work who combine pleasure with
-duty, the day was far advanced, and the skal had begun for
-some hours before Moodie took his final survey, and, dispatching
-the Captain and his party to their post in the mountains,
-withdrew his workmen to their own position on the reverse
-slope of the spur. Having posted his sentries on the crest of
-the hill, he dismissed the remainder to procure their suppers,
-and to make themselves as comfortable as was consistent
-with extreme watchfulness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span></p>
-
-<p>Long before any serious impression had been made by
-Moodie, on the shooting line, Birger and the remains of his
-party had reached his farthest post, having taken his route
-along the crest of the heights. Calculating his time with
-military precision, he had visited the heads of all the
-different passes, stationing at each a picket, the strength of
-which was in proportion to its ascertained importance, or
-blocking it up with an abattis of trees—a very easy thing to
-do, for the bear, when his suspicions are fairly roused, turns
-readily at the slightest appearance of a trap. And now, as
-the minute hand of his watch indicated twelve, a fact which
-he took care to point out to the Parson, Matthiesen was in
-the act of displaying from the branch of a dead fir tree
-which overhung the precipice, the long fluttering slip of
-white calico, which not only marked out the position of the
-pass to those below, but was the agreed signal that it was
-occupied.</p>
-
-<p>The day was bright and hot, as a northern summer’s day
-generally is, and within the cover of the woods not a breath of
-wind had been felt; but on the exposed cliff, where they
-then stood, or rather lay—for the recumbent was decidedly
-the favourite position;—a light and refreshing air was just
-creeping up the sides of the cliffs, stirring the feathery leaves
-of the birches, but leaving the heavier foliage at rest.</p>
-
-<p>It was a joyous scene, as the eye traversed the tops of the
-great forest stretched out like a map below, and traced the
-different colours of the foliage—here was a thick, close array
-of firs, forming a solid column, of miles in extent—there were
-the serried ranks of the spiry spruce,—here, again, where the
-axe had been at work selecting the best trees and leaving
-the rest to succeed as chance had planted, there was a
-broad, park-like expanse full of juniper underwood, bordered, it
-may be, by a belt of birch, the consequences of some forgotten
-fire, or a patch of white poplars, indicating a marshy bit, or
-a dozen or so of restless aspens, balancing their leaves when
-all around was still;—here, again, was a svedgefall, as they
-term the places where the wind gets under the branches of
-the firs, and levels acres of them together. Sometimes these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-form parks of exceeding beauty, as the young trees grow up
-sparsely; but here and there, where they are too small to be
-worth removing, they lie, entangled with weeds and undergrowth,
-a mass of rottenness and a stronghold of Bruin, out of
-which it will sometimes take hours to drive him.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there, too, was a sœter, or, as we are now in Sweden,
-a satterval, or mountain pasture farm, with its low roof of
-pine-branches and its meadow of rough hay, which generally
-stood in large cocks, ready to be removed as soon as the snow
-should form a road; round most of these, groups of cattle
-might be seen; but there was no smoke from their chimneys,
-for every human being was at the skal.</p>
-
-<p>Far in the distance, indeed too far to be seen, except
-where the sun lighted up its waters and returned a dazzling
-reflection, was the river, already guarded by its fleet of boats,
-though these were entirely invisible from the cliffs.</p>
-
-<p>To the southward, the range of heights sank gradually
-into the plain, which here was traversed by the main road,
-cutting both the ridge and the river at right angles.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond this, all was one black, dreary, desolate wilderness,
-without a shrub, or a bush, or a blade of grass; nothing but
-bare, grey, ghost-like trunks of dead trees, stretching forth
-their charred and blackened branches, and looking as if a
-curse was resting on them. Three years ago that blackened
-track had been a flourishing pine forest, but the fire had
-passed over it, and it was gone. According to a generally
-received Swedish superstition, though the birch might succeed
-it, no pine could grow there again for ever: the burnt
-tree had been cursed in itself and in its seed.</p>
-
-<p>This superstition is actually borne out by fact: cut a pine-forest,
-and a pine-forest succeeds it; burn a pine-forest, and
-the succeeding trees, when they do again clothe the ground,
-are invariably birch. In reality, this is not so strange as it
-seems at first sight; the fir is the natural seed of the
-country, and the young fir is the hardiest tree,—wherever
-that tree will grow no other can compete with it; but its
-seed is heavy, and cannot fall far from the parent tree, when
-once vegetation is destroyed,—the fir-seed can never travel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-into the wasted land; but the birch-seed flies in the wind,
-and its young seedlings are invariably the first green which
-succeeds a fire.</p>
-
-<p>This black wilderness was one cause among many which
-had induced the Jagmästere to select this particular spot for
-his skal; no game would willingly break through his line
-when they knew that miles of uncovered country must be
-traversed before they could again find shelter. He had,
-therefore, that morning marshalled his dref along the high
-road, by placing them in position there, and numbering their
-hats as they stood, from the centre to each flank; but, true
-to his word, no sooner had the white flag fluttered from
-Birger’s post, than his bugle sounded the advance along his
-whole line, and the skal was already begun.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson and Birger, whose work for that morning was
-done, were seated on the outer ridge, with their feet fairly
-overhanging the precipice, reconnoitring with their glasses the
-progress of the dref, as here and there the men emerged into
-a more open space, which the skalfogdar were taking advantage
-of, in order to reform or repair their line, and
-re-establish their communications with the parties right and
-left of them.</p>
-
-<p>Every now and then a sudden shout, followed by half-a-dozen
-shots, marking the place by a light puff of smoke,
-(Swedish powder makes plenty of that), would point the
-glasses to some particular spot,—but on no occasion was any
-game visible from above.</p>
-
-<p>According to law, all shouting is strictly forbidden in
-skals, and so is firing at small game, and so is the presence
-of women or boys, upon the express count that they are too
-noisy; but these laws seem to have been made for no other
-purpose except that the people might enjoy the pleasure of
-hunting and breaking the law at the same time, for no one
-ever thinks of keeping them; shouting is incessant, women
-are plentiful, and, as for shooting at small game, the best
-chance a cock-robin stands of his life consists in the very
-great probability of a Swedish piece missing fire, or a
-Swedish marksman missing his aim.</p>
-
-<p>And, indeed, it is universally admitted by the moderns<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-that their forefathers were in error; that not only shouts and
-musketry are useful in keeping up the men’s pluck and
-pointing out to each other their whereabouts, but they are
-positively of advantage in driving the game. When the ring
-is once completed, either by artificial or natural means, and
-the game is fairly surrounded, it is far better that it should
-be aroused by distant shouts, and should be suffered to slink
-off quietly and unseen, approaching by degrees the hållet,
-where, after all, it must be brought up by the standing line,
-than that it should be surprised by the dref advancing in
-silence. A startled bear is just as likely to bolt backwards
-as forwards, and, if he does, the chances are that he gets off
-scot free. He must be an unlucky bear, indeed, who, at the
-earlier part of a skal, and before the men have closed in,
-charges the line and gets more than one shot at him; and a
-most particularly unlucky bear must he be if that shot takes
-effect, whereas it is just as likely to take effect on some
-Jan or Karl, who stands with his eyes and mouth open as
-the “Disturber” rushes by,—and thus affords, in his own
-person, the only chance of a sitting shot, which Swedes
-delight in;—indeed, this is almost the only way in which
-accidents do happen in skals; the bear very seldom revenges
-himself, but he now and then gets people to do it for
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson sat reclining against a rock, very much at his
-ease, sometimes watching the progress of the skal, sometimes
-picking off the stalks from a quantity of ground-mulberries<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
-which he had gathered during that morning’s march.
-Indeed, the Parson, in the course of that march, had succeeded
-in making a very pretty figure of himself: his knowledge
-of botany amounted simply to a desire of appropriating to
-himself every unusual flower he came across; so that by the
-end of the day his hat, which was of that description popularly
-known as a wide-awake, was generally surrounded by a
-garland fit for a May-queen.</p>
-
-<p>In the present instance, the front of his hat exhibited a
-purple plume of the “laf-reseda,” which perfumed the air<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-around him with an odour like that of the night-scented
-stock. He had placed it there not so much for that or for
-its beauty, as because, like the ground-mulberry, it is never
-seen south of the latitude in which they then were—not even
-in the south of Sweden. Twining round the hat-band was a
-wreath of “Baldur’s brow,” a beautiful white flower, dedicated
-in heathen times to the god of Innocence, and still
-bearing his name, and retaining a portion of its ancient
-sanctity.<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> The lily of the valley, which in Sweden signifies
-much the same as it does in England, formed its appropriate
-companion; and so might the heart’s-ease, which fairly tinged
-the hill sides with blue and yellow, had it retained any
-equivalent to its English appellation; but in Sweden it is
-called “skart-blom,” and is appropriated to the Devil. It is
-the flower the witches decorate themselves with when they
-ride by night to the Satanic rendezvous, and dance infernal
-polkas in the wilds of Blaakulla.</p>
-
-<p>“See!” said Birger, “look at that white flag! there it is,
-glancing against the corner of those firs in the svedgefall;
-now you see another in a line with it,—that is the Ordningsman
-and his party; he marks the centre of the advancing
-line. Before they started, the Jagmästere will have given
-him his precise bearing from the centre of the hållet, and
-his business is to attend neither to the bears nor to the
-beating, but to advance steadily on his own line; for that
-purpose he has those three flagsmen allotted to him. There,
-you see that fellow on the farther edge of the svedgefall,
-showing his flag from that black-looking fir?—look
-through your glass, and you will easily make out the
-Ordningsman himself; there he is, with his compass in his
-hand, close by the farthest flag; he is taking the bearings of
-the first man that we made out; and there is the third now
-advancing to take up a new position. What he has to do is
-to keep those flags always in the straight line, and all the
-rest dress from him.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then, the Jagmästere rode, or rather clambered, into
-the svedgefall on his little cream-coloured pony, which,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-accustomed to the work, scrambled about the fallen trees
-more like a dog than a horse. He was attended by a large
-party on foot; one of these, who might be termed his
-orderly, had to lead his horse round by the forest cattle tracks,
-whenever it happened, as it very frequently did happen, that
-the under-stuff was too thick for a horseman to traverse.</p>
-
-<p>His right wing, which had been beating the easier and
-more open country towards the river, had got some distance
-in advance, and he was evidently directing the Ordningsman
-to halt in the svedgefall till the left had time to come up.
-Messengers were dispatched right and left; the bugles began
-to sound, some the “advance” and some the “halt,” and those
-parts of the line which had begun to emerge from the trees,
-were seen collecting in little groups in different attitudes of
-rest, lighting their pipes, or visiting their havresacs for their
-mid-dag’s mad of black bread and hard white cheese.</p>
-
-<p>Before long the left wing, the advanced flank of which
-was under their feet, made itself to be both heard and seen.
-The ground here was much more difficult, because at the
-immediate foot of the cliff the <i>debris</i> of ages had formed
-themselves into a very steep slope. This part, rugged and
-uneven with fallen blocks of stone, was covered with a close
-brake of underwood, not only of juniper, but of hazels and
-rowan bushes, all matted together by brambles,—as well as
-birch and ash, the last of which, winding its long roots among
-the stones, had in most places attained the dignity of timber
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>Well aware that every head of game disturbed along the
-whole line would, if possible, seek refuge here, the Jagmästere
-had intended that his left wing should be thrown forward,
-and had allotted a hundred men, under the most
-experienced of his Adjutanter, to search the ground well,
-keeping a mile or so in advance of the line. The eagerness
-of the men on first starting had somewhat disturbed this
-arrangement, for at the beginning the cover, along the greater
-part of the line, had consisted of firs, which not only screened
-the men from the eyes of their officers, but, by destroying the
-under-stuff, permitted them to get forwards without any great
-exertion. It was to rectify this that the halt had been called.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What is that?” said the Parson, jumping up and scattering
-half his mulberries down the precipice, as a rush of
-wings came sharp round the corner of the rock, and a great
-cock-tjäder, as big as a turkey, came close over his head, and
-dashed into the firs that crested the hill.</p>
-
-<p>“That,” said Birger, unslinging his rifle, “that is a hint
-that we ought to keep a better look-out;—not that we should
-have had that fellow though, for, awkward and heavy as
-they seem, they rush along like a round shot, when once they
-get into their flight. But never mind, we shall have more
-of them presently—mind where you shoot, though, if you use
-your rifle,—there will be a peasant or two knocked over
-before we have done, most likely. We do not think much
-of that, but you would not like to be playing Archbishop
-Abbott<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> yourself, would you?”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson laughed, as he examined and poised his double-barrelled
-gun—for the rifle was in the charge of Torkel,—and
-made a successful right and left shot among a covey of
-orre grouse that were skimming over the tree-tops at his
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you stick to small shot,” said Birger, who had
-despatched a human retriever down the watercourse to pick
-up the birds, “you may fire away in the men’s faces if you
-like; there is not a Swede who would not stand the chance
-of a peppered jacket, to be able to pick up an article of
-game,”—a sentiment fully confirmed by the grinning faces of
-the picket, for whose benefit he had translated his words.</p>
-
-<p>“But we are not likely to have bears coming up to us, if
-we keep up such a popping as this,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush;’ if there
-are bears within the skal, depend upon it we shall get them,
-sooner or later. Fire away! most of us like a broiled grouse
-for supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here goes for the bird of Yggdrasil,” as a magnificent
-peregrine falcon came floating through the air, as if by the
-mere act of volition; “he shall never sit again between
-the eyes of the eagle.”<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p>
-
-<p>Birger had, however, miscalculated his distance, for the
-bird, taking no more notice of his shot than if they had been
-hailstones, sailed quietly on his course, without turning to
-the right or left.</p>
-
-<p>“The bird of the gods bears a charmed life,” said the
-Parson, “it is no use firing at him. Come, load away! look
-sharp, or you will lose your next chance.”</p>
-
-<p>Game, however, is nowhere very plentiful, either in Norway
-or in Sweden; and though every eye in the picket was on
-the look-out, nothing more was seen, except a blue Alpine
-hare, that came quietly lopping up the watercourse, and sat
-on its hind legs, innocently looking Matthiesen in the face
-during the minute and half in which he was taking aim;
-the shot, however, was successful at last, and puss was destined
-to supply the evening kettle.</p>
-
-<p>“If you want a chance at big game,” said Birger, “I will
-tell you what you should do; it is altogether against the
-law, no doubt—and that is one of the few laws relating to
-skals that ought to be observed;—but if you were to slip
-down one of these watercourses with Torkel, and take your
-course quietly and silently through the fjeld, keeping four or
-five miles ahead of the dref, more unlikely things have happened
-than that you should set your eyes upon some beast
-or other stealing off. You have got your compass, and you
-cannot be lost in a little strip of a forest like this, not half a
-dozen miles across. Besides, every stream you come to runs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-from our pickets, which you may always reach by following
-it. You can always distinguish them in the day-time by
-their flags, and if you should be overtaken by night—”</p>
-
-<p>“If I should,” said the Parson, “there is nothing I should
-like better. Torkel will soon get up a fire. I have plenty
-of provisions in my havresac, and a little of the contraband,
-too,” he added, shaking his bottle; “they forgot to search
-me; so that if we should be out at night, we will try if we
-cannot make a night of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“So be it, then,” said Birger; “be early at the Captain’s
-post, that is all, for you may depend upon it, if I know anything
-of the lie of the country, there will be sport there long
-before the dref comes up. You will probably find me there
-before you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Au revoir, then,” said the Parson, as he swung himself
-off the cliff on which he had been sitting, into the boughs of
-an ash, and thus dropped into the watercourse; down this
-he disappeared, with Torkel after him, floundering, crashing,
-and rolling the stones before him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE SATTERVAL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“’Tis merry, ’tis merry, in good greenwood,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Though the birds have stilled their singing;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The evening blaze doth Alice raise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And Richard is faggots bringing.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Alice Brand.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Avoiding the advanced column of the dref, which had halted
-just short of the watercourse, the Parson and his follower
-took a line nearly parallel to that of the hills. It is no easy
-thing to beat a Swedish forest, for there are every now and
-then thick-tangled brakes, and grass-grown svedgefalls, and
-occasionally, it may be, a little lake to break the line, causing
-perpetual halts, since one part must necessarily wait for
-another. But simply making a passage through a Swedish
-forest is almost as easy as walking on plain turf:—here
-there will be a wide patch of high pines, under which nothing
-will grow,—then there will be actual green glades of considerable
-length, with short mountain turf, broken only by tufts
-of lilies of the valley, or, perhaps, whortleberry or cranberry
-plants; and everywhere, when the trees are young, or have
-been cut, and the understuff has been permitted to come
-up thick, the whole space is intersected by cattle paths,—for
-all the fjeld is divided into sœters belonging to the lowland
-farms, forming the summer runs for their cattle.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson and his follower, therefore, had no difficulty
-in leaving the whole line behind them, so that first their
-shouts and then the reports of their firearms were lost in the
-distance, and the forest, soon to be so busy with life, looked
-as quiet and lonely as if it never could echo sounds louder
-than the coo of the wood-pigeon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span></p>
-
-<p>After five or six miles’ walking, the closeness of the air
-under the trees began to tell upon them—more especially as
-this afternoon’s excursion had been preceded by a morning’s
-walk of sixteen or seventeen miles, and neither of them felt
-at all sorry when, in a natural opening of the forest, the
-rough enclosures of a sœter came into view.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” said Torkel, “we shall get some brandy here,
-anyhow.” He was mistaken, however, for no living thing
-was to be found there, except a dog tied to a stump (for
-dogs are strictly forbidden in skals), that at first made the
-forest ring with its barking, but soon became reconciled to
-the intruders by that sort of free-masonry, whatever be the
-cause of it, which always exist between a dog and a sportsman.</p>
-
-<p>“At all events, they must have milk here,” he said, “and
-I am not sure whether, just now, I had not rather find milk
-than brandy.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson laughed at Torkel’s unusual feelings of sobriety,
-but quite participated in his longing for milk. This
-they found, and plenty of it, for the single room of the
-cabin was full of vessels, shoved in anywhere, as if the
-milkers had been in such a hurry to complete a task which
-they could not have neglected without spoiling their cows,
-that they had not given themselves time to put their milk
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel went down on his hands and knees, put his mouth
-into a bucket that stood near the door, and drank away as if—like
-Odin, when he wheedled Gunlauth into letting him
-take a sip from the cup of poetic inspiration—he meant to
-drain it to the very bottom, and then set to upon a sort of
-cake that he found strung upon a cord between two of the
-rafters, which looked something like a number of round,
-thin discs, of semi-transparent paste, with holes punched out
-of the centre to hang them up by.<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Parson, who was not less thirsty and exhausted,
-evinced a little more moderation than this “hog of the flock
-of Epicurus;” he was content with filling his horn occasionally
-at the milkpail, and floating in it a handful of cranberries,
-bushels of which were growing wherever a glimpse of sunshine
-could penetrate the canopy of foliage, “incarnading”
-with their red berries the turf of the whole forest, “and
-making the green one red.”</p>
-
-<p>The refreshment was, as Torkel had observed, better than
-brandy, and both felt quite sufficiently invigorated for a fresh
-journey; but their present quarters looked very comfortable,—the
-shadows of the evening were fast lengthening,
-and they had already advanced far beyond any point which
-the skal could be expected to reach that day. They remained,
-therefore, comfortably sitting on the rail fence, and
-looking down the grassy glade, without any intention of going
-farther that night. Since diving into the forest they had not
-seen a head of game of any kind, except a flock (for it hardly
-deserved a more sportsman-like appellation) of the smaller
-description of grouse, which Torkel, whose eyes were everywhere,
-had detected on the higher branches of one of the
-trees. Three of these the Parson had brought down in the
-most pot-hunting and unsportsman-like fashion, by getting
-them into a line as they sat, and bringing them down as
-a boy massacres fieldfares. These Torkel was indolently<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-picking, and preparing for the frying-pan, an article which is
-generally to be found in a sœter, while, at the same time, he
-kept a professional eye on the glade. The Parson, sitting
-beside him, was as indolently pulling off the fruit of the
-hägg, a sort of wild cherry, a clump of which overshadowed
-the fence on which they were sitting, and afforded them a
-partial cover from any quick-sighted animal coming up from
-the forest.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not like these great summer skals,” said he. “If you
-really want to see sport you should come here in the winter,
-when the snow is on the ground,—that is the time for a man to
-set his wits against ‘old Fur Jacket,’—to ring him in the snow—to
-look out for his den—to turn him out—to dash after him
-through the snow on our skier—to follow him day after day—to
-camp on his track—and after him again as soon as
-day breaks, and at last, after a week’s hunting, perhaps, to
-run in upon him and put a rifle-ball upon his head. All
-this too is done quietly,—a party of two or three at the
-most,—not mobbing the poor devil to death in this fashion,—that
-is the thing that tries a man’s talents as a hunter.
-In such a skal as this, one of those squalling women could
-knock over a bear as well as the best of us, if she happened
-to meet with him; he very seldom shows fight, either, in the
-summer time,—he sees he is overmatched, and gives it up as a
-bad job; but in the winter, you may as well have a firm
-heart and a steady hand before you bring your rifle to bear,
-and you would be none the worse for a stout comrade to
-stand beside you, with pike and knife.”</p>
-
-<p>“The bear does charge them sometimes?” said the
-Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, if hit,” said Torkel, “or if he thinks you have got
-him into a corner, otherwise he would always rather run
-than fight. I remember one journey I had with two young
-Englishmen a few years ago; we went to shoot in Nordre
-Trondhjemsampt;—ah! you should go there if you want
-shooting. I never saw such a place for grouse of all kinds,—aye,
-and for deer too. Well, these Englishmen were
-always wanting to find a bear,—they would not be satisfied
-with the very best of sport, they kept saying that it would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-never do to come from Norway without having a bearskin to
-show their friends,—for all these Englishmen seem to think
-that bears are the common game of the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shot deer and grouse as many as we pleased, but we
-did not so much as hear of a bear till we had given up shooting
-altogether, and were travelling home, which we did
-by the road through Ostersund, Hernösand, and Gefle.
-When we got to the post-house at Skalstuga, the first on the
-Swedish side of the mountains; early in the morning, long
-before it was light, the cow-boy came in crying, and said
-that a bear had just killed one of the cows. Off goes one of
-our Englishmen, half naked, with his gun in his hand, just
-as if he had nothing bigger to shoot than a hare. I caught
-up an axe that was lying there and ran after him. Up he
-comes, and stands right in the bear’s path, just as if he cared
-no more for him than for a big dog, and fires away two barrels
-right in his face. Lord! it was nothing but small shot, such
-as he had been shooting grouse with, and the bear came at
-him like Thor’s hammer. Just in the way, as luck would
-have it, stood a sapling fir-tree; and I never could tell whether
-the bear was blinded by the smoke, or whether some of
-the small shot had taken him about the eyes, but he seemed
-to take the tree for that which had hurt him, and he reared
-himself up against it, and shook it, and fixed his teeth
-in it, and shook it again, and seemed to mind nothing else,
-till I stole up quietly behind him and drove the axe
-into his skull. The Englishman never seemed to care a
-bit about the danger he had escaped; all he said was,
-‘Got him at last!’ ‘That’s the ticket!’ and shoved into my
-hand more yellow and green notes than ever I saw there
-before or since; and, for all he was so free with his money,
-he went to the Länsman at Ostersund and got the bear’s
-nose sealed, and touched the Government reward for it, just
-like one of us, and then he tossed the money to me, and told
-me to get drunk upon it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which you did, I’ll be sworn,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I did!” said Torkel; “I was not fairly sober
-for a good three days after it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hist! what is that,” said he, dropping, as he spoke, on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-the inside of the fence, and motioning the Parson to do so
-likewise.</p>
-
-<p>A wolf came lolloping along with the slovenly gallop in
-which that disreputable beast usually travels, looking as if it
-had sat up all night drinking and was not quite sober yet.
-The Parson laid down his gun, and quietly taking his rifle from
-Torkel, cocked it, and lodged it upon an opening between the
-planks. The wolf had not seen them, but came shambling
-on, when, either scenting his enemies, or knowing by experience
-the ineligibility of a path near fences, he edged away
-towards the close covert, showing a portion of his ungainly
-side at a long shot, and though looking as if he were lame of
-all four legs at the same time, clearing the ground with his
-immense and untiring strides faster than any dog could have
-followed him.</p>
-
-<p>Crack went the Parson’s rifle; but whether the wolf was
-hit, or whether he knew what a rifle-shot meant, or whether
-he so much as heard it, or saw the smoke, it was all the same;
-his course was not altered, his pace was neither relaxed nor
-quickened, he went lolloping on, just as when he was first
-seen, and, as much at his ease as ever, disappeared in the
-forest not a hundred yards from them.</p>
-
-<p>“Missed him, by all that is unlucky!” said the Parson,
-jumping up.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no knowing,” said Torkel; “if you had hit him
-it would have been all the same. Unless the shot strikes a
-part immediately vital they take no notice of it.”</p>
-
-<p>There was evidently nothing to be done; and, indeed, the
-probabilities were that the Parson really had missed, for
-there was not a vestige of blood to be seen on the turf; and
-as the shades were closing in and the woods were getting too
-dark to see anything, they returned to their comfortable
-quarters, and, by bringing in one of the cocks of rushy hay,
-they succeeded in making up on the floor of the hut two
-couches, much more luxurious than anything they had enjoyed
-since leaving Gäddebäck.</p>
-
-<p>“That will do,” said Torkel; “it is a great piece of luck
-that we happened upon this sœter. We shall make a
-much better cookery of our grouse here than we should have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-done under a tree in the fjeld. There must be a frying-pan
-here somewhere, if we had only light to find it by.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you not light the fire?” said the Parson; “that
-will give you light enough, for this fuel is as dry as tinder,
-and good honest birch, too, with some heart in it. You
-must have a fire for cooking, whether you want it for light
-or not, so heap up the hearth-stone at once.”</p>
-
-<p>This was done as soon as said; and to the cheerful
-blaze of dry and crackling fir succeeded the steady, candle-like
-flame of the birch, lighting up the remotest corners, and
-glancing on that indispensable requisite of mountain life
-which Torkel had been seeking. Fresh butter, just from the
-churn, is not altogether uneatable even in Sweden, and besides,
-hunger is not nice; the Parson consumed, with considerable
-relish, his own share of the grouse, and only wished
-they had been as big as black game, or tjäder. Brandy
-there certainly must have been somewhere in the hut, for
-there never was a Swedish hut without; but so well was it
-hidden, that all Torkel’s experience failed to bring it to light,
-and, very much to the Parson’s delight, they were reduced to
-milk, of which there was enough to supply the whole skal.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, who had succeeded in twisting
-up his hay into a sort of chaise-longue, with a well-formed
-cushion for his back, “I did not expect to have a roof over
-my head; I must say this is a real piece of luxury. Why we
-are better off than the Captain with his tents; everything
-we want to our hands, and no host to ask for a reckoning.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would not be over safe in the Hardanger-fjeld,” said
-Torkel; “but I suppose Sweden is another thing: indeed, in
-Norway it is only on the Hardanger that the thing is permitted.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is permitted?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Why the ghosts of the damned,” said Torkel, “are permitted
-to wander about the Hardanger as they please. No
-great favour after all, as you would say if you had ever seen
-the place; and when they see travellers coming they build
-comfortable huts by the wayside, with fires burning, and
-dry clothes, and plenty of brandy and good provisions, and
-everything a man wants in order to make himself comfortable.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span>
-It would be pretty much of a temptation anywhere, and you
-may fancy what it is on that exposed and treeless waste, where,
-whenever it is not raining it is snowing, and if it is not snowing
-it is raining. But if a man once enters and accepts the
-hospitality, he is lost,—the rushing wind carries away the
-house and all that is in it, and the travellers are never heard
-of more.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never happened upon a ghost-house yourself, did
-you?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“I never did,” said Torkel, “though I have been a good
-deal on the Hardanger-fjeld in my day; it is a capital place
-for ripar. But the truth is, these things are not so frequent
-as they used to be. My father, though, once passed a very
-uncomfortable night on the fjeld, and he never could make
-out, to his dying day, whether the ghosts had or had not anything
-to do with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was that?” said the Parson, as he threw another
-log on the fire, and stirred the embers into a good ghost-story-telling
-blaze.</p>
-
-<p>“In those days,” said Torkel, “we lived near Bykle, on
-the upper Torjedahl, and grew a good deal of barley which
-we could not very well consume ourselves, and had no means
-to transport to Christiansand, where generally there is a pretty
-good market for it. So my father set up a still, and drove a
-good thriving trade with the country about Jordbrakke and
-Skore, exchanging our brandy for their salt fish, an article
-which is scarce enough in the Tellemark. My father used
-generally to meet a trader, of the name of Nilssen, at what
-is called a post-house, situated on a ridge that divides the
-Torjedahl from the waters that flow into Wester Hafvet (the
-North Sea). Why they called it a post-house I am sure I
-do not know, for there is not a horse within a day’s journey
-of it, nor a post-master neither, nor, indeed, any one else.
-It was built by Government, no doubt, but you seldom saw
-anything so bad at a common sœter. One miserable room
-of ten feet square, the walls built of dry stones, with the
-wind whistling in at one side and out at the other, which
-was the only means of carrying off the smoke. Fuel there
-was, and straw there was, for Government provides that,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span>
-and the post-master of the next station is responsible that
-there shall always be a store of both; but Government says
-nothing about the quality, and we used generally to find the
-green bog myrtle which grows there, bad as it is, better fuel
-and better bedding than either of them.</p>
-
-<p>“One evening, about eight o’clock, my father arrived at
-the usual place, having appointed a meeting with Nilssen,
-but when he came there he could nowhere find the hut. He
-recognised the place well enough, there was no missing that;
-there was the deep still lake, the waters of which contained
-no living thing,—there it was, as black as ever; there, too,
-was that old mass of whinstone, which used to form the back
-of the hut, and always had a stream of moisture trickling
-down it, but no house was to be seen, and, what made matters
-worse was, that a thick mountain mist had come on,
-with driving rain, which felt as if every spiteful little drop
-was a needle. My father looked disconsolately along the
-track, and fancied he saw, through the blinding fog, the
-gleam of a fire; he went on some fifty yards, and there, sure
-enough, was a nice comfortable hut, water-tight and weather-tight,
-with the door wide open, a bright fire on the hearth,
-and two or three rounds of flad bröd and a Dutch cheese on
-the great stone in the middle which did duty for a table,—but
-not a soul was there.</p>
-
-<p>“My father was not easily frightened; he was an old
-sailor, and had helped to catch many of your English traders
-during the last war. He could have looked down the throat
-of a cannon, and did pretty near, for he was on board the
-<i>Najaden</i> when the <i>Dictator</i> sank her; but he did not much
-fancy being damned, for all that. So he looked and looked
-at the merry blaze that smiled its welcome through the door,
-and watched the cheese and the flad bröd which seemed to be
-dancing in its light, but for all that he laid himself down
-under the lee of a rock, and cold, and wet, and miserable,
-wished for morning, for the wind blew, and the rain kept
-pelting away all night, till he thought it would have floated
-him, rock and all, into the Normand’s Laagen; and there, all
-the time, was the fire blazing away, till it subsided into a
-glowing heap of red-hot embers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Towards morning he fell into a miserable sleep, and when
-he woke up the mist was gone, the sun was shining brightly,
-and there was not a shred of cloud to be seen. The first
-thing he put his eyes upon was Nilssen, coming up from the
-shores of the lake, and looking as wet, and as cold, and as
-wretched as he was.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah,’ said Nilssen, ‘so you have been lost in the fog,
-like me. My misfortune was all my own fault, too. I got here
-yesterday in very good time, and lighted the fire, and made
-all comfortable, and then I must needs be fool enough to
-start after a covey of ripar, that I did not get a shot at after
-all; and then the mist came on, and I could not find my
-way back. A wretched night I have passed, I can tell you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What,’ said my father, ‘was it you who lighted that
-fire?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘To be sure I did,’ said Nilssen, ‘who else should? Men
-are not so plentiful in this cursed place.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And you are not damned, after all?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not that I know of,’ said Nilssen.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That is not the old hut, though, I will take my oath.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ said Nilssen, ‘it is not; the other was very nearly
-to pieces, as you may recollect, when we were last here. The
-roof fell in not a month after that, and then the authorities
-of the three Ampts contrived to settle their differences, and
-do what they ought to have done years ago—build a new one
-at their joint expense. They have not made a bad job of it.
-Come in, you are cold enough.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And I have been lying out in this cursed rain and wind
-all night,’ said my father, ‘with a good fire before my eyes,
-and a warm roof within fifty yards of me, fancying all the
-while that you were damned, and that you wanted to take
-me off to the Devil along with you! What a confounded
-fool I have been!’</p>
-
-<p>“But I am not sure that my father was such a fool either,”
-continued Torkel, “for Nilssen died very soon after that; in
-fact, he had caught a bad cold during that night, and as he
-had sold us a lot of bad fish, I have no doubt he <i>was</i> damned;
-at all events, it is quite true that from that day forward my
-father was never entirely free from the rheumatism, and this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-in his latter days, when he began to get religious, he always
-attributed to the sight of the fire in the post-house; for he
-never was without his misgivings that Nilssen had been
-damned before he met him. He once went as far as Hardnæs
-to ask the priest about it, and he said that the idea was new
-to him, certainly, but that he would not take upon himself
-to pronounce it impossible. To the very end of his life, my
-father used to congratulate himself upon the fortitude and
-self-denial he had evinced during that terrible night, ‘because,’
-said he, ‘if the bare sight of that fire through the mist was
-visited so severely, no one can say what would have been the
-consequence had I sat by it all night.’”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Parson, solemnly, “no one can.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Torkel, “the whole question hinges on the
-fact whether Nilssen was damned or not; now he certainly
-did take us in about the fish—we were obliged to throw
-away half of it. I should like very much to have your
-opinion on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said the Parson, gravely, “will you take upon
-yourself to say, on your conscience, as a Christian man, that
-there was no potato-haulm in the wash from which your
-brandy was distilled?”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel laughed, and rubbed his hands at the recollection.
-“No,” said he, “that I will not; I do not think the old
-scoundrel made much by us, after all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if that is the case, I do not think, if I were you, I
-would be too hard upon poor Nilssen about the next world.
-But you ought to be able to judge for yourself whether the
-laager was a ghost-house or not; what became of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“O, there it is still,” said Torkel. “I have slept in it
-often myself since, and no harm has happened from it. But
-all that hill-country is a terrible place. Do you know, the
-Evil One once leaped over the Tind Sö, where it is four miles
-across? He did, indeed; I have seen the prints of his footsteps
-with my own eyes—and a very curious thing it is, that
-one foot is bigger than the other. Our Kyrkesonger says it
-is to mark the difference between mortal and venial sins.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid your Kyrkesonger will never rise to the rank
-of Candidatus,” said the Parson, “if he does not get up his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-theology a little better. Is not this the place where your
-witches meet?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not far from it; and it is generally supposed that it
-was in hurrying away from one of these meetings, which was
-suddenly dispersed by some one having accidentally named a
-holy name, that the Devil left the mark of his feet on the
-shores of the Tind Sö; but the actual place of meeting is the
-top of Gousta Fjeld. The ridge of the mountain is so narrow
-that you may sit astride on it, with a leg on each side in the
-air, and no resting-place under either foot for a thousand
-fathoms. On this ridge the Devil sits playing on the bagpipe,
-while the witches dance the polska round him in the
-air. They come from all parts of the country, riding upon
-the skyts-horse, which looks like a flying cow, and carrying
-with them all the children they can catch, in order to enlist
-them in the Devil’s service; for each witch has a needle, by
-which she unlocks the sides of the houses, and makes an
-opening, if she likes, big enough for a carriage and horses to
-pass through; and after she has passed, she locks them up so
-that no one can know where she has been. When she
-arrives at the convent—so the assembly is called,—she presents
-to the Devil all those children whom she has brought
-with her: she cannot force the children to take service
-with him,—some refuse, and the witches are obliged to carry
-them back again. These are good and holy people ever
-afterwards; but most of them do enter the Devil’s service,
-for though he is bound down with a chain, which he has
-always worn ever since our Lord came upon earth, yet he
-can make himself look so fine and so glorious that very few
-of them like to say ‘no,’ and to go back to their homes
-through the dark night. If they once say ‘yes,’ he gives
-them a silver dollar each, and marks them, by biting the
-crown of their heads; and then they are taught to curse all
-that is holy—the Heaven, and the earth, and the fruits of
-the field, and the birds of the air,—all except the magpie, for
-that is the Devil’s own peculiar favourite. And then the
-witches make them a mess of rö-gröd, with corn that has
-been stolen. They have a way of their own for stealing corn:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>
-they put a sack to the roof of the granary as they fly past,
-and say ‘Corn draw corn, and straw draw straw,’ and then
-all the corn flies up into their sacks, and the straw remains
-behind. I know this to be true, for I have lost lispund after
-lispund myself that way. I had a girl in my service once,
-who was a witch, and I lost as much as three tonne of corn,
-and a great many things besides, while she was with me.
-But she vanished one night and has never been heard of
-since, and with her a great scoundrel, who had lately come
-into our parts, whom she called her lover,—but the people
-said he was the Devil in disguise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” said the Parson, “lovers very often are;
-but what about your witch children?”</p>
-
-<p>“When they have done all this, the Devil gives notice of
-the next convent, and the witches take the children, and
-they grow up with their brothers and sisters just like any
-of the others, only that they are cross-grained children from
-that time forward, and are always getting into one mischief
-or another, and quarrelling, and fighting, and stealing, and
-lying, and doing the Devil’s work on earth; for they have
-all had new names given them at the convent, and whenever
-the Devil calls them by those names, they must go and do
-whatever work he sets them at, for they have taken his
-wages, and, having once engaged to be his servants, they
-cannot help themselves now.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson felt by no means inclined to laugh at Torkel’s
-demonology, every bit of which may be found gravely and
-solemnly recorded in the State papers of Sweden, for it once
-formed the grounds of accusation upon which men and
-women were executed by the dozen; for with the exception
-of the material and tangible facts, the cow-like horse, and
-the silver dollar, and the ridge of Gousta, and the bagpipes,
-the whole of Torkel’s story was but an over-true allegory,
-the antitype of which may be found everywhere in real life;
-and the fact of the Superior Power compelling the restoration
-of all who do not willingly engage in the Devil’s service, is
-a very sound piece of theology. So he very readily joined
-in the prayer of the Evening Hymn, a very ancient composition,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-dating from centuries before the Reformation, which
-Torkel sang as well and as heartily as if he had been kyrkesonger
-himself. A portion of it has been thus translated:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ere thy head, at close of day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On thy lowly couch thou lay,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On thy forehead and thy breast</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Be the Cross of Christ impressed.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Sin and shame, like shades of night,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fade before the Cross’s light,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Hallowed thus, the wavering will</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the troubled heart are still.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Far, far hence, dark phantoms fly,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Haunting demons come not nigh,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ever waiting to betray,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Arch Deceiver, hence!—away!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Serpent! with thy thousand coils,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With thy many winding wiles,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With thy deep, meandering arts,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ruffling calm and quiet hearts;</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hence!—for Christ, yea, Christ is here,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At His token disappear;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Lo! the sign thou well hast known</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Bids thy cursed crew begone!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p>It is a fact that the Gousta Fjeld and the Tind Sö, a very large and
-lonely lake at its foot, are popularly supposed to be the resort of the
-Devil and his adherents. The author, however, has not been able to
-meet with any authentic accounts of the diabolical convents in Norway.
-He has, therefore, substituted those of Sweden, the locality of which
-is Blaakulla, in Dalecarlia. These are quoted by Frederika Bremer
-from the manuscript of Kronigsward, which details the judicial murders
-which took place under Councillor Lawrence Kreutz, in 1671,—were
-continued for three years, and were suppressed at last by the exertions
-of Countess Catharine de la Gardie. But, though the executions for
-witchcraft were put an end to, the belief in it is as rife as ever. The
-same book contains a laughable story of a supposed witch residing in
-the island of Söllezo, in the Silya Sjön, and of her recovery; which
-proves that the clergy of Sweden have not lost their power as exorcists.
-Not many years ago, a young girl of that island asserted positively that
-she was conveyed every evening to Blaakulla. Her parents, who were
-honest but simple folks, were much disturbed about it. They closely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-watched their daughter by night,—bound her fast in bed with cords,—but
-nothing would avail; for, in the morning, weeping bitterly, she
-still maintained she had been at Blaakulla. At last, her unhappy
-parents took her to the clergyman upon the island, and begged him,
-with earnest tears, to save their child from the claws of Satan. After
-having had several interviews with the maiden, the clergyman one day
-said to her, “I know a remedy,—a certain remedy to cure you! but it
-will give me much trouble. Yet, as nothing else appears to be of any
-avail, we will have recourse to it.” With much solemnity, he caused
-the girl to seat herself upon a commodious chair in the centre of the
-apartment, took up a “Cornelius Nepos,” and began reading one of
-the lives. Before he had finished, she fell fast asleep; and when she
-awoke, the clergyman told her she was cured—and she was so!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MAKING ANOTHER NIGHT OF IT.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Unstable are autumn nights,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The weather changes</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Much in five days—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Still more in a month.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Praise the day at eventide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The wife when she is dead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The sword when thou hast proved it,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The maid when she is married,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ice when thou hast crossed it,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ale when thou hast drunken it.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Ibid.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Probably their couches were softer than usual,—probably the
-fact of their being under a roof where the sun could not
-shine on their faces, might have prolonged their slumbers;
-but the fact is, the cock, had there been one at the sœter,
-which there was not, would have “had his boots on”<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> a very
-long while before either the Parson or his follower had opened
-their eyes; and when they did open them, it was some time
-before either of them could recollect where they were.
-Swedes are not over fond of open air, and though their
-glazed windows in the towns are large enough and numerous
-enough to prove that no ingenious chancellor of the exchequer
-had ever devised a tax upon their light, yet in the
-fjeld, where glass is scarce, windows are scarce too, and the
-few that there are, are generally stuffed with hay. In the
-present case, though the sun was well above the trees, there
-was not light enough to see the smoky rafters over head, or
-the scarcely less dirty strings of flad bröd which were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>
-dangling from them; but all round the building there was
-a perpetual ringing of bells, from the great cracked bass to
-the little tinkling treble; the sheep, scared by the
-noises and the fires, had wandered home during the night,
-and the cows were collecting round the door of the sœter in
-hopes of being milked, which hopes, for one or two of them,
-at least, were speedily realized,—for Torkel, taking the
-bucket that had been well-nigh drained over night, proceeded
-very composedly to milk them, just as if he were in
-his own sœter in the Tellemark, observing quietly that new
-milk was better than old.</p>
-
-<p>In Sweden, as well as in Norway, every animal turned out
-on a mountain pasture has a bell round its neck; certain
-<i>esprits forts</i> (all of whom do it, notwithstanding, as well as
-their more credulous neighbours) assert stoutly that it is to
-enable the girls to find them among the trees; but as cows
-generally keep together, and sheep do so, invariably, one bell
-would be quite sufficient for the purpose. The more probable
-solution is that given honestly in the Tellemark: that the
-bells are tied on to prevent the Trolls from milking them in
-the night,—for no Troll, as is well known, can abide a bell.</p>
-
-<p>While Torkel was in the midst of his operations as deputy
-dairyman, and the Parson was looking on, half doubting the
-propriety of the thing, and half inclined to put a stop to it, a
-sound of laughing and talking was heard behind the fence,
-and three girls, none of them more than eighteen or twenty,
-came clambering over it. Torkel did not seem the least in
-the world disconcerted, nor did they on their part testify the
-smallest surprise or displeasure, though one of them was the
-proprietor’s daughter, and temporary mistress of the hut,
-and the others were her servants; but after exchanging a
-few joking observations relative to their respective modes of
-passing the preceding night, and the young ladies’ taste for
-field sports, they all set to work milking in earnest, and provided
-for the sportsmen a better breakfast than they were
-likely to have achieved by their own unassisted efforts; nor
-could they be prevailed upon to accept any payment, beyond
-laughingly insisting upon the intruders carrying out every
-bit of hay, rebuilding the hay-cock, sweeping out the room,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span>
-and putting everything tidily into its place; till the Parson
-detected Miss Lilla eyeing, with evident admiration, a pair of
-Tellemarken shirt-buttons,—round hollow silver balls, about
-the size of a grape-shot, with which he had decorated his
-broad-flapped hat. These, after a good deal of pressing, she
-permitted the “Herr Englesk” to fasten on the red silk handkerchief
-which formed her very becoming head-dress, and
-they parted mutually pleased, Lilla remarking politely—as
-the Parson, shouldering his gun and taking off his hat after
-the manner of the natives, bade her farvel (for the word is
-Swedish no less than English)—“Jeg er ret lykkelig ved at
-kunne berede dem denne lille Tjeneste,” which, as Lilla was
-a pretty girl, Torkel condescended to understand and interpret,—a
-thing which he had often professed himself
-utterly unable to do when the speaker was a bearded man,
-and informed the Parson that she was very happy in finding
-such an opportunity of rendering this trifling service.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson’s Swedish was at an end with his “farvel;”
-all he could do in return was to bow and smile, and wave
-his hand, as he vaulted over the rail and left the hospitable
-sœter behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Their journey through the forest was little more than a
-counterpart of that of yesterday,—now traversing spaces
-roofed with gloomy fir, and beech not less gloomy when you
-see their undersides only and breathe nothing but the confined
-air below them,—now breathing freely in a glade or svedgefall,
-and gathering a handful of whorts or cranberries by the
-way,—now pushing through a belt of under-stuff, thick enough
-to conceal an elephant, but all the time meeting with very
-little game. Indeed, skals are not by any means the likeliest
-times to find the smaller game, and even the larger
-lurk unseen till the very end of them. Torkel had cracked
-off the Parson’s rifle at a Lo, as he called it—that is to say, a
-lynx,—that jumped up from under his feet and dashed into
-a thicket, but with very little effect beyond frightening it,
-though the beast was twice as large as a fox and twice as
-red. The parson had brought down a hen “capercailzie,”—but
-that was the whole of their morning’s sport.</p>
-
-<p>For some time the under-stuff had been unusually thick,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span>
-and had formed a considerable impediment to their progress;
-they had persevered through it for about half a mile, and the
-wood gave no signs of becoming more open, when Torkel
-stopped, and looked right and left of him through the stuff,
-as if to find an opening.</p>
-
-<p>“We must be skirting the border of a svedgefall,” said he,
-“where the air comes in freely; these hazels would never
-grow in the close forest,—let us edge a little to the right, we
-are taking the belt end-ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“The right!” said the Parson; “that seems even thicker
-than where we are now.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is the very reason,” said Torkel; “the nearer the
-svedgefall, the more air,—the more air the closer the understuff.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson thought this remarkably good reasoning, and
-set himself boldly to face the difficulty, instead of shrinking
-from it,—a proceeding which, were it generally followed in
-our course through life, would seldom fail to meet with its
-reward.</p>
-
-<p>It did not on this occasion, at all events, for after a hundred
-yards or so of hard struggle, they suddenly emerged
-into an open plain of some miles in length, and a good half
-mile across. It was not a svedgefall, as Torkel had imagined,
-but the clearing formed by an old fire, the effects of which
-nature had already, in a great measure, succeeded in repairing;
-for a coarse grass, gemmed with all manner of flowers,
-covered the greater part of it, through which the spiræa raised
-its feathery head; large tracts were vividly green with young
-birches, as yet hardly higher than the grass, but closely set,
-as if planted in a nursery;—here and there the cranberry
-threw a gleam of crimson into nature’s carpeting, while the
-epilobium—an absolute tree compared to the dwarf plants
-around it—showed, with its thickly set flowers, a mass of
-lilac; and the fox-glove (in Sweden a holy flower), bent its
-head and rang its fairy bells, inaudible by mortal ears, whenever
-a good angel passed it by on his errand of mercy. A
-few great mournful dead trees were still stretching out their
-helpless and blackened branches, like the old and ruined
-families after a revolution, sorrowful remembrances of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-glories which had passed away; but most of these had
-dropped where they had stood, and were already concealed by
-the vigorous young undergrowth, which was springing up all
-the more vigorously because the soil had been for ages fertilized
-by the leaves of their predecessors.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson sat down exhausted on one of these remains
-of fallen majesty, and fanned himself with his broad-leafed
-hat, while Torkel, standing on the highest point he could find,
-cast a look up and down the opening, which seemed as silent
-and as destitute of animal life as any part they had hitherto
-traversed.</p>
-
-<p>“There is something,” said he; “I see it move—I am sure
-there is something alive there.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson was up in an instant, with his telescope in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“There it is,” said Torkel, “on the farther edge, just under
-the high trees—that tall dead trunk with a forked head is
-exactly in the line; look there, I see it move now as plainly
-as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have got it now,” said the Parson, “and it is a bear,
-too, if ever I saw one in the Zoological Gardens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” said Torkel; “do not say that, or we shall never
-get a shot at it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” said the Parson; “it is almost out of sight, let
-alone out of hearing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That does not signify,” said Torkel, “that animal is
-wiser than any of us; whether it has a fylgia, or guardian<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>
-spirit, like us, is more than I can say, but it is the truth, that
-if ever you name its name you will get no shot at it, and
-fortunate for you if you do not meet with some piece of ill
-luck into the bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well,” said the Parson, “I will take care in future;
-but what am I to call him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Call him Old Fur Jacket! or call him The Disturber! or
-call him The Wise One! anything you like, only do not call<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span>
-him what you have done just now. I hope no mischief will
-come of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are two,” said the Parson; “there is a little one—I
-see it plainly enough, now that they have got clear from that
-patch of epilobium. What on earth is the old—pshaw!—the
-Old Wise One about? she seems to be administering a little
-wholesome discipline to young Fur Jacket;”—and he handed
-the glass to Torkel.</p>
-
-<p>“She has been frightened,” said he, “she has been roused
-out by the dref, and she is making her cub get up into the
-tree; they very frequently do that when they suspect they
-will have to run or fight for it. Young Wilful does not seem
-to know what is good for him, and must be flogged into it.
-Just like our own younkers,” said Torkel, philosophically,
-taking another look through the glass.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not very good for him just now,” said the Parson,
-“with our eyes upon him. If he once gets up he is a lost
-Fur Jacket.”</p>
-
-<p>“And up he gets,” said Torkel, “and receives a parting
-benediction from his mother’s paw across his stern, just to
-freshen his way, as Tom says. And now how to get a crack
-at the Old Lady? if we were on the other side we might do it
-easily enough, but the stuff here is not high enough to hide us;
-those brutes have eyes sharp enough to see through a mill-stone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Had we better not watch her? perhaps she will think
-that which is good for young Hopeful will be good for her;
-we shall have her climbing, herself, next.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not she, she knows better; the branch that is very good
-protection to a little lump of brown fur, she knows well
-enough, would not do for a beast almost as big as a cow,—you
-will not catch her up a tree, and you need not expect it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be done then? there she is still.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know anything better than to keep along this
-edge, till we put a mile or so of ground between us and her,
-and then to cross; and the sooner we start the better, for
-she will not stay long after she has disposed of her young
-one.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good!” said the Parson, “and now for finding the place
-again;”—and he took out his compass and placed it on the
-fallen trunk. “That forked tree bears to us exactly E. by
-N.; when we come down the other side and bring it W. by
-S., we shall not be very far from the place; and then the
-northern edge of that large clump of epilobium will give us
-the exact mark. And now to get there as quick as we
-may.”</p>
-
-<p>They had not proceeded a couple of hundred yards when
-they met with a brook which intersected the opening nearly
-at right angles.</p>
-
-<p>“This will do,” said Torkel, jumping into it, for it was not
-much more than knee deep, and clear as crystal. “The fall
-of the ground, the bed of the stream, and the stuff that
-always grows on the banks, will be quite sufficient cover
-for us.”</p>
-
-<p>On they went, stooping, sometimes splashing through the
-water itself, sometimes creeping on hands and knees under
-the bank, resting for a while behind some friendly rock or
-stump, then creeping on again, till at last they neared the
-opposite side; and then, seeking the shelter of the trees, they
-took a few minutes’ rest—for going on all-fours is anything but
-a comfortable mode of progression. Slowly and warily they
-advanced, peering about, moving from tree to tree, and looking
-closely into every bush before they showed themselves.
-There was the place evidently enough; the north corner of
-the epilobium was near enough to the forked tree to make a
-capital mark—there could be no mistake as to the locality;
-besides, the bear’s tracks were evident enough on some soft
-ground; but no living creature was to be seen. The bear
-had either heard them, or smelt them, or, having provided
-for her young one, and being restless and anxious on account
-of the noises that had roused her at first, had gone on to
-some thicker cover.</p>
-
-<p>“That comes of calling the beast by his name,” said Torkel,
-half sulkily; “never do that again, at least not in the fjeld.
-Well, never mind, we will have young Innocence, at all events;
-the reward is half as much for a cub as it is for an old
-one.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That is all you think about,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“No it is not,” said Torkel; “I like the sport itself as
-well as any man living—I love it for its own sake; but I
-should not mind a few of their yellow notes, either, to be
-turned into honest, hard Norwegian specie-dalers, and laid up
-for the winter,—at least, just now, for Lota’s sake. Fancy
-what a set of scoundrels these Swedes must be, when they
-have to print on all their notes, ‘Whoso forges this shall be
-hanged’—we do not do that in Norway.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Parson, “you are none of you clever enough
-to forge—the <i>Norges Bank’s Representativ</i> is quite safe in
-such clumsy hands as yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“There he sits, just in that fork close to the trunk,” said
-Torkel, who, if he had not, as the Parson insinuated, skill
-enough in his fingers to forge a note, had quickness enough
-in his eyes to see through a log of timber, if a bear had been
-hiding behind it. “There is young Innocence! Oh! do not
-spoil his skin with that small shot. Here is the rifle. Put
-the ball in under his ear,—that will not hurt him.”</p>
-
-<p>It did not seem to hurt him, in good truth, for he never
-moved an inch on receiving the shot, though the blood
-dripping down the tree showed that the ball had reached its
-mark. The cub remained perfectly dead, but supported by
-the fork in which he was sitting.</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be done now?” said the Parson; “I do not
-see how to get him down, for the trunk is too big to swarm
-up, and we have not a branch for twenty feet; but it will
-never do to leave him there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave him!” said Torkel; “O no! that would never do.
-I think we may get up into that tree, though, with a little
-management.”</p>
-
-<p>There was growing, within a few yards of the great tree
-which the bear had selected, a small thin weed of a fir, which,
-coming up in the shade, had stretched itself out into a long
-branchless pole with a bunch of green at the top, in its legitimate
-aspirations after light and air. Torkel, disengaging
-the axe which he usually carried at his back, notched it on
-the nearer side, and then, seeing its inclination would carry
-it to the great tree on which the cub was hanging, cut vigorously.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span>
-In a minute or two the little fir sank quietly into
-the yielding arms of his great neighbour, and formed with its
-trunk a rough ladder. Up this Torkel, having paused for a
-moment to see if it had finally settled, climbed as readily as
-any bear in the forest. He was soon seen worming himself
-through the spreading branches, and slipping down to the
-fork; and the little lump of bear’s fat, about the size of a
-two-year-old hog, came squashing down upon the turf.</p>
-
-<p>Small as it was for a bear, it was impossible to carry it;
-so they tied its hind legs together, and hung it upon one of
-the dead trees in the open, the Parson having first pinned
-upon its snout a leaf which he had torn out of his note-book,
-and had written Torkel’s name upon it.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel, however, was mistaken about his share of the yellow
-notes, though the Parson did not suffer him to lose by it.
-Every bear killed in a skal is the property of the Ofwer
-Jagmästere; a regulation which is found to be absolutely necessary,
-in order to prevent men from breaking their ranks
-and hunting the likely places independently,—a proceeding
-which would ensure the loss of every bear except the particular
-animal which was the object of immediate pursuit. Of
-this Torkel was not aware, because in Norway skals such as
-this seldom or never take place, not only because the ground
-is generally too difficult, but principally because the inhabitants
-are too widely scattered to be easily collected in sufficient
-numbers, and a great deal too lawless to be managed if
-they could.</p>
-
-<p>With all the complacency which the consciousness of having
-done a good action confers, they proceeded on their journey,
-which, as their course happened to lie lengthways of the
-opening, was easy enough. Hot, and the least little bit in
-the world fatigued, they sauntered along on the shady side
-of the glade, till they began to discover that the whole
-country had become shady, and that a little sun, if it was
-to be had, would be just as pleasant. In fact, it had
-become extremely chilly.</p>
-
-<p>“There goes Thor’s hammer,” said Torkel, as a crash of
-thunder burst over their heads, echoing from tree to tree;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span>
-“we need not fear the Trolls now, every one of them is
-half-way to the centre of the earth by this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish we had nothing worse to fear,” said the Parson;
-“but this gradual darkening looks a great deal more like a
-spell of bad weather than a sudden storm. I wish we knew
-where the Captain’s post is.”</p>
-
-<p>“We cannot be within seven or eight miles of that,” said
-Torkel; “and I really do think that we are going to have a
-wet night, and plenty of mist into the bargain. It will be
-perfectly impossible for us to find the post, knowing so little
-of the country as we do. We had better hut ourselves at
-once. If we had been on the hill we might have seen this
-coming, but down here it was impossible, with no sky visible,
-except that which is right over our heads.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the Parson, “if it is to be, we may as well
-halt at once. So off with your havresac, and turn to. This
-spreading fir will do as well as any for our canopy.”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel was a man of deeds, and his assent and approbation
-were demonstrated by his throwing down his havresac
-and forthwith selecting and cutting down a young fir for his
-ridge-pole; and,—while the Parson was securing the locks of
-the guns with handkerchiefs, and such like extemporaneous
-expedients,—for the gun covers had, of course, been left with
-the baggage,—he had already cut down two pair of cross timbers
-to lay it on. The Parson, with his hand-bill, aided him
-vigorously, and the more so that the rain had now begun to
-patter sharply from leaf to leaf, and it was very evident that
-no long time would elapse before it found its way to their
-localities below. The frame-work of the hut was arranged,
-and branches of the fir and beech, and coarse grass and
-juniper,—in fact anything that could be collected on the
-spur of the moment,—was laid on as thatch, while Torkel
-hastily drew together and chopped up the driest stuff he
-could find for the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The rain was now coming on in right earnest, and the
-night was prematurely setting in. The drops came through
-thicker and thicker, each one as big as a marble; and the
-sportsmen, with jackets more than half wet through, crept<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span>
-disconsolately into the unfinished hut, in order, as Torkel
-said, to make themselves comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>The first piece of comfort which was discovered was that
-the havresacs, which had been thrown off at the beginning of
-the hutting operations, had been left where they were
-thrown, and were by this time wet through and through, together
-with every morsel of bread that they contained. The
-supper was not luxurious, and, as neither was greatly disposed
-for conversation, they laid themselves up in the warmest
-corner they could find, and courted forgetfulness, as well as
-rest and refreshment, in sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson, as an old fisherman, had been pretty well
-accustomed to a minor description of roughing it. The
-boxes of dried poplar leaves of a Norwegian cottage, or the
-heaps of hay of a sœter-farm were to him as feather beds.
-A rainy day, too, he had often hailed as remarkably good
-fishing weather, but a night’s bivouac, sub-Jove, and that
-Jove pluviali, was rather a new thing to him; and his cloak,
-too, miles off, under the charge of the faithful Jacob. One
-habit, however, he had picked up in his travels, which stood
-him in good stead now, and that was the habit of “making
-the best of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Bad was the best; the fuel was wet and scanty, and the
-fire soon went out; and Torkel’s house, run up hastily and
-after dark, was as little water-tight as if it had been built
-by contract. Before midnight the Parson was roused up,
-first by detached drops and then by little streamlets falling
-on his face and person, and wet and chilled, he lay counting
-the hours, and envying Torkel, who snored comfortably
-through it all.</p>
-
-<p>Morning came at last—it always does come if we wait long
-enough for it,—and a dull and misty light began to struggle
-in through the opening of the hut, and through several other
-openings also, which, during the past night had officiated,
-though uncalled for, as spouts for the water.</p>
-
-<p>Still the rain fell, not in showers, not violently, for there
-was not a breath of wind, but evenly, quickly, steadily, as if,
-conscious of its resources, it meant to rain for ever; while
-the big drops from the fir branches kept patter, patter, on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span>
-the soppy ground, and the mist hung so low that you could
-scarcely see the branches they fell from.</p>
-
-<p>“Hang that fellow, he will sleep for ever,” said the Parson;
-“come, rouse out Torkel, ‘show a leg,’ as Tom says,
-it is broad daylight now, and high time for us to be
-moving.”</p>
-
-<p>Torkel stretched himself and rubbed his eyes, and looked
-stupid; his thoughts had not returned from his native
-Tellemark, and his prospects of a “home and pleasing wife,”
-on the banks of the Torjedahl, of which, in all probability,
-he had been dreaming.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Torkel, rouse up my boy,” said the Parson, kicking
-him; “here is the tail end of the brandy-flask for you, and
-when that is gone, we must find our way to where more is
-to be had.” The hint of brandy had the desired effect of
-waking up the old hunter; for even his iron frame was none
-the better for the night’s soaking. The brandy, however,
-put them both in good-humour, and having extracted from
-their havresacs that which had once been excellent kahyt
-scorpor, but which now were black soppy lumps of dough,
-they made an extempore breakfast, seasoned by some chips
-of Fortnum and Mason’s portable soup, a piece of which the
-Parson invariably carried with him, but which, as there was
-now no possibility of lighting a fire, they were obliged to
-suck or eat as they could.</p>
-
-<p>“Now Mister Torkel, <i>en route!</i> hvar er väga til hållet?
-we must get there before we taste brandy again, that is
-certain; pray Heaven they have not broken up the skal, and
-left us alone in our glory. That is our direction,” continued
-he, looking at his pocket-compass, “but the thing is to keep
-it, in this thick wood and thick weather, when no one can
-see a dozen yards before his nose.”</p>
-
-<p>Every one who has been out in a fog knows the propensity
-the traveller invariably has to work round in a circle,
-and to return to the spot from which he started. True, in
-the present case, the compass was a safeguard against this,
-but to consult the compass when walking or riding requires
-time, the needle does not settle itself to the north without a
-good deal of vacillation; and here the lie of the country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span>
-gave no assistance whatever; it was not a plain, certainly, for
-it was very uneven, and occasionally rocky, but there was
-nothing like hill, or any continuous direction of declivities,
-which could form a guide. Here and there were dense
-brakes, every leaf and twig of which, overcharged with
-moisture, showered down its stores upon them, and there
-was no possibility of picking the ground, where the only
-chance of finding the track lay in keeping the compass
-course. No brook had been met with of sufficient volume
-to render it probable that it had come from behind the hills;
-and besides, it was more than probable that the watercourses,
-which formed the only communications with the
-pickets above, were much too full now to be practicable.</p>
-
-<p>As hour after hour wore on, and the forest seemed always
-like that through which they had started in the morning, the
-Parson was more than once tempted to follow the course of
-the running water, and to make his way down to the river,
-upon the chance of at least a shelter and a meal at one of
-the farm-houses; but the hopes of effecting a junction with
-his friends, and still more with his baggage, kept him to his
-course, though the hållet—as Virgil’s Italy served poor
-Æneas—seemed to be continually going backwards as he
-approached it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo!” said Torkel at last, who was then a little in
-advance, “what have we got to now, a svedgefall, or a
-sœter? the fjeld is much clearer here. Oho, I see! this
-will do; look here, this juniper was cut only lately, and here
-is another stump, and the branches all carried away, too, and
-there is a tree that has got its lower boughs trimmed; we
-have got to the shooting line at last.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I think we have,” said the Parson; “and
-if so, we must turn short up to the left, and the Captain’s
-post cannot be far from us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless they have broken up the skal,” said Torkel.</p>
-
-<p>“If they have, I am sure we shall find some one here, left
-to guide us; Lieutenant Birger knows that we are to make
-for this spot. Here is something, at all events,” as they
-came in sight of a line of peeled saplings, right across the
-path, which had for some time begun to ascend rather rapidly.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span>
-“This will do, I am sure;” for now a peasant, who had been
-sitting cowering under the rock, with a soldier’s musket in
-his hand, the lock of which he had covered with a sack that
-had evidently done duty with the carioles, came forward to
-meet them.</p>
-
-<p>He was not very communicative, however, for he could
-not speak English, and would not understand Norwegian;
-but, at all events, they learnt to their comfort that the post
-was there still, and, after ten minutes sharp pull up a steep
-but very open and practicable pass, they came in sight of the
-Captain’s watch-fires, situated in the gorge of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Home at last!” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“And high time, too,” said the Captain. “There, pick
-those wretched flowers out of that hat of yours, and let us see
-whether we cannot make you look less like a drowned rat.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have not broken up the skal, then?” said the
-Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! nothing like it; the rain came on late in the
-evening, and they could not have broken it up then if they
-wished, for the men would not have had time to go home, and
-might just as well make themselves comfortable where they
-were.”</p>
-
-<p>Comfortable! thought the Parson, shrugging his wet
-shoulders, and thinking of his own comforts during the
-night past.</p>
-
-<p>“And this morning,” continued the Captain, “the weather-wise
-say that the rain will not last; and as they have driven so
-much of the country, and fairly disturbed the game, the
-Ofwer Jagmästere sent for some brandy—not enough to make
-the men drunk, but as much as is good for them,—and they
-are to keep their fires burning and make all the noise they
-can, and so keep the game within the ring till the weather
-clears.”</p>
-
-<p>“And where did you hear all this?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Birger is here,” said the Captain; “he came in
-about two hours ago, as wet as you are; he is asleep in the
-other tent. Did you not see a row of barked bushes as you
-came up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Parson, “that I did, and I hailed them as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span>
-the traveller did the gibbet,—the first mark of civilisation I
-had seen; but I cannot say that I understand what they
-mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was Birger’s plan,” said the Captain, “they have done
-it pretty continuously along the line of the dref; it is intended
-to look like a trap, and to prevent the game from coming up
-the pass during the rain, when we cannot trust to our rifles.
-We have had half-a-dozen wolves here last night; there is
-one of them,” pointing to a carcase which two of the men
-were skinning. “I was not ready for them, that is the
-truth, for I was eating my supper. I ought, certainly, to
-have had a brace of them, but this gentleman was a little in
-the rear of his party, and the Devil took the hindermost,—at
-least my little pea-rifle did. And there are a couple of
-foxes; Tom says their skins are valuable. I picked them
-off during the night. I am pretty sure we had a bear,
-too, early this morning; but he turned, whatever he was,
-before I could get a sight of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“No wonder, with that fire,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we do want to keep them in,” said the Captain;
-“besides, who is to do without a fire in such weather as this?
-There—had you not better go and make yourself comfortable.
-Jacob has brought your knapsack and cloak: you will find
-them there in the tent—(by-the-bye, what do you think of
-the use of tents now?) After that I suppose you will be
-ready for dinner?”</p>
-
-<p>“You may say that,” said the Parson; “it is little beside
-biscuit sopped in rain that we have had this day. Tom,”
-he shouted, “mind you take care of Torkel there; going
-without his grub is a serious thing to one of your country,
-and a still more serious thing going without his brandy.”</p>
-
-<p>“As for your wet clothes,” continued the Captain, “there
-is no help for that. Birger’s are much in the same mess,
-but we have a fire big enough to dry anything, if the rain
-would only hold off. In the meanwhile you must keep
-under canvas; those lug-sails of yours keep the wet out
-capitally. You see, I have used them for roof, and have
-built up walls to them with fir-branches and junipers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the Parson, “it is quite luxurious,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-and so is this dry flannel shirt—Heaven bless the man who
-invented flannel shirts,—I should have been dead with cold
-by this time, if I had been wearing a linen one. Hallo,
-Jacob! you look rather moist; what is the state of the
-larder?”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the state of the larder was, the Captain had
-determined it should be a mystery, for he knew well that
-nothing unfits a man for subsequent work so much as a
-hearty meal after great fatigue upon little sustenance. As
-soon, therefore, as he heard that they had eaten little or
-nothing since their breakfast at the sœter on the preceding
-day, he gave a private sign to Jacob, and nothing whatever
-was forthcoming but a good strong basin of portable soup,
-smoking hot, with a couple of kahyt scorpor bobbing about
-in it; and, early as it was in the day—for it was not more
-than four in the afternoon,—the Parson was well satisfied to
-scoop out a bed in the dry moss of the tent, to draw his fur
-cloak over him, and to seek in sleep the rest which he needed
-quite as much as he did the food.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE WATCH FIRE.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Fire will be needful</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For him who enters</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With his knees frozen.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of meat and clothing</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stands he in need</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who journeys o’er mountains.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Water is needful,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A towel and kindness,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the guest’s welcome.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Kind inclinations</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Let him experience;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Answer his questions.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Hávamál.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sound and deep were the Parson’s slumbers, complete and
-absolute was his state of unconsciousness. Noises there were
-in the camp, no doubt, noises of every description: eight or
-ten people without any particular occupation, without
-any reason whatever for keeping silence—rather the
-reverse,—are apt to be noisy. But it was all one to
-him, the Seven Sleepers themselves could not have slept
-more soundly; and the next four or five hours were to him
-as though they had not been. His first perception of sublunary
-matters was awakened by the words of a well known
-air, which at first mingled with his dreams, and then presented
-themselves to his waking senses:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O, never fear though rain be falling,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">O, never fear the thunder dire,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O, never heed the wild wind’s calling,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But gather closer round the fire.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For thus it is, through storm and rain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The weary midnight hours must wane,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere joyous morning comes again,</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">And bids the gloom retire.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Parson unrolled himself from his cloak and looked
-out; the night had fallen dark enough, and the rain, though
-it gave evident symptoms of having exhausted itself, was still
-falling, but scantily and sparingly. The mist was thicker and
-darker and blacker than ever; all, however, was bright light
-in the camp, for the bale-fires of Baldur could not have burnt
-more brightly than the watch-fires of the picket. The Captain
-had had plenty of spare hands and plenty of spare time,
-and had kept his men in work by collecting stores of fuel;
-besides which he had made use of an expedient which,
-common enough in winter camps, is seldom resorted to in
-summer. A full-grown pine, which seemed to have died of
-old age, and had dried up where it stood, was cut down; the
-head, already deprived of its branches by Time, was chopped
-off and laid alongside the butt, end for end, and the fires had
-been lighted on the top of these two pieces of timber. The
-interstice between them admitting the air from below, roared
-like a furnace, and blew up the bright flames on high; whilst
-the trunks themselves, which had speedily become ignited,
-contributed their own share to the general light and heat.
-There were several supplementary fires, for the great furnace
-was much too fierce for culinary operations; and the smoke
-from all these, pressed down, as it were, by the superincumbent
-mist, formed, by the reflection of the flames, a sort of luminous
-halo, beyond which it was impossible for eye to penetrate.
-Here and there fir branches were stuck into the
-ground to dry the clothes upon, for though the drizzle had
-not exactly ceased, the heat dried much faster than the rain
-moistened.</p>
-
-<p>Full in the blaze of light, and as near as he could approach
-to it without burning himself, stood Birger; his neat little
-figure just as tidy, and just as carefully dressed, as if there
-had been no such thing as falling rain, or wet juniper, or
-prickly brambles in the world. He was standing with his
-back to the fire, and his hands in the pockets of his shooting-jacket,
-watching the preparations for a late supper, and singing,
-at the full pitch of a very powerful voice, the magic words
-which had recalled the Parson to a state of consciousness.
-The Captain, who had evidently been furbishing up with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span>
-fresh chalk the “S. F.” on his cap, which looked quite white
-and new, notwithstanding the rain, had just returned from
-visiting his sentries, and was examining the lock of his American
-rifle, which he had carried with him, to see if it had
-sustained any damage from the wet. Jacob, and his attendant
-imps, were emerging from behind the flames with the
-everlasting black kettle, which was accompanied this time by
-a pile of steaks, cut from some mysterious animal, and served
-up on the splash-board of one of the carioles, by way of
-dish.</p>
-
-<p>“Halloo! Birger,” said the Parson; “you here! Rather
-a change in the general aspect of affairs since we parted
-last!”</p>
-
-<p>“You may well say that; I never saw such a determined
-day’s rain; I thought the twilight of the gods was come in
-real earnest.”</p>
-
-<p>“To judge from the fire that you have got up,” said the
-Parson, emerging from the tent, “you seem inclined to realize
-the old prophecy, that that twilight is to finish off by a
-general conflagration.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need not cast inquiring glances at me,” said Birger to
-the Captain, who, having satisfied himself about the state of
-his weapons, was trying to make out the allusion. “I am
-not going to tell you that long story now. The gods themselves,
-if we may trust the high song of Odin, used to take
-off the edge of their hunger, and thirst, too,—for they
-were thirsty souls,—before they called on Bragi, the god of
-minstrelsy, to sing even their own deeds. And, to tell you
-the truth, to say nothing of my being as hungry as a hunter,
-these steaks are most magnificent, and this kettle unusually
-savoury.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have you got in it?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Andhrimnir cooks Sahrimnir in Eldhrimnir,” replied
-Birger, quoting from the cookery of the prose Edda. “Do
-you not see Odin has sent us a present of heavenly meat
-from Valhalla?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense! what is the meat of Valhalla called here on
-earth?”</p>
-
-<p>“Goat’s flesh,” said Birger, demurely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” said the Parson, turning over, with his crimping
-knife, a bone almost big enough to have belonged to a
-small ox; “and this is a goat’s rib, is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Valhalla was always remarkable for its breed of goats,”
-said Birger: “but never you mind what rib it is, there’s a
-biscuit to eat with it, that is all you need care about, just
-now. I am afraid our host, the Skalfogdar” (bowing to the
-Captain), “cannot find you any currant jelly to eat with
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can find you some cranberry jelly, though,” said the
-Captain, “which is a much better thing, and much more characteristic
-of the country. Here, Jacob, hand me that mess-tin,
-will you. The very first thing I did, after reconnoitring
-my post, was to lay in a store of these cranberries, and to
-make them into jelly. I had not to go far for them. You
-would not like them in the Swedish fashion—pickled,—would
-you? I think the men have got some which they
-have made for themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, yes; and a little of the forbidden stuff, too,
-to wash it down with. Never mind the water, Piersen, I
-have taken my share of that already.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Jacob made his appearance, with four or five orre
-grouse, spitted upon a strip of fir;—Jacob piqued himself
-on his fjeld cuisine, and really did serve up his dinners admirably.
-The whole was concluded with split grayling, by
-way of cheese, for being north of the Wener Sjön, they were
-in the grayling country,—a circumstance which the Captain,
-whose post was not a mile from the river, had not been slow
-to profit by;—on the sunny morning of the preceding day,
-he had caught them by dozens. The grayling, which are
-seldom caught in Norway, where the rivers are mostly too
-rough for such tender fish, abound throughout the whole
-north of Sweden, and are worth anything to the fisherman;
-they render his chances of sport, as well as of provisions,
-very much less precarious, because they do everything which
-trout do not; they are stationary when—in Sweden, at all
-events—the trout is migratory; they come into high season
-when the trout are going out; they will not rise in a stormy
-day, which the trout loves; but, when the sun is bright and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span>
-the wind is low, and not a ripple curls the surface, and not
-a trout stirs beneath it, the swift, shadow-like grayling dot
-it with their rises like so many hail-stones. They are very
-good eating, too, when dressed in any way man can devise;
-but a very excellent method, and a very common method in
-Sweden, is to split them down the back, pepper them well,
-and dry them in the hot sun before broiling them, or making
-them into plok-fiske. This Jacob was unable to do on the
-present occasion, for the rain had been falling from the time
-of the Captain’s return from the river; so he had substituted
-for the sun that which was scarcely less hot—the
-Captain’s blazing fire; and his imitation was unanimously
-pronounced to have exceeded the original.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not think I should have fared like this at any of
-the farm houses,” said the Parson, stretching himself at full
-length on his cloak and basking at the fire, for the rain had
-now entirely ceased, and the bivouac began to look home-like
-and comfortable. “I must say it required a pretty firm
-determination to keep steadily onward, with soaked clothes
-and chilled bones and empty stomachs, such as we had this
-morning. I was sorely tempted to make for shelter; but I
-set before me the comforts of persevering, and I am very
-glad I did so. To say nothing of your company and Jacob’s
-dinner, this glorious blaze is far better than a farm-house
-stove, and my old cloak than a dirty sheep-skin. Well,
-virtue is its own reward. Jacob, fill the pot with hot water,
-and let us have a few embers here to keep it warm. Have
-you got any sugar?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing your countrymen are so remarkable for,”
-said Birger, “as a steady, resolute perseverance against difficulties
-and discouragements.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pluck?” suggested the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Pluck! you did not know when you were beaten at
-Waterloo, and so you won the battle; Wellington would
-have got an army of Englishmen out of the scrape of Moscow,
-if he had ever been ass enough to get them into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” said the Parson, “that this may be traced to a
-national peculiarity of ours—love of adventure. Other men
-will undergo hardships and incur dangers, in search of gain,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span>
-or even in the pursuit of some definite object, but the
-Englishman seeks his hardships for the pleasure of undergoing
-them,—courts his dangers for the pleasure of surmounting
-them, and follows out his adventure for adventure’s sake.”</p>
-
-<p>“In fact,” said the Captain, “he does just what we are all
-doing now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “and let no one say—what is the use
-of it?—what is the Englishman the better for diving into
-mines, and scaling mountains, and crossing deserts?—what
-has he to show for it? He has this to show for it,—a manliness
-of character,—a spirit to encounter the dangers of life,
-and a heart to overcome its difficulties. Depend upon it,
-while your aristocracy—men brought up and nourished in
-the very lap of luxury and ease—seek their pleasures in the
-dangers of the wild ocean, or the hardships of the stormy
-mountain-side, you will see no symptoms of degeneracy in
-the hardihood and manliness of your national character.
-Pluck is a genuine English word, slang though it be.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you may translate it into Swedish,” said the
-Captain, “for our English blood has a cross of Scandinavian
-in it, and there really is as great a similarity in our national
-characteristics as there is in the structure of our languages.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” said the Parson, “your word ‘Mod’ implies
-pluck, with a dash of fierceness in it. When it is said of
-some grand berserkar, ‘har oprist syn mod,’ it means that
-he has summoned his pluck, with the full intention of making
-his enemies aware of that fact. Still, however, it is a fair
-rendering of our more peaceable word, and you have a right
-to it; but I am quite sure you cannot translate that expression
-into any other language under the sun, without
-losing some part of its force.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whether any foreigners can translate the word into
-their own language,” said the Captain, “is more than I will
-undertake to say, but they perfectly understand and appreciate
-this peculiarity of our English character. Last year I
-was arranging with one of the Chamouny guides an expedition
-into the higher Alps; I had with me a jolly talking
-little French marquis, whom I had picked up at St. Gervais.
-He was an ambitious little fellow, and volunteered—Heaven<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span>
-help him!—to be my companion. My guide—(you recollect
-old Couttet, Parson?)—looked rather blank at this, and taking
-me aside, said in a low voice, ‘<i>absolument je n’irais pas avec
-ce Monsieur lá</i>.’ ‘Why?’ said I, rather astonished at the
-man refusing that which would certainly have put some
-additional francs into his pocket. ‘<i>Je connais bien ces
-Francais</i>,’ said he—‘an Englishman is fearful enough in
-the valleys, always saying he will not do this, and he cannot
-do that, because in truth he is so proud that he does not like
-to take anything in hand and be beat in it; but once get
-him on the mountain, and fairly in for it, and be the danger
-what it may, he faces it, and be the fatigue what it may, he
-keeps up a good heart, and in the end gets through it all as
-well as we do ourselves. Your Frenchman is as bold as
-brass in the valleys, and does not do badly for a spurt if he
-thinks people are admiring him, but he gets cowed when
-danger comes and no one to see him, and sits down and dies
-when he is tired.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Couttet was a sensible fellow, and knew his
-man,” said Birger, who, descended from the old aristocracy
-of Sweden, hated and despised the French party most cordially;
-“and how did you get rid of your travelling companion?”</p>
-
-<p>“O! Couttet took the management of that upon his own
-hands; he made the poor little marquis’s hair stand on end,
-with all sorts of stories about snow storms, and whirlwinds,
-and frozen travellers; which no doubt were true enough, for
-there is not a pass in the High Alps without its well-authenticated
-tale of death; so the little fellow came to me heartily
-ashamed of himself, and looking like a dog that was going
-to be whipped, with his ‘mille excuses,’ and so forth, and in
-fact, we then and there parted company, and I have not
-seen him from that time to this. He certainly was rather
-an ambitious Tom Thumb for the Col du Géant.—Hallo!
-there is something on foot there,” said he, interrupting himself,
-“hark to that! there goes another.” And in fact, three
-or four shots not very distant from them were distinctly
-heard, though they came, not sharp and ringing as such
-sounds generally strike upon the ear through the clear air of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span>
-the north, but deadened by the mist, as if, so to speak, the
-sound had been smothered by a feather-bed. “There goes
-another! and another!” then came a whole platoon—“O,
-by George! I must go and visit my sentries.”</p>
-
-<p>“All nonsense,” said Birger, “one fellow fires at a rustling
-leaf, and then all the rest crack off their pieces, by the way
-of follow-the-leader; you may just as well make yourself
-comfortable,” drawing his cloak round him by way of suiting
-the action to the word. “Hand me over the bottle, Jacob!
-some more hot water in the pot!”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go, however,” said the Captain, who was young at
-picket work, and proportionably anxious; so shouldering his
-rifle, and calling to Tom, his corporal and interpreter, he
-disappeared into the outer darkness, while his friends
-settled themselves more comfortably in their cloaks, and
-threw half a dozen additional, not to say superfluous, logs
-into the glorious blaze.</p>
-
-<p>The dispositions at the foot of the pass had been made
-with great judgment; the object was, if possible, to prevent
-anything from passing during the night, but at any rate
-to arrange matters so that nothing should pass without being
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>For this purpose a pretty large fire was lighted so near to
-the perpendicular part of the rock that nothing would be
-likely to go behind it, the shrubs of course being cleared
-away from its vicinity; and on the opposite side of the
-passage was a little sentry-box of fir branches, under which
-sat two Swedes, with directions to let fly at anything that
-crossed between them and the fire; so that if they missed, as
-most likely they would, the picket above might at least be
-prepared.</p>
-
-<p>The men, who had been excited by the firing, were sharp
-as needles, and indeed, were not very far from letting fly at
-their own commander, but they had seen nothing that they
-could be very certain about, though of course their imaginations
-were full of half the beasts in Noah’s Ark; and so, after
-straining his eyes into the thick darkness for half an hour or
-more, the Captain heaped fresh fuel on the fire, recommended
-a sharp look-out, returned slowly up the pass,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span>
-and was well laughed at for his pains as he resumed his seat
-by the blazing tree.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Birger, what is that story that you and the
-Parson were alluding to just before dinner, I hope you have
-eaten and drank enough by this time to qualify you for
-relating it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, the twilight of the gods? the Ragnarök, as the
-Edda calls it; that is not a story, it is a bit of heathenism.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me,” said the Captain, “that you Swedes
-keep your heathenism a great deal better than you do your
-Christianity.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Norwegians do, certainly,” said Birger, “the fact is,
-their conversion was effected by force of arms, rather than by
-force of argument; the party of Olaf the Christian was
-stronger than the party of Hakon the heathen, so they killed
-and converted, and the people became Christians, and very
-appropriately adopted the saint’s battle-axe for their national
-emblem. As for their Reformation, that was simply an
-order from a despotic court, not resisted, only because the
-people did not care much about the matter. ‘It will not
-make herrings dear,’ was the popular remark on the subject.
-The creed of Odin was the only religion that they were in
-earnest about, and that is why the legends that they cling
-to, are, nine times in ten, heathen rather than Christian.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I have read that story about the herrings in
-Geijer, but applied to a different nation,” said the Parson;
-“it will not do for you Swedes to be throwing stones at
-Norway, in the matter of that Reformation; your original
-conversion by St. Ansgar, was a good deal more creditable
-than theirs, but your Reformation was simply the party of
-Gustaf stronger than the party of Christiern—you reformed
-your Church because you wanted to dissolve the union of
-Kalmar.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you say about your own Reformation?” said
-Birger.</p>
-
-<p>“That it has nothing to do with the twilight of the gods,
-which the Captain wants to hear about—tell us what you
-Swedes believe about that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we Swedes do not believe in it at all; it is not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span>
-like the legends of the Walpurgis Night, or the death of
-Baldur, which are annually kept alive by the change of
-seasons which they commemorate. This legend has lost its
-hold on the popular mind; but it is a curious theory, notwithstanding,
-because it contains evident traces of a revelation
-corrupted, because disjoined from that people to whose
-guardianship had been committed the oracles of Divine
-Truth. In the twilight of the gods may be clearly traced
-a representation of the end of the world, such as is revealed
-to us:—a fierce winter, the most terrible natural affliction
-to the northern mind, is to usher it in; then comes the
-general falling away, which we are ourselves taught to
-expect.<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<p>“The sun and the moon are to be devoured by the wolves,
-that have been continually pursuing them ever since
-creation, and every now and then, by seizing them, have
-caused eclipses; the stars fall, the earth quakes so that the
-trees are shaken from their roots, and the mountains totter;—then
-the Midgard Serpent turns on its ocean bed, and an
-immense wave rushes over the land, upon which floats the
-phantom ship, Naglfar, which is built of the nails of dead
-men—the wolf, Fenrir, together with the midgard serpent,—both
-of them the offspring of Loki, the Principle of Evil,—which
-hitherto have been chained down by the Æsir, are
-now permitted to break loose; the heavens are cleft in
-twain, and the sons of Muspell, the Band of Brightness,
-headed by Surtur the Avenger, ride through the breach, and
-advance by the bridge of Bifrost which bursts asunder
-beneath them. For the time the Avengers join their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
-bright bands with Loki and the Children of Darkness, and
-advance to the battle-field of Vigrid, where the destinies of
-the world are to be decided.</p>
-
-<p>“In the mean while the gods are fully prepared; Heimdall,
-the Warder of Heaven, has sounded the Horn Gjallar,
-and the gods assemble in council;—Valhalla pours out from
-its five hundred and forty gates its hosts of heroes; these,
-which are the men who have been slain in battle from the
-beginning of the world, and ever since have been trained by
-daily tournaments for this very purpose, are eager for the
-combat; and Odin, having previously ridden over for the last
-time to the Well of Mimir, and consulted the Norna, marshalls
-his hosts on the field of Vigrid; loud and desperate is
-the battle, the Powers of Evil fall one by one before the gods,
-but very few of these survive the conflict. Thor, having
-killed the Midgard Serpent, falls exhausted with his efforts
-and dies; Frey, who has parted with the sword of victory,
-falls before the avenger, Surtur; Loki and Heimdall engage
-in battle and mortally wound each other; Odin himself is
-swallowed up by the wolf Fenrir, which is instantly destroyed
-by Vidar; and last of all, Tyr, the God of Victory, falls in
-the very act of overcoming the dog Garm.</p>
-
-<p>“Surtur the Avenger, having now no opponent, sets the
-earth and the heavens on fire with his excessive brightness,
-and the whole race of men is consumed, with the exception
-of certain chosen individuals who lie hid and protected in
-the forest of Hodmimir. Then Surtur himself retires before
-Vidar, the God of Silence, who, calling to him Modi and
-Magni (Courage and Might) the sons of Thor (Violence),
-and summoning Baldur (Innocence) from the realms of Hela
-(Night or Invisibility), founds a new heaven and a new earth,
-and a new race of inhabitants, and they dwell on the plains
-of Ida (perpetual youth), where Asgard formerly stood, and
-their descendants shall spread over the new earth, which
-shall be lighted by a new sun.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘The radiant sun</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A daughter bears</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere Fenrir takes her;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On her mother’s course</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shall ride that maid</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the gods have perished.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“And now, to quote the conclusion of the Prose Edda, ‘If
-thou hast any further questions to ask, I know not who can
-answer thee, for I never heard tell of any one who could
-relate what will happen in the other ages of the world.
-Make, therefore, the best use thou canst of what has been
-imparted to thee.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said the Captain, “this is Revelation!”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure it is,” said the Parson; “and my wonder is
-not that so much of revealed truth should have been corrupted,
-but that so much should have been preserved. There
-is no occasion for the sneers of those who say that in the
-conversion of Scandinavia, St. Ansgar merely substituted
-Valentine for Vali, St. Philip for Iduna, and our Lord for
-Baldur. He had, in truth, little to teach his converts beyond
-explaining allegories, and shewing them that their religion
-was only a mild, yet tolerably faithful type of that which
-was actually true,—that Thor and Odin were attributes, not
-persons, and that Asgard and Gimli, and Hela and Nifleheim,
-were states and conditions, not places.”</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that this conversation had been
-continued altogether without interruption. Shots had from
-time to time rung through the night-air; some faintly and
-from great distances; some, as it would seem, within a few
-hundred yards of them; there was evidently something restless
-in the circle of the skal, but their own sentries gave no
-notice, and the ear becoming accustomed to such noises, the
-shots had of late been little regarded.</p>
-
-<p>One moment, however, changed the whole aspect of affairs,
-and recalled the thoughts of the party from the heights of
-Asgard to the affairs of middle earth.</p>
-
-<p>A shot from the foot of the pass; then another! “Hjortarne!
-hjortarne!” (the stags! the stags!) roared out the
-sentries.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain sprang into a dark corner, bringing the whole
-blaze before him, and cocked his rifle. Then came a sound
-like a troop of horse at full gallop—a rush!—a charge!
-Jacob flying into the arms of the sportsmen, his coffee pot
-scattering around its fragrant contents,—dark forms bounding
-across the bright spot of light, scattering the men, and
-the wet clothes, and the cookery, and the crockery! A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span>
-crack from the Captain’s rifle! a crash! and the whole scene
-passed away like an illusion, leaving the circle tenantless, in
-the midst of which the great fire was blazing away as quietly
-and peaceably as if nothing unusual had ever been illumined
-by its light.</p>
-
-<p>“By the Thousand! that shot told somewhere,” said
-Birger, picking himself up. “By George, it is Jacob! poor
-devil! Well, I am sorry for him, the old scoundrel.”</p>
-
-<p>But Jacob, when he could be brought to his senses, could
-not find out that he had been wounded at all, though his
-great unwieldy frock-coat was split up the back, and the tails
-rolled in some unaccountable way round his head. His
-ideas, which were never peculiarly bright, had got completely
-bewildered, and nothing could convince him that a legion of
-Trolls had not been making a ball-room of his ample back.</p>
-
-<p>“It was not Jacob I fired at,” said the Captain, quietly
-reloading his rifle; “take a pine knot, and look a little
-further up the pass; I suspect you will find something more
-valuable than our fat friend. Oh, that’s it!” as a loud shout
-was heard; “I thought it could not be far off,—bring him
-into the light.”</p>
-
-<p>Birger repeated the command in Swedish, and presently
-three or four of the men emerged from the outer darkness,
-bearing, with some difficulty, an enormous elk, the patriarch
-of the forest.</p>
-
-<p>“Well done,” said Birger; “capital shot! Here! Tom,
-Torkel, out with your knives, and off with the skin; do not
-think twice about it. Ten to one we shall have Moodie
-here; he will not mind his own people much, but he knows
-that we are not in the habit of firing into the air, and he will
-be coming to see what has been disturbing the camp all
-night. There, look sharp! never mind a tear or two; make
-that beast into goat’s flesh as soon as you can. Cut off the
-head at once, you cannot disguise the horns!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but what if Moodie does see it?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said the Captain, “Birger is quite right. Moodie
-is in command, and he would consider it his duty to report
-us; and besides, I will answer for it he would jump at the
-chance of playing Brutus, and delating his own friends.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span>
-There was a good deal of significance in the way he cautioned
-us that elks and red-deer were strictly preserved. It is a
-fact, too, that with all that immense range of royal forest at
-his undivided command, he has never shot a stag or an elk
-yet. He considers himself on honour, and behaves like a
-gentleman and a kammerjunker, as he is.”<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p>“He is the only man in Sweden who does, then,” said
-Birger. “I will engage for it. Bjornstjerna, Hof Ofwer
-Jagmästere, as he writes himself, never loses a chance if he
-can get one on the sly. By the way, how nicely the mist
-has cleared off, without any one seeing it. Positively I can
-see the stars again. I told you it would be so:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent10">“Through storm and rain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The weary midnight hours must wane,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere joyous morning come again,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">And bid the gloom retire.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I wish I could take you up to our day look-out place,”
-said the Captain; “we should have a good view of the watch-fires
-from it now. I stood there for an hour together on the
-first night, looking at the fires of the hållet; and by this time
-the dref must have come quite near enough for us to see
-them too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Birger, “come along! I think I know the
-way,—it is the path I came down by this morning, is it not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes it is, but it will never do on a dark night like this;
-it is not over-safe by day, and there are shreds of the mist
-hanging about us still. We want light for that path.”</p>
-
-<p>“And light you shall have,” said Birger. “Here, Tom,
-split me this fir-root, it is as full of turpentine as it can hold.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-There,” continued he, thrusting the end of one of the slips
-into the blaze, and striking up the song of the Dalecarlian
-miners:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Brother, kindle thy bright light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For here below ’tis dark as night;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gloomy may be on earth thy way,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But light and good shall make it day.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Now then, I think we start by this ledge; light another
-of these pine-slips, Tom, and bring the whole bundle with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>The path was not altogether a safe one, certainly, for it
-was a narrow ledge, winding round the face of the cliff that
-formed the northern side of the pass, and leading to a sort of
-promontory which jutted forward somewhat in advance of
-the range; but there were plenty of branches to hold on by,
-and there was no real danger as long as there was light
-enough to see where to place the feet; and when they had
-got fairly out of the range of their own enormous fire, the
-stars were glimmering, and the night was not, after all, so
-very dark. A withered ash, the bare trunk of which stretched
-out horizontally, like a finger-post, from the extreme point,
-was their look-out, and bore the strip of calico, once white,
-but now sullied and dishonoured by twenty-four hours of
-continuous rain, which marked the position of their picket.</p>
-
-<p>The look-out commanded completely the position of the
-hållet, the encampment of which was placed among some
-straggling copse that feathered the reverse slope of the spur
-of rock which connected the range of hills with the rapids
-and falls of the river. Among this bushwood were scattered,
-irregularly, the cooking and sleeping fires, glancing every
-now and then on the huts of boughs and other temporary
-shelter which had been run up to protect the men from the
-wet, while, on the bare crest of the spur, which had been
-entirely denuded of what little timber it possessed, was a
-line of fifty watch-fires, one to each skalfogde’s command;
-each of these had its stoker, who from time to time replenished
-its blaze with fresh logs,—and its sentry, who, sitting or
-lying in some dark recess, was to fire at everything that
-came within the circle of the light. Everything betokened<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span>
-extreme watchfulness; not a fire burnt dim,—black figures
-were continually passing and repassing before them,—and
-every now and then a straggling shot waked up the echoes,
-and kept the whole line in a state of continual agitation.</p>
-
-<p>The dref, which had advanced a little during the day, was
-still five or six miles off, and their fires, which formed a vast
-semicircle, were, for the most part, hidden by the trees; but
-a hazy and continuous line of misty light defined the whole
-position, tinging the very sky with redness, so that the receding
-skirts of the mist looked luminous, like a terrestrial aurora
-borealis.</p>
-
-<p>While they yet gazed, the tree tops, which, beyond the
-reflection of the fires, had hitherto been one unbroken sea
-of blackness, came gradually into view: first the spiry tops
-of the firs, then the rounder and softer outlines of the birch
-and ash, grew more and more defined; then the character
-of the foliage became distinguishable,—the glaucous white of
-the poplar and the fringiness of the ash and rowan: then a
-soft pale light, interspersed with deep broad shadows, was
-cast over the scene, slightly dimming the glow of the watch-fires,
-and contrasting strangely with their yellow light; and
-then the half moon rose up from the cliffs behind them, illuminating
-the distant landscape, but bringing that immediately
-beneath their feet into blacker and darker shade.</p>
-
-<p>“Your friend Bjornstjerna is a plucky fellow,—that I will
-say for him; most men would have turned tail at such a
-drench of rain as we have had; and now virtue promises
-to be its own reward—we shall have a glorious day to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we shall,” said Birger,—“indeed, I am sure we
-shall, as far as the weather is concerned; but I am afraid
-that will not prevent us from suffering some loss by what we
-have had already. You may depend on it every beast
-within our circle has gone the rounds and tried the weak
-points of it,—some have escaped, at all events. The wolves
-last night, and the stags just now, have forced the passage
-with very little loss; and certainly ours is not the most unguarded
-spot in the line.”</p>
-
-<p>“By George! Birger! that shot is from our post!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Not a doubt of that;—and there’s another! Wait a bit,
-it may be nothing after all.”</p>
-
-<p>“O! but it is something!” said the Captain, in an agony,
-as three or four more shots rang from the out-post itself,
-followed by confused cries and shouts, as if men were engaged
-in mortal conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain threw himself on the steep descent, the whole
-of which he would have accomplished very much quicker than
-was at all salutary for his bones, had not Birger caught him
-by the collar as he was disappearing.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, mind what you are about! Take a torch
-in your hand, if you must go; or, better still, let Tom go
-first. Whatever it is, the thing must be over long before
-you can get there. All you will do at that headlong speed
-will be to break your neck down the precipice!”</p>
-
-<p>Tom, much more cool, had already taken the lead, and was
-throwing a light on the narrow and broken pathway for the
-Captain to see where to place his footsteps. Birger’s selection
-of Tom for a leader was a good one, for it was absolutely impossible
-for one man to pass another during the descent, and
-no threats or entreaties from the Captain could urge the
-phlegmatic Norwegian beyond the bounds of strict prudence.
-The last ten feet of the rock the Captain leaped, and pounced
-down from above into the midst of the picket.</p>
-
-<p>Before the great fire lay a full-grown bear, dead, and
-bleeding from a dozen wounds, and round him were grouped
-the whole picket—including the sentries, who had deserted
-their posts,—whooping, and hallooing, and screaming, and
-making all sorts of unintelligible noises.</p>
-
-<p>The story was soon told, when the men had been reduced
-to something like order. The bear had been attempting to
-steal past the first fire, and, sidling away from it, had almost
-run over the two sentries, who were much too frightened to
-fire with any aim or effect. The bear, almost as frightened
-as they, had rushed forward, but, startled at the great blaze
-upon which he came suddenly at the turn of the pass, hesitated
-a moment, and received Torkel’s spear in his breast.
-The rifles and guns, which were lying about, were caught
-up and discharged indiscriminately, and, as luck would have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-it, without taking effect on any of the party. Some rushed
-on with their axes, some with knives, some with blazing
-brands; and the bear dropped down among them, mobbed
-to death, every individual of the party being firmly convinced
-that it was he, and none but he, who had struck the victor
-stroke.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said Birger, “there is the bear, at all events; and
-a good thing for us that he is there; we should not have
-heard the last of it from Moodie for some time, if he had
-slipped off. Hang him up, my men; we will skin him when
-we have time and daylight; we do not want to make goat’s
-meat of that fellow, at all events. Hang him up openly, by
-the side of the wolf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bother that moon,” said the Captain, sulkily, for he did
-not enter into the spirit of ‘<i>quod facit per alium facit per
-se</i>.’ “What a set of lunatics we were to go staring after the
-picturesque instead of minding our business; all of us together,
-too!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was very poetical,” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that is the very thing. Birger, you do not take in
-the allusion, I can see—a ‘grāte powut,’ as they pronounce
-it, is, in Ireland, slang for an irrecoverable fool.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! well!” said Birger, laughing,—for, being an old
-bear-hunter, he was not jealous, and could afford to laugh,—“we
-have not got to the higher flights of poetry yet, and
-we will take good care not to leave our posts again. As for
-you, Captain, <i>pends-toi, brave Crillon, nous nous sommes combattus
-à Arcques et tu n’y étais pas</i>. However, I think we had
-better get a little sleep, those who can, for the chances are
-we shall want steady nerves to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>So, sending back the sentries to their posts, the whole
-party, with their weapons by their sides, and everything
-ready for a sudden emergency, rolled themselves up in their
-cloaks, with their feet to the fire, one of them (taking it by
-turns of an hour each) walking up and down, rifle in hand,
-within the circle of its light.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BEATING OUT THE SKAL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Now the hunting train is ready. Hark, away! By dale and height</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Horns are sounding,—hawks ascending up to Odin’s halls of light.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Terror-struck, the wild-wood creatures seek their dens ’mid woods and reeds;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While, with spear advanced pursuing, she, the air Valkyria speeds.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Frithi of Tegner.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Hillo, Moodie! what news?” said the Captain; “have
-a cup of coffee and a—a—chop,” as that individual strode
-down the pass from the side farthest removed from the skal
-looking—as, indeed, was very nearly the case—as if he had
-neither trimmed his beard nor washed his face since the
-beginning of the campaign.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the news is, that you had better look out sharp, if
-you mean to do credit to my recommendation. I had a
-message from Bjornstjerna last night, that he meant to get
-the dref in motion an hour before sunrise, so as to beat out,
-and give the men time to get home before evening; they
-must have been advancing for these two hours; our people
-have heard their shouts distinctly enough, and I only wonder
-we have had no game yet. Capital mutton chops, these,” he
-added; “who is your butcher?”</p>
-
-<p>“O, we are pretty good foragers,” said the Captain, carelessly,
-but at the same time casting an anxious glance round
-the encampment, to see whether there were any tell-tale horns
-or hoofs lurking about. “Terrible weather yesterday, was
-not it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, it was as much as I could do to keep
-the men at their posts; I have got one or two skulkers down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span>
-in the Länsman’s books, but I do not think I can have the
-conscience to inflict the fine; I had half a mind to skulk
-myself;—we must do it, though, in justice to the honest
-fellows who braved the weather. I think the best man I
-have is a woman; she did more service in shaming the men
-and keeping them to their duty than a dozen of us. I had
-occasion to degrade a skalfogde for drunkenness, and I promoted
-her into the vacancy on the spot. How the men
-laughed: they call her some Swedish equivalent to the
-‘Dashing White Serjeant,’—and I only wish I had a dozen
-white serjeants instead of one. But what have you done
-here in the shooting way? I heard a good deal of firing last
-night from your post; you have made yourselves pretty
-comfortable, at all events.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a way we have in the army,” said the Parson.
-“There is our <i>spoliarium</i>, however,” pointing to a group of
-carcasses that were hanging to the lower branches of a fir,—“one
-bear, two wolves, five foxes, a lot of hares, and”—here
-the Captain plucked his sleeve,—“and—that is all,
-besides a young bear which I killed in the fjeld as I came
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh come! that is not so bad; and that bear is a glorious
-fellow! who killed him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we cannot justly say,” replied the Captain, sheepishly:
-“the fact is, he made a charge upon the picket, and it
-took a good many hands to quiet him,—you may see that by
-the gashes; I am afraid the skin is terribly injured.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a mercenary dog you are; these are honourable
-scars, which, while they impair the beauty, only enhance the
-value;—every cut is the memorial of a gallant deed.”</p>
-
-<p>Whether the Captain,—who was vehemently anxious to
-kill a bear to his own hand, and whose conscience upbraided
-him bitterly for his last night’s dereliction of duty,—coincided
-in this sentiment, might be doubted; at all events, he
-made no attempt to remove the doubt by indiscreet confessions,
-and was only too glad to shift the subject, lest any
-untimely observation from his companions or attendants
-might reveal the true state of the case.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you done yourself?” said he; “I am sure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span>
-your people must have fired twenty shots for our one; I
-thought you were having a mock skirmish, at one time.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, those people fire at anything or nothing, just for the
-sake of making a noise. We have got a good many wolves
-and foxes, though, and a rascally lynx or two; but we have
-not been so fortunate as you with the bears; though I am
-clear we saw two or three during the night. I am sorry to
-say that there were three or four stags killed, and I do not
-know what to do about it. There was a herd last night very
-restless; it had tried our line at several points. I had given
-strict orders to let them pass, but they always got headed
-back, somehow,—in fact, the men fired at them, that is the
-truth of it, and the skalfogdar say they could not prevent
-them. This morning, as many as three were brought in
-dead, and I am sure I do not see how I am to identify the
-men who fired; they were firing all night, and every skalfogde
-stoutly denies that his party had anything to do
-with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! how were the people to distinguish one beast from
-another in the dark?” said the Captain; “you may be
-thankful they have not shot one another, and that you have
-not had three or four peasants brought in this morning,
-instead of three or four deer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, there would have been less said if it had
-been so. However, I must report it to Bjornstjerna, and
-leave him to do what he pleases. I strongly suspect my
-dashing white serjeant of being one of the murderers. Give
-me another chop,—that mutton of yours is the very best
-thing I have eaten since we left Gäddebäck,—and then you
-really must get to your posts; we shall have the dref down
-upon us before we know where we are. Several hares had
-been showing themselves, and trying to pass the line before
-I came up, and they will not do that by daytime, unless they
-are driven. You had better break up the encampment as soon
-as you have done breakfast: let Jacob stow everything ready
-for moving, and then send him off to have the carioles harnessed.
-The skal will break up before noon, and then there
-will be such a rush of fellows wanting to get home, that the
-chances are we shall have a Flemish account of our horses, if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span>
-we do not look sharp after them now. People are in no ways
-particular on these occasions; there are so many of them, that
-it is difficult to fix the blame anywhere, and all roguery
-goes down to the account of mistake and confusion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the Captain, jumping up and carefully
-loading the rifle which Tom had just been cleaning from the
-effects of the night’s dews and rain, while the shot-gun had
-been doing duty in its place by the Captain’s side,—“then
-here goes; I am going to the foot of the pass, and shall
-not want Tom this half hour, so he may help Jacob. Birger
-is going to the look-out place, and he will not want his man
-either. What will you do, Parson?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I think I will take a turn with Moodie down the
-hållet, when he goes back to inspect his posts. I shall want
-Torkel to carry my rifle, as I may not come back here; but
-your two men will be enough to help Jacob. How are we
-to carry these great beasts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that is Bjornstjerna’s business. I dare say he has
-given orders for a sufficient number of carts, or, at all events,
-we shall have men enough to carry them when the skal breaks
-up. These are public property,—you need not trouble yourselves
-about them; what we have to think about is our own
-little belongings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Public property!” said the Captain; “I did not bargain
-for that; I want the skins to hang up in my paternal halls,
-as trophies of the battle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you must buy them,” said Moodie; “there will be
-an auction up the village as soon as the skal breaks up, and
-by offering a little more than the market price, you may
-secure anything that you want. It really is a very fair regulation,”
-he added, observing a shade of discontent on the Captain’s
-brow. “You shot them, no doubt; but you could
-not have got a shot at them at all if it had not been for these
-people driving them. Properly speaking, they belong to
-Bjornstjerna, but I understand he has given up his right to
-the men, if so, they will all be converted into brandy before
-night-fall, you may be quite sure. However, come along,—that
-last volley was from the dref, and it sounded quite
-close.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span></p>
-
-<p>Moodie’s path was by no means either easy or safe, for he
-carefully avoided the straight road which would have led him
-across the shooting line, and contriving to make a circuit and
-scramble down the face of the cliff at a small fissure, which
-lay a quarter of a mile to the north of the pass, he attained
-the rear of the hållet without disturbing or tainting the
-ground. It may be observed, that there was no such extreme
-necessity for all this precaution; but Moodie was, after
-all, an Englishman, and a hunter of but four years’ standing,
-and, if he was the least bit in the world a martinet, he
-was not altogether without excuse,—and really his position
-was, it must be confessed, very scientifically occupied.</p>
-
-<p>At the time that he and the Parson came on the ground,
-the hållet was just relieving guard, in order to give the
-morning watch an opportunity of breakfasting before the
-general turn out; and the scene was extremely picturesque.</p>
-
-<p>The breakfast was an extempore affair enough, except
-among those parties who had been so fortunate as to
-knock a hare on the head, or to secure a joint of what
-Moodie turned his face away from, and the Captain persisted
-in calling mutton. A little rye meal, mixed up cold,
-or in special cases, when kettles could be had, made into
-stirabout, was very nearly the whole of it. An older commander
-would have closed his eyes to the sight of brandy,
-and his nose to the smell of aniseed, but Moodie was young,
-and faithful to his trust.</p>
-
-<p>Groups of men and women were collected round the fires
-for cooking, some rubbing up firearms, some snapping and
-oiling obstinate locks and picking touchholes which the wet
-had damaged, and drying powder which either would not go
-off at all or else flashed in the eyes and singed the hair
-and eyebrows of the operators. Gradually, however, they
-all began to straggle into their line, for the sounds of the
-dref were more and more audible, and now and then some
-scared and crouching beast would show itself on the side of
-the hill, and after drawing upon itself the fire of all who
-were within a quarter of mile of it, would shrink timidly
-back into cover, nine times in ten absolutely unharmed.
-Now would come, high over head, and altogether free from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span>
-the chance of shot, a gallant blackcock or a tjäder, who,
-having run or flitted under cover for miles, had at last taken
-heart of grace, looked his danger in the face, and dashed
-across the line with that success which bravery deserves.
-Hares would from time to time race along the brow, unable
-to make up their mind which way they would head, and
-sometimes would draw a fruitless shot or two from a young
-and over-ardent sportsman, followed by the grave rebuke of
-his steadier skalfogde.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Captain had advanced along into the
-shooting line, and building himself up a screen of branches,
-where he could fully command the passage, waited patiently
-for what luck would send him; absolutely despising the
-smaller game that occasionally stole across the line and
-sheltered themselves in fancied security in the skalplatz,
-and not greatly disturbed by the occasional double-shots
-from Birger’s look-out place on the cliff above, though this
-was not unfrequently followed by a rattle of the twigs, or a
-soft <i>thud</i>, as his victim came tumbling to the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Birger’s post, indeed, had proved an excellent position for
-winged game, for the grouse, though by no means plentiful
-anywhere in Sweden, had been collected from twenty miles
-of country by the continued driving. Many, of course, had
-taken wing, and dashing over the heights, had found security
-in the higher fjeld, or across the river. But the grouse,
-especially the old cock, is a running bird, and numbers of
-them had continued toddling away by short and startled
-runs, a mile or so in advance of the dref, and now, hearing
-the noises in front as well as in the rear, and beginning to
-comprehend the precise dangers of their position, were, one
-after another, taking wing. Many of these followed the line
-of the cliffs, unwilling, perhaps unable to face them, but coasting
-their inequalities, and looking out for a lower point;
-these would come exactly on a level with Birger’s stand, and
-very seldom passed it unharmed.</p>
-
-<p>All this the Captain left unheeded; his soul was above
-black game; and, burning to wash away the disgrace of the
-preceding night, he kept his eye resolutely fixed on the
-shooting line; something moves—it is a bear—no—a rascally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-wolf, in that nonchalant style which no amount of
-danger will induce him to put off, slouches across—not across,
-for he is worthy of the Captain’s rifle; a shot reaches him,
-and he rolls over and over to the very foot of the shelter he
-had sought. Not a stir is heard from the Captain’s screen,
-and when the little puff of white smoke is dissipated into
-air, no one would have told where the fatal shot had come
-from. There goes a real full-grown bear, in downright
-earnest, and followed by two half-grown cubs, crouching and
-squatting, and making themselves as small as possible, like
-so many rabbits stealing out of cover; but confound them,
-they are three hundred yards down the line, the Captain
-will not risk wounding or missing them, and they disappear
-into the trees of the skalplatz to be headed back by the
-hållet when too late to return.</p>
-
-<p>And now the shouts and cries began to come louder and
-louder; and the hares, which had lingered as long as possible
-on the edge of the wood, began to creep, or steal, or race, or
-bound across the line, and among them several specimens of
-better game; the men were actually beginning to show
-themselves here and there in what, from the closing in of
-the ranks, had now become close order, so that nothing could
-have passed their line, when a gallant bear, with head erect
-and mouth open, dashed into the opening at full gallop, and
-came straight upon the Captain’s hiding-place, as if he knew
-where his enemy was lying, and meant, at all events, not to
-die without vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain fired deliberately,—paused for a moment to
-see the effect of his shot—then fired his second barrel; both
-took effect on the broad chest exposed to him, though without
-checking, for a moment, the rush of the bear. On he
-came!—the screen went down like reeds before him; but
-the Captain had thrown himself flat on the ground, and,
-covered by the branches, had escaped the view of his adversary,
-who plunged over them, dashed at the opposite cover,
-and disappeared from view.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, that was a near thing,” said Bjornstjerna,
-who cantered up to the spot on his pony; “but a miss is as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span>
-good as a mile,—not that you missed that rascal; I saw
-both shots strike as plainly as ever I saw anything in my
-life. Never mind, my boy, you have not lost him; he will
-not go far, for all his gallant bearing. Larssen!” he shouted,
-“Larssen! come here and take my pony. We must ride the
-Apostle’s horse<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> now;” and, leaping off, he proceeded to arrange
-his army, causing each skalfogde to muster his own
-men, as they came up, on the edge of the shooting line.
-Soiled, and wet, and dirty they looked: a Swede is rather a
-picturesque animal, when you are far enough off not to see
-his dirt, particularly when there is any general muster of
-them, for as each parish weaves its own wadmaal, or coarse
-cloth, and each wears it of a particular colour or pattern, the
-commencement of a skal looks, at a little distance, like a
-muster of regular troops, in regular, though rather eccentric
-uniforms: but the rains, and the dirt, and the mud-stains had
-reduced this to a very general average,—a sort of forest uniform
-of neutral tint.</p>
-
-<p>Advantage was taken of the halt to clean and reload the
-fire-arms, most of which had been rendered useless in the
-morning’s beat; for though the sun was shining brightly,
-there had been no wind, and the rain-drops of yesterday were
-glittering like diamonds on the branches, and pattering down
-like a shower-bath on all who moved them.</p>
-
-<p>In the mean time, the two chiefs having completed their
-junction, held a short consultation, and it was determined to
-advance a strong party from each side, close to the roots of
-the cliffs, sufficiently numerous to allow each man to touch
-his neighbour, and then to beat the skalplatz out to the
-river, which, not being quite so rapid or impassable as was
-expected, was guarded by the boats.</p>
-
-<p>This involved the abandonment of the Captain’s picket,
-which reinforced the beating party, the <i>materiel</i> being conveyed,
-under the superintendence of Jacob, to the travelling-waggon
-which had been brought as near to the scene of
-action as the forest roads permitted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375"></a>[375]</span></p>
-
-<p>And now began the real dangers of the skal,—the difficulty
-of restraining the men from firing indiscriminately into the
-skalplatz, and shooting everything alike,—wolf, hare, fox, or
-beater.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the men were sober, and the officers well
-aware of the danger. Flags were sent into the forest to
-mark the advancing line; strict injunctions were given that
-none should be permitted to advance faster than his neighbours,
-and a trusty man on the outside of the cover carried
-a white flag about five yards before the main body of the
-beaters, followed by an <i>extempore</i> provost marshal, with a
-party of trusty men, who had orders to tie up and flog on
-the spot any man who fired at anything whatever in the rear
-of the flags.</p>
-
-<p>All these arrangements were completed in little more than
-half-an-hour, and the bugles on both sides rang out the advance.
-The progress was very slow, not only on account of
-the necessity of preserving the accurate line, but because the
-beasts themselves required so much rousing; many of the
-smaller game, and, on one occasion, even a wolf, absolutely
-refused to move at all, and was knocked down or speared as
-it lay. In no case was resistance made by any of the wild
-beasts, with the single exception of the gallant fox, who,
-desperate but unsubdued, stood boldly at bay, and bit
-furiously at everything within its reach, but in vain,—for as
-the line soon became two or three deep, escape was next to
-an impossibility. One of the bear cubs, a three-parts grown
-animal, was dispatched by a blow of a hatchet, and the other
-was shot in the thick cover, by a man who had almost stepped
-upon it without seeing it. The Captain’s bear, a full-grown
-male, did not live ten minutes after it had gained the cover;
-there was no faltering in its gait or symptom of injury, for
-no muscle had been cut or bone broken by the shot, and its
-pluck and energy had carried it on till it fell suffocated by
-internal bleeding.</p>
-
-<p>And now the shouts rang out from the river-side; the
-she-bear had taken the water, and was gallantly forcing her
-way across it at a point rather higher than the boats had
-expected her. The stream was strong; the boats were at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[376]</span>
-some distance; the Swedes, who were never good at moving-shots,
-had blazed away when she first dashed into the
-stream, and there was every chance of her escape, for they
-are terribly awkward in loading their terribly awkward firearms;
-the rowers were pulling away for life and death, and
-the heavy boats were forcing their slow progress against the
-stream, which was gradually bringing the bear down to them
-as she swam across it, when a long-shot from Bjornstjerna
-took effect, she rolled over, recovered herself, struck out
-again, but was carried down among the boats, secured, and
-brought to land.</p>
-
-<p>The game was then mustered,—so far, indeed, as it could
-be recovered, for it was shrewdly suspected by some, that the
-whole was not forthcoming. There were four full-grown
-bears and three cubs, seven wolves, two lynxes, three or four
-badgers, and a queer nondescript animal of the genus <i>canis</i>,
-which they called a filfras; foxes there were in some numbers,
-and this a much more valuable description of animal
-than ours; hares were numberless, and also squirrels,—many
-of both these last species of game, too, had been stewed and
-eaten on the preceding days. Whether any other description
-of larger game had been shot, did not appear. Notwithstanding
-what Moodie had said about the herd of stags, none
-were paraded at the muster, and as he did not, after all,
-make any complaint to the Ofwer Jagmästere on the subject,
-it may be concluded that the whole was a mistake or a dream
-of his own, and that no such breach of forest law had been
-committed by any one,—a fact of which the Captain loudly
-declared his complete conviction.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="700" height="460" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">DEATH OF FEMALE BEAR.</p>
-<p class="caption-r"><a href="#Page_376">p. 376.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[377]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BALL.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Truly my brethren—truly my dear sisters—do you know how it
-seems to me—why it seems to me that no one can get along till he has
-taken a draught—How so? Eh? Your health, dear soul—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Here’s to you day and night,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">New raptures, new delight.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Strike up with the fiddles! beat the drums! a stout pull at the pot!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Here’s to ye as is fit,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The reckoning day endeth it.</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The big bottle hail ye,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The drums beat reveiller,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">At one draught down send it,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The reckoning will end it.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Kajsa Stina stands a drawing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All my heart is clapper-clawing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the pot my fingers thawing—</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Thus I sing my dying song.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Fredman’s Epistle to Kajsa Stina, Karl Bellman.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Never had the arches of the old forest rung with such
-shouts and screams, and roaring songs, and bursts of laughter,
-as they did on the evening of the great skal. A few of the
-elderly people, but a very few, had had enough of it, and
-went off quietly to their homes as soon as they were released
-from duty; as for the rest, no one could have supposed that
-they had been worked off their legs, and kept from their
-natural sleep, and drenched to the skin for the last three or
-four days and nights; they were not over-clean, certainly,
-though some of the youngsters had contrived, somehow or
-other, to smarten themselves up for the occasion; but the
-rest made a great contrast to the women, those at least who
-had taken no active part in the skal,—their white woollen
-jackets, or scarlet or green spencers covered with embroidery
-and buttoned down the front with silver knobs, formed a
-pleasing relief to the dinginess and raggedness of active<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[378]</span>
-service. As for the unfortunate buglers, who, most of them,
-were general musicians, and would play upon anything
-that was wanted, these, without the least regard to their
-previous fatigues, which had been even greater than those
-of the beaters, were placed upon barrels, or carts, or stumps
-of trees, fiddling and clarionetting for the bare life, while
-men and women tore in wild polska round them.</p>
-
-<p>Some travellers have characterized the Swedish dances as
-indecent; whether they are so or not, English papas, and
-mamas, and maiden aunts are very competent judges, for they
-are precisely the English polka, as we call it (dropping the s for
-convenience of pronunciation); the English polka is, in reality,
-the national peasant dance of Sweden; and in their own
-country the Swedes dance it with all their hearts and souls
-as well as their limbs and bodies—not sliding and mincing as
-we do, but downright pounding, so as to leave the print of
-the foot, and especially the heel, on the yielding turf.</p>
-
-<p>It might seem difficult to provide refreshments for such
-a ball-room in such a place, where the dancers mustered
-somewhere about two thousand strong—but in truth they
-were no way nice. The game, which Bjornstjerna had very
-liberally given up to them, formed a good part of these
-refreshments, a few sheep—“really sheep this time,” the
-Captain observed,—with a good supply of rye-meal made into
-stirabout, formed the solids, and these, though, with the
-exception of the game, they did not grow in the forest, were
-easily procurable, for the families of the combatants, knowing
-that a party of English gentlemen were engaged in the skal,
-and rightly conjecturing that their hearts would be open,
-had brought their stores to the meet, and all of these stores
-were not exactly solids; the barrels on which the fiddlers
-were standing were intended for something better than rye-meal:
-in fact, corn brandy, and a hot fiery liquor which they
-make out of potatoes—very beastly to the taste, but quite as
-efficacious in producing drunkenness as the very best Cognac—was
-in plenty, and, the restrictions of the skal being at an
-end, there was every prospect that the men would fully
-indemnify themselves for their previous abstinence.</p>
-
-<p>Birger and Moodie were stamping, and polking, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379"></a>[379]</span>
-hurrahing, and kissing their partners with the best of them,
-and the Captain, also, was not altogether unsuccessful in
-his <i>coup d’essai</i>; as for the men, Tom and Piersen had
-altogether forgotten the inferiority of the Swedes to the true
-Norwegians, and Jacob’s long streaming coat tails had gone
-quite mad.</p>
-
-<p>Torkel, alone, stung by some jest from his friend Tom,
-about the peculiar duties and system of self-denial proper for
-an engaged man, crept up rather discontentedly to the fire,
-at which the Parson was standing and talking over the
-events of the day with Bjornstjerna.</p>
-
-<p>In Norway, which in reality is a republic, and not a
-monarchy, there is a great deal of independence and equality
-among all ranks, which is not by any means the case in
-Sweden; but even in Sweden, a skal is a time of saturnalia;
-and besides, Torkel, though in some measure acting in the
-capacity of a servant, was, in reality, the son and heir of a
-sufficiently wealthy proprietor; and the Englishmen, whom
-he ranked infinitely higher than he did the very first of
-Swedish nobility, having treated him all along more as a
-companion than anything else, he felt not the least shy of
-the Hof Ofwer Jagmästere, though he added the title of
-Count to his official honours,—and therefore entered very
-readily into conversation.</p>
-
-<p>They were turning over the skins of those beasts the
-bodies of which were already undergoing a conversion into
-soup; most of these had been purchased by the party, and
-were laid aside for packing; but the lynxes and the filfras,
-and some others, which are not considered good for eating,
-were still hanging by their heels to the lower branches of
-the tree.</p>
-
-<p>The filfras was a curious animal, about three feet long, but
-low in proportion to its length, with great splay feet, well
-calculated to form natural snow shoes—in fact, he leaves a
-track almost as large as that of a full-grown bear, and upon
-the whole, very like one, and climbs trees even better and
-quicker than his big brother. The present specimen had
-been detected on a tree, and being wounded while in the act
-of passing from one branch to the other, had come to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[380]</span>
-ground; but, wounded as he was, he had fought gallantly for
-his life, and had bitten so severely the first man who attempted
-to handle him, that he was obliged to leave the skal
-and go home. The filfras is a harmless beast enough, so far
-as sheep and cattle are concerned, and lives chiefly upon
-hares and such game, which, though his eyesight be not very
-quick, a remarkably keen scent enables him to tire down—he
-himself, in return, is even detected by his own scent,
-which is perfectly perceptible to human nostrils, and extremely
-disagreeable,—few dogs can be got to run him.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<p>The lynx, though of the tiger race, is a very harmless
-beast unless attacked; he may carry off a young lamb now
-and then, but very seldom kills his own mutton—it is not
-for want of spirit, for he fights like any tiger when driven
-into a corner; throwing himself on his back, he polishes off
-the dogs as fast as they come near him. A pack of English
-fox-hounds might settle his business, as they probably would
-that of his Bengal cousin himself; but there is not a dog in
-Sweden that would look him in the face.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a great pity,” said Torkel; who was examining the
-shot-holes in the bear-skins.</p>
-
-<p>“What is a great pity?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, to mob to death all these fine beasts, that might
-have given people no end of sport in the winter.”</p>
-
-<p>“And eaten up no end of sheep and oxen,” said Bjornstjerna.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! well!” that did not strike Torkel very forcibly; he
-had, it must be confessed, led hitherto a rather miscellaneous
-sort of life; he knew a great deal more about hunting than
-he did about farming, and regarded the depredations of the
-bear—though some of them had been made on his father’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381"></a>[381]</span>
-own farm—much in the light in which an English fox-hunter
-listens to tales of murdered geese and turkeys.</p>
-
-<p>The matter which weighed upon his conscience just then
-was, that poor Nalle<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> had not received altogether fair
-play. This had not struck him during the heat of the
-chase so very much, but, now that the murder had been committed,
-and that he was regarding the result of it in cold
-blood, he evidently did not feel quite easy in his mind about
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” he said, “poor fellow,” turning over the skin of
-Bjornstjerna’s own bear, which was yet wet with the water
-of the river in which he had been killed; “well! we do not
-do such things in our country.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Bjornstjerna, “you could not get a couple of
-thousand people together in your country without knives
-drawn.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how do you manage it in your country?” said the
-Parson, who was not a little afraid that his follower’s nationality
-would get the better of his politeness.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Torkel, “you should see one of our Norwegian
-bear-hunts in the winter; it is not an easy thing to
-get Master Nalle on foot, and he takes a good deal of
-looking after; but, when you do get a chance, it is worth
-having.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember my brother Nils one day, as he was coming
-home from church, took a short cut across the fjeld, and put
-his eye on a queer-looking heap in the snow, that he did not
-rightly know what to make of. While he was looking at it
-out came a great fellow—one of the biggest I ever followed,—as
-if he would eat him. Down tumbled Nils on his face,
-and the Wise One came ploutering through the snow right
-over him, but went on, minding his own business, as all wise
-ones do, and never stopped to look at Nils.</p>
-
-<p>“It so happened that my brother Nils had nothing
-but a pair of skarbogar on his feet (a rough sort of snow-shoe,
-made of wood and rope), and, knowing he could not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[382]</span>
-get over the ground very well, never tried to follow him, but
-came home quietly and told me what he had seen. The
-weather looked fine, and there was neither snow likely to
-fall, nor wind likely to drift what was fallen already, so that
-we knew the tracks would lie; and the next morning, before
-it was well light, we had each of us our pair of skier on our
-feet, our rifles at our backs, a good iron-shod pole in our
-hands to shove along by, and a week’s provision in our
-havresacs. I took old Rig<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> with me, in case we should lose
-the tracks.</p>
-
-<p>“We soon came up with them, and off we went, taking it
-leisurely—for we had a long run before us. It requires some
-little exertion to get up hill with these skier; they do better for
-such a country as this than they do for the rocky and tangled
-fjeld in Norway; but, on flat ground, you get along five or six
-miles an hour without feeling it, and as for down-hill, you
-may go just as fast as you like, only for standing still and
-keeping your feet.</p>
-
-<p>“For four or five hours the track lay as straight and even
-in the snow as if we had been travelling the post road to
-Christiania. Old Nalle thought his winter quarters were
-not over safe, and meant evidently to make a passage of it,
-and had just been trotting along in the snow, not looking
-right or left of him.</p>
-
-<p>“After that the track came doubled and crooked, as if the
-old gentleman had been taking a view of the country, to see
-whether it would suit his purpose, before lying down for
-another nap,—so we had to work it out painfully, step by
-step. This was a slow job, for he had taken a turn to every
-point of the compass, and had crossed and re-crossed his own
-tracks, and had changed his mind so often, that the short
-winter’s day began to close, and we feared the light would
-fail; so we started right and left of the spot, and succeeded
-in ringing him before we met again.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by ringing a bear?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“Making a circle round his tracks,” said Torkel, “so as to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[383]</span>
-be sure none lie beyond it; in that case you are independent
-of a thaw, for you know that the old gentleman must be
-within a certain space. When we met we agreed to leave
-our friend quiet, and to sleep till morning; so we cut down
-a tree or two, and got up a roaring fire in a little hollow to
-leeward, where we were sure the bear could not see our
-light or smell our smoke, and there we lay, snug and comfortable
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>“No thaw or mischance of any kind had taken place
-during the night, and the next morning we were on the
-tracks again; for we had marked the place where we had
-left off, by setting up one of the poles in it.</p>
-
-<p>“We soon got puzzled, however, and began to be very
-thankful that we had brought old Rig. Rig was a sharp
-fellow,—one of the quickest dogs I ever met with at picking
-up a scent, or taking a hint either; his namesake, when he
-watched at the gates of Asgard, could not have kept a
-brighter look-out. The ground soon got very tangled and
-sideling, so, as the ring was but a small one, we determined
-to give up the tracks, and to hunt for him with the dog.</p>
-
-<p>“The old fellow was not long in getting a sniff at him, and
-made noise enough to wake up the Nornir in the cave of
-Hela. I pushed on, and before I could tell where I was,
-ran my skier one on each side a little hole in the snow, where
-the dog was baying,—a place that did not look big enough
-for a fox to get in. I could not very well turn, for the
-points of the skier were one on each side the trunk of a great
-twisted birch, at whose foot the hole was; and I could not
-see what was in the hole, the snow was so dazzling in the
-bright sunshine that everything else looked black. I began
-to think that Rig had got hold of nothing better than a fox,
-and was beginning to be angry with the dog for making such
-a row, and running the chance of giving our real game a
-hint to steal off. I was looking down between my skier,
-with my face as low as my knees, when all at once I felt the
-snow heaving up from under me, and over I rolled, head
-over heels, and old Fur Jacket with me, and Rig, who had
-pinned him as he bolted, on the top of us both.</p>
-
-<p>“The old fellow was a great deal too much taken up with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[384]</span>
-the dog to mind me; but before Nils could come up, or I
-could get my legs again, he had shaken him off, and was
-dashing through the deep snow at a rate that kicked it up
-in a white mist behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“I had kept fast hold of my rifle, all through, and the snow
-had not done it a bit of harm; in fact, the frost was so
-sharp that it came out of the barrel like so much flour; and
-besides, we always cover our locks with tallow after loading.
-He had got pretty well out of shot before we were in chase,
-but for his sins he had taken down-hill, and the ground was
-pretty clear, so we slid along after him like Fenrir after
-the Sun;<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> when all at once, Nils, who had a little the best of
-the race, touched a stump with the point of his skie, and
-flew up into the air, pitching head foremost into the snow.
-It was, luckily for him, deep enough to save him from a
-broken head or neck—at least, so I found afterwards, for I
-had not time to stop then. As for the dog, he was a mile
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Just at the bottom of the slope, I ran in upon the chase,
-and he turned short round when I was not half-a-dozen yards
-from him. I could no more stop than I could stop the lightning;
-so, setting my pole in the snow, I swerved a little, and
-just missed going over him, as Nils had done with the
-stump.</p>
-
-<p>“By the time I had curved round, I found he had taken
-advantage of his chance, and was going up again, travelling
-three times as fast as I could hope to do, for skier are desperate
-bad things up-hill. However, mine had seal-skin upon
-them, luckily, for in our mountainous country we are obliged
-to do something to prevent slipping back; but, for all that,
-he was getting much the best of it, so I took a cool shot at
-him, and heard the ball strike just as if I had thrown it into
-a piece of dough, but he never winced, or took the least
-notice.</p>
-
-<p>“However, Nils had managed to pick himself up, and
-I saw him and Rig together a good way above us, so I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a>[385]</span>
-waved my cap and shouted: you can hear a shout in the
-winter half-a-dozen miles off. Nils changed his course, so as
-to cut us off. I followed, loading as I went. By-and-bye
-the old fellow seemed to find out that he had enemies on
-both sides of him, for he stopped, and growled, and looked
-back at me, and showed his teeth. Just then Nils made a
-noise above, by breaking through some understuff; and he
-turned, and came at me with his mouth open, charging down-hill
-as hard as he could lick. It was ‘neck or nothing’ with
-me now, I knew that, for there is no turning or dodging on
-skier, going up-hill, so I rested my rifle on the fork of a
-branch, and, waiting till he had come within a dozen yards
-of me, I shot into his mouth. Lord! it seemed as if somebody
-had given him a lift behind; his hind-quarters rose up,
-and his head went down, and he came sliding along the snow
-on his back, wrong-end foremost. I could not move right
-or left, hampered as I was, and he took me just across the
-shins with his huge carcass, breaking one of my skier,
-and carrying me with him as if I were riding in a sledge;
-but when we got to the bottom he never tried to hurt me,
-for he was as dead as Baldur.</p>
-
-<p>“That was something like a chase, and we turned a pretty
-penny by it, too; we got four specie for sealing his nose,
-and fourteen for his skin, to a young Englishman who
-wanted to prove to his friends at home that he had killed
-a bear, and gave two specie over the market price for
-the shot-hole; and, for ourselves, we had lots of fat, most
-of which, by the way, had got melted in the race, and
-had to be frozen again before we could carry it; and,
-for solid meat, the scoundrel weighed hard upon four
-hundred pounds. We had pretty hard work in getting him
-home, for in those two days we had run on end more than
-thirty of your English miles, besides the turns. We had to
-go home and fetch a sledge for him, and my sisters had a
-pretty job of salting when we got him there; Kari said
-that our work was not half so hard as hers.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a curious thing, much as I have been in your country,
-I never saw a skie,” said the Parson; “I do not even know
-what sort of things they are.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[386]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It would be strange if you had,” said Torkel; “we never
-keep them at the sœters, for the plain reason that we do not use
-them in summer at all, nor inhabit the sœters in the winter.
-You have been very little in any of our permanent winter
-homesteads since you have been here, and if you had happened
-to put your eye upon half-a-dozen long pieces of wood,
-with leather straps to them, the chances are, you would never
-have thought of asking what such very ordinary-looking
-articles were. I will answer for it, Herr Moodie has plenty
-of them at Gäddebäck; but they are, most likely, stowed
-away at the top of the house, in the winter store-room, where
-you would never think of going. They are long, thin strips
-of wood, of a triangular form, about three or four inches
-broad, with their points curved up for a foot or so, to clear
-the obstacles. In this flat country they make the left-foot
-skie, which is of fir, ten or twelve feet long; the right one
-is generally of ash, and not above five or six feet in length,
-or they would never be able to turn in them. I, myself, like
-them best both of a size, and not above five or six feet long,—only
-then you must have them broader, to prevent sinking
-in the snow. This is a disadvantage, certainly, still they
-are much handier to dodge about the trees with, than those
-unwieldy concerns they have here. Mine are a pair of old
-military skier, and there are none better.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! do the soldiers use them?” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“That they do,” said Torkel. “I was always a good
-runner on skier, but I learnt a good many clever tricks at drill,
-when I was serving my time of duty in the militia. Our rifle
-regiment have all two light companies of skielobere, and are
-drilled to light infantry movements on skates. I did not
-like much being called out in the depth of winter for drill,
-and not a little did I grumble at the hard work they
-put us to,—scaling mountains, which we are obliged to do in
-skier, like ships beating to windward; and then charging down
-them among trees and stumps,—swinging this way and that,
-to keep one’s rifle out of harm’s way, and then suddenly
-called upon to halt and fire,—and preciously punished are we
-if the piece is not ready for action. However, I did not know<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[387]</span>
-what was good for me; I have been twice the man ever
-since after the bears and winter game.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suspect,” said the Parson, “that is pretty nearly the
-whole use of your skate-drill; it must be a pretty thing to
-see in a review,—but he must be a gallant enemy who undertakes
-a winter campaign in Norway, unless he is descended
-from the Hrimthursar themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! I cannot stand this any longer,” said Moodie,
-coming up; “half the party are drunk, and the rest are
-half-seas over; and there’s the Captain pounding away to his
-own whistling, for the last fiddler has just dropped off his
-empty barrel. It is time to go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bed, yes! but where are we to find it: Jacob, I
-suppose, is by this time numbered with the dead drunk.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may swear to that, and Tom also; I saw him very
-near his end an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well I do not care, for one,” said the Parson; “my bed is
-here,” and he pulled out of his cariole his trusty mackintosh,
-and folding one of the sails to his own length, he spread the
-mackintosh upon it. “I shall sleep here luxuriously; and
-Torkel, bring me the cushion of the cariole seat. I will not
-forget to tell Lota how faithful you have been to her this
-day. Good night, all of you; we have work before us to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>And so they had,—for the sun was not yet far above the
-horizon, when the carioles were bumping along the forest
-roads to the southward.</p>
-
-<p>At Amal, Torkel, with good wishes from all, and presents
-from some of the party, took his leave to prepare for what
-Tom called the amending of his life, and parted on his separate
-road through Fjall, and laid under contribution a market
-boat from Wagne to Frederickshald, where he hoped to find a
-vessel to Tonsberg, or Larvig, on the Norwegian coast. The
-party proceeded leisurely along the western coast of the lake,
-to enjoy for some time longer the hospitalities of Gäddebäck.</p>
-
-<p>But the days began to shorten, and the joyous Scandinavian
-summer to come to its close. It was necessary to think of
-the homeward passage, in time to allow fine weather and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[388]</span>
-sunny days for a leisurely cariole journey along that most
-picturesque of countries, the southern coast of Norway.
-Torkel’s wedding day, too, was approaching, and the party
-were under a half engagement to old Torgensen, which tallied
-very well with the necessity of reaching Christiansand for
-their homeward passage. “Time and tide wait for no man,”
-and a forebud having been laid to Strömstad, the carioles, accompanied
-as far as Wenersborg by Moodie, rolled away on
-the road to Uddevalla.</p>
-
-<p>One piece of luck attended them,—they were not yet to
-part from Birger, for it so happened that his royal highness
-the Crown Prince, was to pay his usual state visit to Christiania,
-on which occasion he was to be attended by Count
-Birger, our young scamp’s father, whose daughter, Birger’s
-sister, held also some appointment in the establishment of
-the Princess. Birger, therefore, was able to consult his
-pleasure and his duty at once, in going to Norway; to enjoy
-the coasting journey with his friends, and then to meet his
-family at Christiania after their departure.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[389]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE WEDDING.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When he came into the house at nightfall,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She was angry with him—his old mother—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">“Son,” she said, “thou lay’st thy snares each morning,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And each day thou comest back empty handed!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Either thou lack’st skill, or thou art idle;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Others can take prey where thou’st taken none!”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus to her the gay young man made answer:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">“Who need wonder that our luck is different,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the same birds are not for our snaring?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At the little farm that lieth yonder,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Lives a wondrous bird, my good old mother;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Snares I laid to catch it all the autumn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now, this very winter have I caught it.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Marvellous is this bird! for it possesses</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not wings, but arms for tenderest embracing;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not down, but locks of silky, sunny lustre;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No beak, but two fresh lips so warm and rosy!”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>The Young Fowler.—Runnèberg.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the morning of the wedding-day, and that day, of
-course, Sunday. Autumn was a little advanced, but the sky
-was as serene, and the lake as still and as smiling as it was
-on that day on which the fishermen had last looked
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>The Parson had strolled out with Birger, after a very
-hurried and uncomfortable breakfast,—the only time such
-a thing had ever occurred under the hospitable roof of Torgensen;
-this was not so much for exercise as for the sake of
-being out of the way of the good lady Christina, who looked
-as if she considered the whole of her daughter’s earthly
-happiness to depend on the perfection of the wedding-dinner,
-which, even at that early hour of the morning, was in the
-course of preparation. Upstairs and downstairs was she, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[390]</span>
-a face as red as her scarlet stomacher, her great bunch of
-keys jingling like a sheep-bell as she moved, and her embroidered
-skirt whisking round every corner. She was partially
-dressed for the grand occasion, though her head was as yet
-muffled in a rather dirty handkerchief, but the glories of her
-holiday gown were in a great measure obscured by an
-immense apron, which bore indisputable marks of something
-more than mere superintendence of her peculiar department.
-The whole district would be there, no doubt, for though there
-are generally appointed days for weddings, and several
-couples were usually married at the same time, and moreover,
-the beginning of winter is a very favourite time for
-such matters, yet the Torgensens were so indisputably the
-squires of the place, that besides their own party which had
-been collected from far and wide, and that of one or two of
-their dependants who were to be married on the same day,
-the chances were that they would have visitors enough from
-other and inferior bridals.</p>
-
-<p>Come as many as there might, there were provisions
-enough for them all; there was brandy enough to float a
-barge; there were heaps of fish and game of all sorts; and—a
-much rarer thing at the beginning of autumn and before
-the cattle have returned from the sœters,—plenty of beef and
-mutton. Puddings, sweet soups, and all the infinite variety
-of gröds had been in preparation for days and nights; still
-the good house-mother distressed herself; and rendered uncomfortable
-everything around her, lest something should
-have been forgotten, and the credit of Torgensen’s hospitality
-should suffer in the eyes of the strangers.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, who had offered to officiate as bridesman,
-was taking lessons in his arduous duties from little Lilla, the
-præst’s daughter, who, proud of her English, and not at all
-unwilling to get up a flirtation with a good-looking foreigner,
-had neglected her own duties as bridesmaid, and enticed the
-Captain, nothing loth, to the præstgaard, where he was practising
-the required duties of his office; and, to judge from the
-time he took at his lessons, he must have been particularly
-slow and stupid in comprehending them.</p>
-
-<p>What was the morning occupation of Lota and her other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[391]</span>
-bridesmaids was a mystery,—not one of them was visible; that
-it was something of an entertaining character was evident
-from the tittering, and gay laughter, and occasional little
-screams that proceeded from a large square-headed window
-wide open on the upper-floor, and on the farthest extremity
-of the building. The only anxious and unhappy-looking
-countenance was that of the happy bridegroom himself, who
-having nothing whatever to do, wandered up and down the
-terrace with his hands in his pockets, the only idle man, and
-consequently in the way of every one. Conscious that he
-was the object of every body’s attention, and the butt of
-those jokes which are common on such occasions, and no
-where more common or less delicate than in Norway, he
-laboured hard to be at his ease and succeeded but very ill.
-Indeed, his new jacket, which did not come down to his
-shoulder blades, and was a little too tight for him into the
-bargain, and his stiff glossy trousers would alone have been
-sufficient to disturb any man’s self-possession, to say nothing
-of the chain of filagree silver balls, each as large as a grape-shot,
-which were called shirt buttons, and hung down from
-his neck; while a stout broad hat twice as broad in the
-crown as in the rim, and stiffly turned up on each side,
-weighed on his brows like a helmet,—so very new that it
-still exhibited the creases of the paper in which it had been
-packed.</p>
-
-<p>Jan Torgensen, Lota’s brother, who was his other bridesman,
-was doing his best to keep him in countenance, for
-they had always been great allies, and in fact, Torkel had been
-Jan’s preceptor in wood-craft, and, so Lota declared, in every
-sort of mischief besides. At this present moment any one
-who had seen them both, would have taken Jan for the preceptor
-and Torkel for the pupil; and Jan for the happy
-bridegroom, and Torkel for the disappointed swain,—so happy
-looked Jan and so sheepish looked Torkel. But, in truth,
-Jan had his own particular pride and happiness, connected,
-though in a remote manner, with that of his friend. He
-had just received his appointment as skipper of the <i>Haabet</i>,
-vice Svensen, superseded in Lota’s affections by Torkel, and
-in the command of the brig by Jan; for the poor fellow,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[392]</span>
-when he found how things were going with him, resigned
-the command, settled accounts with old Torgensen, and,
-much to the regret of the latter,—for Svensen was a first-rate
-sailor,—betook himself to Copenhagen, out of the sight of his
-rival’s happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Jan, who was a thorough partizan, and had never liked
-poor Svensen, not so much on account of any of his demerits
-as out of affection for his friend Torkel (for Lota it is to be
-feared, had coquetted between her admirers much more than
-was altogether proper), was singing, or rather roaring, at the
-full pitch of a sailor’s voice, the popular ballad of Sir John
-and Sir Lavé:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“To an island green Sir Lavé went;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He wooed a maiden with fair intent;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I will ride with you,’ quoth John;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Put on helmets of gold, to follow Sir John.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">He wooed the maiden and took her home,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And knights and serving-men are come;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Here am I!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">They set the bride on the bridal seat,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir John, he bade them both drink and eat.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Drink, and drink deeply!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">They brought the bride to the bridal bed,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They forgot to untie her laces red:</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I can untie them!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir John, he locked the door with speed;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Good night to you, Sir Lavé,’ he said.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I shall sleep here!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Word was brought to Sir Lavé there—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Sir John is within, with thy bride so fair!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘That am I, in truth!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">At the door, Sir Lavé makes a loud din;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Withdraw the bolts, and let us in!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘You had best keep out,’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">He knocked at the door with shield and spear,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Withdraw the bolts, and come out here!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘See if I do!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘If my bride may not in peace remain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I will go and unto the king complain.’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Just as you like,’ quoth John.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[393]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Early next morn, when the birds ’gan to sing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir Lavé is off to complain to the king;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I will go, too!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘I was betrothed but yesterday,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir John has taken my bride away!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Yes, so I have!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘If that the maiden to both is dear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It must be settled at point of spear.’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I’m very willing!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">As soon as the morrow’s sun was bright,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Came all the knights to see the fight;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Here am I!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The two were mounted, and at the first round</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The knees of Sir John’s horse touched the ground.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Now help me, Heaven!’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Once more, and in the second round</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir Lavé lies upon the ground;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘There let him lie,’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir John he rode to his hall in state,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And his maiden met him at the gate;—</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘Now thou art mine,’ quoth John.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thus was Sir John made happy for life,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the maiden became his wedded wife.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">‘I knew I should have her,’ quoth John.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Put on helmets of gold, to follow Sir John.’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Come, come! Jan!” growled old Torgensen, “hold your
-saucy tongue; Svensen was a better man than you will ever
-be in a year of Sundays. And you, you grinning flirts,”—to
-the servant-girls, with whom Master Jan was an especial
-favourite, and upon whom the application was by no means
-lost—“get along with you, and mind your own business,—as
-if you had nothing to do, on such a morning as this, but
-to listen to such fooleries! Be off with you, I say!”</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the Parson and Birger,—who, by the
-way, hardly recognised each other in their gala habits, for
-the one was habited, in honour of the occasion, in the black
-dress of an English clergyman, while the other, with his sword
-clinking by his side, blazed in all the blue and yellow splendour
-of the Swedish guard,—took up their old position at the lich<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[394]</span>
-gate of the church; one as before balancing on the stocks,
-the other astride on the dwarf wall, glad to be out of the
-din of preparation. It was not a happy day for any of them,
-for it was the last day of the expedition, which every member
-of it had enjoyed so thoroughly;—Birger’s leave of absence
-was running to an end, and the two Englishmen had
-taken passage with young Torgensen to the <i>Haabet</i>. They
-were to sail—so Torgensen said—that night; but, as it was
-quite certain that, before that time, the whole crew would
-be drunk, in honour of their young mistress, this probably
-meant to-morrow. Still, to-morrow was to be the final break-up
-of the party; and Tom had been philosophizing, with
-tears in his eyes, on the transitory nature of human pleasures;
-and Torkel, bridegroom as he was, would willingly
-have postponed his wedding if he could have prolonged the
-expedition,—at least, so Lota had told him the evening
-before, and he did not look as if he was speaking the truth
-when he denied it.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of the friends felt much inclined for conversation.
-They were natives of different parts of the world; their
-courses from that point lay in opposite directions; the
-chances were very much against their meeting again, and,
-though their acquaintance had not been of very long duration,
-so far as time is concerned, one week’s campaign in the
-wild forest does more towards ripening an intimacy than a
-year of ordinary life.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the time passed on, and the early peal
-rang out, and the groups began to collect as before in the
-church-yard, and the lake to be dotted with boats, all pulling
-or sailing from its remoter bays and islets to the church,
-as a common centre. Here and there a party, as before,
-was occupied round a grave, pulling up the overgrown convolvulus
-and trimming the withering leaves of the lilies.
-By and by a bugle sounded a call, and a couple of fiddles
-from one of the nearest boats struck up a polka.</p>
-
-<p>“Here come some of the wedding parties,” said Birger;
-“there seem to be plenty of happy couples in Soberud this
-year. Well! there is nothing like fashion,—in this, as in
-other things, one fool makes many. Look at that leading<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[395]</span>
-boat!—that one, I mean, just pulling round the point of the
-island!—there is a crowned bride in her! Holy Gefjon,
-Mother of Maids! such a sight as that is rare in Norway!
-I should think the chances were that she got some one to
-pull her crown off her head before the day was over. She
-does not seem much afraid, either, and an uncommonly pretty
-girl, too, which makes it all the more wonderful. Well!
-well! ‘a virtuous woman is a crown to her husband;’ I hope
-he will appreciate his blessings as he ought, such blessings as
-that do not fall to the lot of many in this country.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by that, Birger?” said the Parson,
-getting up, and shading his eyes with his hands as he looked
-out on the lake.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, you may well shade your eyes before beauty and
-innocence,” said Birger; “you do not often see them combined,
-in this country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the fact is this,” said he, dropping his bantering
-tone, “what you commonly call virtue—that is to say,
-chastity,—is a very rare article indeed, I am sorry to
-say, either in Norway or Sweden; the manners of the
-people do not tend to foster it. Their promiscuous way of
-living in the winter, and the sœter life in summer, makes it
-absolutely necessary for a girl either to have a very great respect
-for herself, or to be forbiddingly ugly; and whatever the
-case may have been in earlier and better times, certain it is that
-beauty is now much more common among us than self-respect.
-Then, again, the laws which prevail in Sweden, and the
-customs, which the Udal tenures in Norway make as stringent
-as laws, forbid any to marry who are not householders
-(whence your word husband, which simply means huus bonde—a
-peasant with a house), and at the same time forbid the
-erection of more than a specified number of houses on any
-land. All this renders early marriages almost impossible.
-The result may easily be imagined. And to make this the
-more certain, our wise laws enact that a woman, having any
-number of children by any number of fathers, who at any
-time of her life shall marry any one whatever, by the simple
-act of marriage affiliates all the children she may ever have
-had on her unhappy husband; and wherever the Udal law<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[396]</span>
-prevails, he is obliged to share his land equally among them.
-The consequence of this is, that unchastity is no sort of disgrace.
-It is the commonest thing in the world for a noble
-to live with a woman all his life, under promise of marriage
-to be performed on his death-bed, and the woman is all the
-while received much like the Morganatic bride of a German
-prince. Frederika Bremer, herself as exemplary a woman as
-ever lived, has made the plot of one of her novels to hinge
-on a man living in such a manner, and dying suddenly, without
-being able to perform his promise. She does not attach
-the shadow of disgrace to any one, except the relatives of the
-deceased, who refused to acknowledge the woman merely on
-account of this ‘unfortunate accident,’ as she calls it. And so
-it is. Had she written otherwise, she would have been out
-of costume; there is no disgrace in the matter. I do not
-mean to say that this girl is not proud of her crown—of course
-she is, just as I am proud of this blue and yellow ribbon of
-mine,” pointing to the Order of the Sword with which he
-had decorated his uniform-coat for the occasion; “but look
-how she is kissing that girl in green, who has just landed
-from that other boat,—that is another bride who cannot
-claim the distinction; she no more thinks her disgraced, than
-I should think a brother officer disgraced to whom his gracious
-Majesty had not been pleased to give the same distinction
-that he has to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“There seem to be plenty of brides,” said the Parson, “for
-there is another green lady, of damaged fame; she seems to
-be a rich one, by the number of her fiddlers before, and followers
-after.”</p>
-
-<p>“They generally have one wedding-day for the district,”
-said Birger, “and a good plan too; it diminishes the expense
-when they all have their festivities together, and diminishes
-the drunkenness very considerably, both on the day and on
-its anniversaries, for the whole district get drunk together at
-once, and get it over, instead of inviting one another to help
-them to on their several wedding-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what are the ‘crowns?’” said the Parson.</p>
-
-<p>“An ancient custom, by which they challenge any imputation
-on their fair fame; any one who has anything to say<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397"></a>[397]</span>
-against the chastity of the wearer, is privileged to pull off
-the crown and to drive the lady out of the church, only the
-accuser is bound to prove his allegations.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems a pretty expensive affair, at least, to judge of it
-at this distance.”</p>
-
-<p>“O yes, far too expensive to be the property of any individual;
-they hire it for the occasion, and, I will be bound,
-pay five or six dollars for the pleasure of wearing that and the
-rest of the costume. Just look at her as she comes into the
-light; that dress of black bombazine, with the short sleeves
-and white mittens, is probably her own,—very likely it was her
-mother’s before her, only fresh dyed for the occasion; but that
-gay apron, with the ribbons, and beads, and the silver chains
-and necklaces, I should think were hired; the dollars round her
-neck are her dowry in all probability, and, consequently, her
-own; so is the muff, and the handkerchiefs of various colours
-that hang from it; and possibly, also, those yellow kid
-gloves. But look at the crown itself! why it is silver gilt!—and
-that scarf, which hangs down from the spray on the top
-of it, is covered with satin lappets, three-quarters long! now
-do you think a peasant would buy that? A green bridal,
-you see, is a much more modest affair; they wear their silver
-chains over their green bodices like the others, but on their
-heads, instead of the crown, they have the ordinary wimple
-of married women, made of fine white linen, and above it the
-triangular snood of unmarried girls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here come our party at last! What a host they have
-collected! the church will not hold them all. And there is
-pretty Lota, with her bridesmaids after her. Well, I hope
-no one will pull her crown off; how pretty she looks in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not half so pretty as that little fresh-looking, innocent,
-Lilla Nordlingen,” said Birger. “Upon my word I am half
-inclined to make love to her myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better not, Mr. Guardsman, you do not stand
-the ghost of a chance; how she would turn up that innocent
-little Norwegian nose of hers at a brute of a Swede. Besides,
-do you not see how she is making love to the Captain,
-how uncommonly smart the Captain has turned out in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[398]</span>
-red uniform! to which the moustache he has been growing
-ever since he has been here, forms so appropriate an appendage.
-Your blue and yellow would look dingy to eyes that
-have been dazzled with such scarlet magnificence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, well, we will see. The Captain looks as if he were
-saying to her, ‘<i>Aimez moi vite, car je pars demain.</i>’”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s your best chance,” said the Parson, maliciously;
-“but come, the bells are ringing in, and we had better get
-into the ranks of the procession. Here comes Nordlingen,
-with his long-legged Candidatus at his heels.”</p>
-
-<p>While the Pfarrherr went in to array himself in his
-robes, the different marriage parties, warned by the bells,
-had begun to arrange themselves into one grand procession;
-while their respective musicians, who together formed a
-pretty numerous band, laid their heads together about the
-tune to be played on this grand occasion, and tuned their
-fiddles into concord.</p>
-
-<p>The party had by this time increased considerably, and
-when at last the band, having settled their harmonious differences,
-marched up the nave of the church playing, somewhat
-incongruously, a jolly polka, there marched after them
-no less than six happy couples, with their followers, each
-bride and each bridegroom having a silver ort (ninepence)
-tied up under their respective garters, for luck. Only two
-of the six were crowned brides, and that, Birger whispered,
-as they took their places, was a wonderfully large proportion.</p>
-
-<p>First after the fiddlers came the Candidatus in his gown,
-who had gone out to marshal the procession; then came the
-married men related to the parties, in their short blue
-jackets and white-fronted shirts, some of which were clean;
-then came the bridegrooms with their bridesmen, dressed
-something in the same fashion, except that they affected
-buckskin breeches and white stockings: each bridegroom,
-by way of distinction, had a fine white handkerchief (cambric,
-if he could possibly come by it), tied round his right
-arm; then came the bridesmaids in green, (which there is
-not an unlucky colour as it is with us), with bare heads, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[399]</span>
-their hair, which was plaited with many coloured ribands,
-hanging down their backs in two tails; then the bride-leaders,
-married women, who are supposed to encourage the brides
-during the ceremony, and lastly, the brides themselves, in all
-their splendour. The chancel was as full as it could hold,
-the principals disposing themselves round the altar, kneeling,
-while the bridesmaids held canopies of shawls and handkerchiefs
-over their heads, and the congregation craned in through
-the chancel rails, while the priest proceeded with the service.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely was the benediction pronounced, when the fiddlers
-again struck up their polka, and the happy couples, now
-arm-in-arm, marched down after them, (the wedding-party
-forming a sort of escort), and proceeded with great ceremony
-to the præstgaard meadow, where the marriage feast—an
-enormous pic-nic—was prepared for them, and where the
-wedding presents, many of them of considerable value, were
-set out for public inspection.</p>
-
-<p>These were not exactly the expensive sort of trumpery
-which forms the staple of bridal presents in England,—silver
-vessels that no one ever drinks out of, and dressing cases far
-too expensive for ordinary use. The presents here were real
-honest implements of house-keeping or farming; pots and
-pans, and plates and dishes, and chairs and tables,—spades,
-pickaxes: a tonne of rye-meal was the offering of one,—a
-sack of potatoes of another; here was a pile of oderiferous
-salt-fish,—there a flitch of bacon, at which one of the Captain’s
-best jokes missed fire—bacon having no allegorical value whatever
-in Norway; here again was a good milch cow, tethered
-to a tree, or half-a-dozen sheep or pigs folded with hurdles,
-while the bride’s feather-beds would have borne a high
-value in England. Lota’s were something quite magnificent.
-With such hunters in her train, as Torkel and poor
-Svensen, and her own brother Jan, (who in his younger days
-and before he had found out some one to whom to transfer
-his youthful allegiance, had contributed largely to his sister’s
-stores), it was not to be wondered at if she easily eclipsed all
-the brides of the season.</p>
-
-<p>At a comparatively early hour, Torkel and his wife took<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[400]</span>
-their leave, as they had that evening to reach Lönvik, a pretty
-little farm in the interior, on the banks of a small lake of the
-same name, which Torkel’s father had given up to him on his
-marriage. But this by no means put a stop to the festivities,
-which were carried on to a late hour in the night, and at
-which, Sunday though it was, Nordlingen himself presided.
-Sunday in Norway begins at six o’clock on Saturday night,
-when invariably preparations are commenced for the next
-day, in the way of looking up Sunday clothes, and brushing
-up or washing out the house,—sometimes, in religious
-families, by special prayer, though that is not very common,—sometimes
-even by washing their own persons, though this,
-it must be confessed, is rarer still,—for all of them have a very
-great horror of the personal application of soap and water.
-Sunday, therefore, even as a day of worship, legitimately
-ceases at the same hour on the following day, and, as Nordlingen
-himself remarked,—what was a more fitting time for
-enjoyment than just after they had been admitted to their
-Lord’s presence, and had had their sins forgiven them. It
-was surely much more congruous than the English way of
-“making a Saturday night of it,” with all their sins yet upon
-their shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, there was dancing, there was no visible
-drunkenness; the Pfarrherr was a man of sufficient influence
-to make a stand against the national vice, and if any of the
-guests did feel a little the worse for liquor, he quietly took
-himself, or was taken by his friends, beyond the glare of the
-great bonfire, where no one could see him,—for Nordlingen
-was wise enough not to look too closely into what was not
-intended for his inspection.</p>
-
-<p>It was this idea, or perhaps the recollection that the
-<i>Haabet</i> was to sail the next day, that induced him to close
-his eyes to the fact that that innocent little Lilla had danced
-with no one but the Captain the whole evening, on the plea
-that no girl of the party, except herself, was able to talk to
-him in English. Whatever it was that they had to say to
-one another, there was a good deal of it, and it took a good
-while saying, and as Birger, who was outrageously jealous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401"></a>[401]</span>
-remarked spitefully,—“they, as well as the drunkards, preferred
-evidently the light of the moon to that of the great
-wedding bonfire,” and thinking, probably, how he would
-make up for lost time after the <i>Haabet</i> had tripped her
-anchor, whistled pensively the Swedish song—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hence on the shallows our little boat leaving,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On to the Haaf where the green waves are heaving,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Causing to Thyrsis so much dismay.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[402]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOMEWARD BOUND.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And, now, my good friends, I’ve a fine opportunity</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To obfuscate you all by sea terms with impunity.</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">And talking of “caulking,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">And “quarter-deck walking,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">“Fore and aft,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">And “abaft,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hookers,” “barkeys,” and “craft,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">(At which Mr. Poole has so wickedly laught);</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of “binnacles,” “bilboes,” the boom called the “spanker,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The best “bower cable,” the “jib,” and “sheet anchor;”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of “lower-deck guns,” and of “broadsides and chases;”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of “taff-rails” and “top-sails,” and “splicing main braces,”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And “shiver my timbers,” and other odd phrases</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Employed by old pilots with hard-featured faces;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of the expletives sea-faring gentlemen use,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The allusions they make to the eyes of their crews.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Ingoldsby.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Haabet</i> did not sail that night, which indeed was hardly
-possible, her Captain being employed in dancing, and making
-love, and singing, in the words of Karl Bellman,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Awake, Amaryllis! my dearest, awaken,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Let me not go to sea by my true love forsaken,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our course among dolphins and mermaids is taken:</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Onwards shall paddle our boat to the sea.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Neither did the <i>Haabet</i> sail on the morrow, for the wind
-had chopped round to the south-west; neither did she sail
-the next day, for there was a dead calm;—there was plenty
-of time for leave-taking, and a leisurely journey to Christiansand
-besides, which was accomplished in the carioles—their
-last journey, as Tom feelingly remarked. The Captain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[403]</span>
-arrived at Ullitz’s, a good hour behind the rest, who would
-not wait for the end of his last conference with Lilla Nordlingen.—They
-were, besides, a little anxious about the
-weather, for the season was somewhat advanced, and everything
-was so deadly calm, that it was quite evident a change
-of some sort was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>What that change was, the next morning made manifest
-enough, for the wind was roaring round the house, and the
-rain pattering furiously against the windows long before the
-sun was up.</p>
-
-<p>However, the old copper lion that surmounted the church
-had veered round again, and was turning his battle-axe
-towards England, and Jan Torgensen—Captain Torgensen
-we should call him now in virtue of his new command, and
-in truth he was not a little proud of the title himself,—came
-in just as a very sulky breakfast was completed, and announced,
-“that as the wind was fair, he did not care the scale
-of a herring how much there was of it, and that this night
-should be spent at sea.”</p>
-
-<p>No one was sorry for this announcement, not even
-Birger, who was going back to Nordlingen’s, as he said, “in
-order to console Ariadne for the desertion of her faithless
-Theseus.” The pleasures of the summer had departed, and it
-was useless to linger over the scenes of past enjoyments. At
-Nordlingen’s perhaps the time might have passed pleasantly
-enough, notwithstanding the change of weather, but Christiansand
-has but few resources for a rainy day; and besides
-this, the very idea of a prolonged parting is depressing.
-Torkel was gone, and Tom was much too low for a story
-or a joke. There were, however, some marine difficulties—there
-always are; papers are never ready, and agents are
-always behind time, and thus, though every one was anxious
-to be off, and none less than Torgensen himself, who grudged
-every blast of the fair wind, it was full five o’clock before the
-anchor broke ground; and a cake, the last token of Marie’s
-affection, having been previously placed on the taffrail for
-Nyssen, the <i>Haabet</i> turned her stern to the blast, and set
-her fore-sail, and hoisted a couple of double reefed top-sails to
-receive it. The rain redoubled—certainly if Gammle Norgé<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[404]</span>
-had received them with smiles, she honoured their departure
-with tears.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing that met the Captain’s eye, as he turned
-from waving the last farewell to Birger’s receding boat, was
-the pilot, roaring drunk already, and the mate supplying him
-with no end of additional brandy. He went forward to draw
-Torgensen’s attention to this apparently dangerous breach of
-naval discipline.</p>
-
-<p>“Be quiet,” said Torgensen, in broken English, “the mate
-knows very well what he is about, I supplied him with the
-brandy myself. That drunken rascal is sure to get us into a
-scrape, if he has sense enough left in his drunken body to
-fancy he can take charge of the ship; and I am obliged, by
-law, to take him drunk or sober. As soon as he gets too
-drunk to interfere, which I am happy to say will be the
-case very shortly, I shall pilot my own ship, and I should
-think I ought to know how to take her out of Christiansand
-by this time—we all do that; in fact, these drunken pilots are
-nothing but an incumbrance.” And an incumbrance in this
-instance he proved, for, Torgensen having safely carried his
-brig to the mouth of the fjord, they were obliged to heave
-to for the pilot’s boat, which kept them waiting for a good
-hour more. The Parson suggested taking him to sea; but
-Torgensen swore he had had too much of him already.</p>
-
-<p>It was long after dark, therefore, when they passed the
-lighthouse, which they did in a furious squall of wind and
-rain, and stood out to sea under close reefed top-sails and
-reefed fore-sail, with two men at the helm, the brig steering
-as wild as if the Nyssen were blowing on both quarters at
-once, but dashing away through it for all that, and heaping
-up the sea under her bluff bows.</p>
-
-<p>The whole surface was one vast blaze of phosphoric light—the
-ship’s ragged wake was a track of wavering flame, the
-water that broke from her bows was a cataract of fire, a rope
-that was towing under her counter (Torgensen was not at
-all particular about these little matters), was ten times more
-visible than it would have been by broad daylight, for every
-strand in it was clearly defined by lines of delicate blue flame,
-while each breaking wave was a flash of brightness. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[405]</span>
-wind was as fair as it could be, and as they drew out from
-under the lee of the land, seemed enough to tear the sails
-from their bolt ropes.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah for Nyssen!” shouted Torgensen; but he shouted
-a little too soon, for not an hour afterwards they were close
-hauled with a south-west wind, dead foul, dancing like a
-cork in a mill pond, on the top of a tumbling cross sea, and
-plodding along at barely three knots; not even looking up
-within four points of their course.</p>
-
-<p>And the next day, and the next night, and the next, the
-same monotonous story; only as the wind settled to the
-south-west, the bubble went down, and it was not so difficult
-to walk the three steps and a half, which formed the <i>Haabet’s</i>
-quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<p>Still the only answer to the anxiously repeated morning
-question of “How is her head,” was, when most favourable,
-“half a point southward of west,—think we shall weather the
-Naze, please God.”</p>
-
-<p>Torgensen was always in high spirits, and was as proud of
-his new command, the Captain said, as a peacock with two
-tails; and she really had qualities of which a commander
-might well be proud, as a sea-boat,—but these did not comprehend
-either beauty, or comfort, or speed.</p>
-
-<p>There is no between decks in a Norwegian timber brig,
-the whole space being occupied with its bulky cargo, much
-of which lumbers up the waist, and forecastle besides; the
-crew inhabited a small hurricane-house just abaft the mainmast;
-a very small slip of this was bulk-headed off for the
-mate,—while the remainder—and a very small remainder it
-was—served the crew for parlour, and kitchen and all, for
-there was no other cookery place in the ship; in one sense
-this was an advantage, for they could cook in the worst of
-weathers, and this is not always practicable in a merchant
-ship; but if they did get this advantage over the wind and
-rain, it was, as the Captain remarked, a very dirty advantage
-indeed. All that there was of cover below the deck, was a
-very small sail-room aft, also used as a bread-room; before
-this was the Captain’s cabin, measuring exactly eight feet by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406"></a>[406]</span>
-six, which served for Torgensen and his two passengers, and
-for a purser’s store-room into the bargain, with all its indescribable
-stinks. After a very little practice, the Captain
-declared he could always tell the tack they were on, by the
-particular description of stink that was uppermost, and
-used to say that they had got their starboard or port stinks
-on board, as the case might be.</p>
-
-<p>The bread alone of the ship’s provisions was under cover;
-the beef and pork was stored in harness casks, lashed to the
-bulwarks, thus diminishing still more the very diminutive
-quarter-deck. In fact, a quarter-deck walk was what none
-of them ever thought of.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah!—the Naze bearing N.N.E., and all dangers of a
-lee-shore past: a lee-shore in timber ships is no joke; they
-never sink—they cannot, for the Norwegian deals and
-baulks being of less specific gravity than water, the ship
-that carries them would be buoyed up even if water-logged,
-but their very want of specific gravity is the cause of their
-danger on a lee-shore; besides being full below, the whole
-deck is lumbered up for six feet or more, and the centre of
-gravity is so high that they are all crank to the most ticklish
-degree; and, though invariably carrying very low sail, require
-every attention to keep them on their legs; for this
-reason, if caught on a lee-shore in anything like a breeze,
-they can never claw off, for they can carry nothing without
-tumbling over on their beam ends. For this reason, every
-Norwegian is very careful of an offing, it is the only thing he
-seems to care much about. When the wind changed, every
-ship that the fair breeze had tempted out of Christiansand
-that day had put back, and Torgensen only had held on,
-partly because he knew the comparatively weatherly
-qualities of his brig, but principally because he was young
-and foolish.</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening the wind drew round to the northward,
-and the brig was able, first to lie her course, then to shake
-out the reefs from her topsails, and lastly, having brailed up
-her fore and aft mainsail, to display a very ragged suit of
-studding-sails, which together got a fathom or two over six<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_407"></a>[407]</span>
-knots out of her—the very top of her speed,—and the Naze
-slowly sank below the horizon, fading into blue as it
-sank.</p>
-
-<p>But this good luck was not to hold; fine weather returned,
-but with it calm and light baffling breezes, with the
-ship’s head looking every way except that which she was
-wanted to go. Singular as anything of cleanliness seems
-among people who personally rejoice in dirt, there was more
-fuss in cleaning decks than is to be seen in many a man-of-war;
-the very cabin-deck was holy-stoned every morning, as
-well as the quarter-deck; though so far as the latter was
-concerned, this was rendered absolutely useless by the
-abominable habit of spitting, for which the Norwegians
-deserve as much notice as the Americans themselves, and
-which they do not yet only “<i>quia carent vate sacro</i>,” because
-they have not a Mrs. Trollope to write about them. In the
-present instance this was the more inexcusable, because the
-northern style of ship-building pinches in their ships so
-much aft, that a man with strong lungs might set on
-the weather bulwark, and with ease spit over the lee-quarter.</p>
-
-<p>As for seamanship, there are no smarter seamen in the
-world than the Norwegians when there is need, or more
-slovenly when there is not; but how they contrive to navigate
-their ships is a mystery which none but a Norwegian
-can solve. The whole of it is done by dead reckoning, with,
-in the North Sea at least, a pretty liberal use of the lead:
-besides the deep-sea lead, their only nautical instruments
-are the log, and what they call the “pein-compassen.” This
-last is a compass-card made of wood, and marked with
-thirty-two lines corresponding to the points, and drawn
-from the centre to the circumference, on which centre
-revolves freely a brass needle of equal length with the
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>On starting, the true bearing of the destined port, or of
-some remarkable point or headland which must be sighted
-during their voyage, is taken, and the “pein-compassen” is
-fixed to the binnacle, with that part set towards the head of
-the vessel. This, for that particular voyage, is called “the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408"></a>[408]</span>
-steering line;” and so long as the true compass tallies with its
-wooden brother—that is to say, so long as the ship looks up
-for her port,—the whole run is given her at the end of each
-watch; but, in traverse sailing, the two compasses must of
-course point different ways. In this case, at the end of the
-watch if the wind has been steady, or whenever the ship,
-from tacking, or any other cause, alters her course or her rate
-of sailing, the brass needle on the “pein-compassen” is turned
-to that point of the compass to which the ship’s head has
-actually been lying, and a line is drawn from that point with
-chalk, intersecting the “steering line” at right angles. The
-part cut off between the centre of the compass and the
-point of intersection gives the actual gain in distance to the
-port towards which she is bound, and answers to the cosine of
-our more scientific nomenclature. This, with some corrections
-for lee-way, is given to her, while the chalk line drawn from
-the point of the moveable needle to the point of intersection,
-which answers to our sine, gives the number of miles
-which the adverse wind has compelled her to diverge from
-her course, and which must be compensated for by a corresponding
-deviation on the other tack.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is that, day after day, the ship’s reckoning is kept,
-not by calculation, but by actual measurement, performed by
-a pair of compasses on a graduated scale; and, clumsy as
-this contrivance may seem, they do navigate their ships with
-an accuracy that might put some of our merchant skippers
-to shame,—to say nothing of the masters in Her Majesty’s
-Navy.<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a></p>
-
-<p>So far as the North Sea goes, which is the principal scene
-of Norwegian navigation, this mode of reckoning is considerably
-assisted by the lead,—indeed, it would be hardly too
-much to say that these timber ships are navigated by the
-lead alone. The soundings of the whole North Sea are accurately
-marked, and it so happens that there is considerable
-variety in the sand which the arming brings up; besides
-which there are a good many “pits,” as they are called—that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409"></a>[409]</span>
-is to say, small spaces, some of them not a mile across, in
-which, for some unexplained reason, the depth is suddenly
-increased. Should the ship be so fortunate as to strike one
-of these, they are so accurately noted in the charts, that it is
-as good as a fresh departure.</p>
-
-<p>It was about a week or ten days after the Naze—the last
-point of Norway—had faded from their sight, like a dim blue
-cloud, that the Parson was sitting or lying at the foot of the
-foremast in a soft niche, which he had arranged for himself
-among the deck timber, and had called his study. He was
-reading, for the books which they had brought with them,
-and which, hitherto, they had had neither time nor inclination
-to look into, were now very acceptable indeed. The Captain,
-sitting on the bulwark abreast of him, and steadying himself
-by the after-swifter, was watching the proceedings of some
-visitors who had come on board the preceding evening—a
-kestrel and half-a-dozen swallows. The swallows were so
-tired when they came on board, that they readily perched on
-the fingers that were held out to them, and one of them had
-passed the night on the battens in the mate’s cabin. The
-hawk did not seem a bit the worse for his journey; he was
-seated very composedly on the quarter of the top-gallant
-yard close to the mast, where he was pleasantly occupied in
-preparing his breakfast off one of the swallows, who had
-risen earlier than his companions, and who did not exactly
-realise the proverb about the “early bird finding the worm,”—on
-the contrary, he had been found himself, and was thus
-ministering to the wants of the hungry, while his brethren,
-having now recovered their strength by their night’s rest,
-were flitting unconcernedly about the masts and yards, just
-as on shore they had flitted round the church steeple, and
-were wondering, no doubt, what had become of all the flies.</p>
-
-<p>“As this is only the middle of September,” said the Parson,
-looking up at the birds, “it is evident that the migration of
-swallows must begin in the North first, and that previous to
-their leaving our shores, the English swallows must receive
-a large addition to their numbers; a fact which, so far as I
-know, naturalists have not noticed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or else,” said the Captain, “that they shift their quarters,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410"></a>[410]</span>
-like a regiment that has got its route, and march by detachments—one
-relieving the other. Ah!”—with a long sigh—“I
-wish I had wings like a swallow!”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! nonsense!” said the Parson; “we shall get on
-shore some time or other; everyone does, except the ‘ancient
-mariner.’ ‘Good times, bad times, all times pass over.’”</p>
-
-<p>“So they do; but all this is so much waste of life. Here
-am I, sitting dangling my legs over the sides of this cursed
-brig, knowing all the time that my friends are knocking the
-partridges about. Who can give me back my 1st of September?
-Besides,” he added, in a grumbling tone, “I want
-a clean dinner, if it is only by way of a novelty; I can rough
-it as well as anyone for the time, as you know, but a course
-of such living as this will poison a man.”</p>
-
-<p>The Parson laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“It does, I assure you! I have often seen it in the West
-Indies; when a nigger takes to eating dirt, he always dies,
-and I should think a little of that would go a great way with
-a white man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you know it is said that ‘every man must eat his
-peck of dirt in the course of his life.’”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s exactly the thing; we are allowed a peck of dirt,
-as you say, to last our lives, but you see if we stay here much
-longer, we shall soon get to the end of our allowance. What
-do you think I saw yesterday? When I went below, I could
-smell the cook had been there; you say yourself that you are
-always obliged to open the skylight whenever he comes near
-the cabin. You know what a beastly miserable day it was,
-and as I had nothing to do, I thought I would turn in and
-try to sleep away a little time, and get a little warm. I felt
-the pillow rather too high, and, putting my hand under it, I
-found the dish of plok fiske we were to have for dinner
-stowed away there to keep it warm! Bother that skipper,
-he is going about again,” as the Norwegian equivalent for
-“raise tacks and sheets” came grumbling on his ear, and the
-men lounged lazily to their stations; “he’s as frightened at
-the shore as if it was Scylla and Charybdis, and the Mäelström
-into the bargain. If he would only hold on three or
-four hours more, we might sight Flamborough Head, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411"></a>[411]</span>
-get on board an English collier and enjoy a little cleanliness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you will not enjoy that luxury for this voyage,”
-said the Parson; “the English ships always keep inside the
-line of sandbanks on the Norfolk coast; almost all we have
-met outside, as you may have remarked, are foreigners.”</p>
-
-<p>“Outside barbarians!” said the Captain, who was not in
-a good humour.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the clue-garnets had been leisurely manned,
-one at a time, and the mainsail was hanging in festoons from
-its yard; Torgensen himself steering, as, indeed, he had done
-for the last hour, and also giving the word of command.
-The wind was as light as could be, so that it really did not
-signify, except for fidgettiness, on which tack she was.</p>
-
-<p>The helm had been a-lee for about a minute, and the men
-were at their stations for “mainsail haul,” while the brig
-went creeping and creeping into the wind. The men
-began sniggering and joking to one another, but their
-jokes being Norwegian, were for the most part lost on the
-passengers.</p>
-
-<p>“What is that young fool about?” said the Parson, who
-had not risen from his recumbent posture; “he will have the
-brig in irons before he can look round. Jump up and see
-what is the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain scrambled on to the forebitts, so as to look
-over the hurricane-house, and burst out laughing. “Bother
-the fellow! if he is not reading ‘Peter Simple,’<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> and jamming
-his helm hard a-lee with his hinder end. Why, Torgensen!
-Torgensen! what the Devil are you about? the brig has been
-in the wind this half-hour!”</p>
-
-<p>Torgensen started up, flinging his book on the deck,
-righted his helm, and bellowed out his next command. It
-was loud enough to startle the mermaids in their coral caves;
-but noise will not compensate for slackness; the brig was
-already nearly head to wind, and there she hung—she would
-not go an inch farther for any one, and at last fell off again.
-Torgensen was obliged to wear her, after all.</p>
-
-<p>He swore, however, he did it on purpose, in order to get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412"></a>[412]</span>
-a cast of the lead, as he had not got one for the whole watch.
-This did not seem to the Parson so very indispensable,
-seeing that in the whole of that forenoon watch they had
-not shifted their position four miles; nevertheless, to suit
-the action to the word, Torgensen did lay his main top-sail
-aback, and armed his lead with as much gravity as if he
-really expected that the sand and shells brought up by this
-cast would be different from the sand and shells brought up
-by the last.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you what, though, ‘it is an ill wind that blows
-nobody good,’—we may get a cod while Torgensen is sending
-his note to the mermaids; jump below and get up the lines.
-The rind of that ham we had for breakfast will be a dainty
-such as Tom Cod is not likely to meet with often in the
-haaf, and it will be a pleasing variety to that eternal plok
-fiske, if we can get one. By the way, that salt fish has got
-desperately hard; I saw the carpenter pounding our dinner
-with the back of his axe yesterday, before the cook could do
-anything with it.”</p>
-
-<p>Whether Tom Cod would have been duly sensible of the
-honour that was done him, and would have accepted the
-line of invitation which the Captain had sent him for the
-next day’s dinner, it is impossible to say, for, unfortunately,
-he never received it. The whole bank abounded with hungry
-dog fish, and the bait never got a dozen fathoms over the
-side before it was seized by them. However, it was all fish
-that came to net; dog fish are not esteemed on shore, but
-place the diner on board ship, give him three weeks of
-calms and foul winds, short provisions, and those provisions
-principally dried fish, with a piece of salt horse for a luxury
-on Sunday, and even dog fish will come to be appreciated at
-their just value.</p>
-
-<p>It was about the middle of the dog watch in the same day—when,
-according to the theory of the Norwegian marine,
-everybody is supposed to be on deck for his own pleasure,
-and, according to matter of fact, everybody is below, sleeping,
-or talking, or cooking, or mending his clothes,—when the
-Parson, whose time began to hang a little weary on his
-hands, was yawning about the <i>Haabet’s</i> quarter-deck, with his
-hands in his pockets.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_413"></a>[413]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Norwegian dog watch must not be confounded with
-the English watches of the same name. In the Swedish or
-Norwegian navy, the twenty-four hours are divided into five
-watches instead of seven, as with us. These, beginning at
-8 p.m., are called the first watch, the night watch, the
-morning watch, the forenoon watch, and the dog watch, respectively,
-of which the first four consist of four hours each,
-and the last of eight. The dog watch comprehends the time
-from noon to 8 p.m. It is, of course, impossible for human
-strength and human endurance to keep it properly, but it is
-permitted to be kept in a slack sort of way by the whole
-ship’s company conjointly, one watch being indeed responsible
-for the duty, but not being forbidden to go below, provided
-their place, for the time, be taken by amateurs.<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> The natural
-effect of this is, that the whole watch is kept very slackly
-indeed, even in men-of-war; in fact, at the particular time
-specified, there was no one whatever on the deck of the
-<i>Haabet</i>, except Torgensen, who, as before, was steering, and
-the Parson, who had come on deck because the Captain was
-snoring so loud, and who, as luck would have it, was looking
-over the bulwarks to windward.</p>
-
-<p>The day had continued calm and hot, as September days
-often are, and the ship was not many miles from the place
-in which she had missed stays in the morning. She was
-close hauled, but carrying everything that would draw.</p>
-
-<p>“Torgensen,” said he, “I think you had better look out;
-there is something coming down upon us, that looks very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414"></a>[414]</span>
-like an invitation from your friends the mermaids.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> I should
-like to send an excuse.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, The Thousand!” said Torgensen: “God forgive me for
-swearing, at such a time;” and shoving the helm into the
-Parson’s hands, he seized a handspike, and began to belabour
-the deck.</p>
-
-<p>On all ordinary occasions there had been a good deal of
-republican slackness on board the <i>Haabet</i>, the men doing
-what they were told, but doing it leisurely, and in a <i>nonchalant</i>
-sort of way. It did not much signify, for in blue water
-and calm weather, it makes little difference whether the
-manœuvres are performed smartly or not.<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> But assuming
-the handspike was like taking up the dictatorship; there
-was no want of smartness now; the men buzzed out from
-their hurricane-house, like bees out of a hive, some half
-dressed, some stuffing a handful of plok fiske into their
-mouths, but all rushing to their stations, as if the very
-tautest-handed boatswain in the British service was at their
-heels.</p>
-
-<p>It so happened that Torgensen had been fitting up a fore-sail
-of his own, which he called a fok; a stoutish spar held
-the place of foot rope, which, though it diminished the area
-of the sail, certainly had the effect of making it stand better
-when close hauled; but that which he prided himself most
-upon, was his substitute for clue-garnets, which consisted of
-two ropes, which, rove through blocks at the quarter of the
-yard, led before the sail through a block at the clue, then to
-the yard-arm, and then along the yard; thus, embracing the
-sail, acting as spilling-lines and clue-garnets at once, and
-hauling it up, as it were, like a curtain in a theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The square main-sail was by this time clewed up, and, had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415"></a>[415]</span>
-not Torgensen’s head been full of this invention, he probably
-would have seen the necessity of casting off the sheet of the
-fore and aft main-sail, as he passed, supposing he had not
-time or hands to man the brails; as it was, the fore-sail came in
-most sweetly, and Torgensen, forgetting his captainship,
-skipped up the rigging, and was out at the weather earring,
-like a monkey up a cocoa-nut tree.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the squall struck her. Naturally the brig
-carried a lee helm, but at this moment, relieved of her fore-sail,
-and at the same time pressed upon by the whole force of
-the squall in her main-sail, she griped obstinately,—a propensity
-which the Parson had originated by steering as near as
-he could, in order to shake the wind out of the top-sails while
-the men were reefing. Things began to look serious; not a soul
-was on deck, every man being out on the yards, which, so soon
-as the sails began thrashing in the wind, jumped and jerked so
-furiously, that it was as much as any of them could do to hold
-on; the brig lay over, so that the water not only bubbled
-through her scuppers, but came pouring in over her bulwarks,
-and the Parson, with both hands clutching the bulwarks,
-was driving the helm a-weather with his stomach, while his
-feet were slipping one after the other on the wet and slanting
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>Just at that moment the Captain—his coat and shoes off,
-his head tied up in a pocket handkerchief, and his eyes scarce
-opened, just as he had roused up from his slumbers,—showed
-an astonished face above the hatchway.</p>
-
-<p>“Hallo! what’s the matter now? who spilt the milk?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jump! and let go that main-sheet! cut it if you can’t get
-at it any other way! but take the sail off her at any rate,
-or in two minutes we shall be at Fiddler’s Green.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain was wide enough awake to see that things
-were rather too serious for a joke, and scrambled up to
-windward as well as he could. Round rattled the sheaves, as if
-they would set fire to their blocks; away flew the sheet through
-them, the slack of it whipping the deck right and left, and
-barely missing the Captain, while the end of the main boom
-plunged into the water, wetting the sail half way up. The
-brig, eased of the strain, slowly and reluctantly paid off,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_416"></a>[416]</span>
-while Torgensen, still seated at the weather yard-arm, with
-his legs twisted round it, holding on by the earring with
-both hands, with his breast straining against the lift to
-which he seemed to be holding on with his chin, and his
-hat, the while, which had been secured round his neck by a
-lanyard, fluttering and dancing to leeward, just nodded
-down on deck, as if to say, “all right my boys, I knew you
-would do the needful,” and then went on with his work as if
-nothing particular had happened.</p>
-
-<p>The squall, however, was only the prelude to a change
-of wind; in less than an hour’s time she was able, not only to
-shake out her reefs again, but to lie her course, and to jog
-along it merrily.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the close of the next day they were looking out
-sharp for the Outer Garboard Buoy, which, out of sight of
-land, marks the mouth of the Thames, and, strange to say,
-after a cruise of three weeks’ traverse sailing, hit it to a
-nicety,<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> and on the following morning, when the fishermen
-came on deck, they had the satisfaction of seeing, for the
-first time since the Naze had sunk in the horizon, not only
-land, but land on both sides of them, of which that on their
-starboard beam bore a very strong resemblance to the old
-South Foreland.</p>
-
-<p>“England again!” said the Captain. “Hurrah for England
-and partridges!—what the deuce are you squinting at on the
-French coast, Parson?”</p>
-
-<p>“A very interesting sight for us,” said the Parson,
-putting the telescope into his hands, “though not on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417"></a>[417]</span>
-French coast; look at that sail, and tell me what you make
-of her.”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain took a long view. “A lugger I think, coming
-down before the wind, wing-and-wing.”</p>
-
-<p>“The very thing, and of course bound for England: if
-all goes right, we shall nearly cross her, and that in less than
-an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then hurrah for a leg of mutton!”—for it should be said
-the <i>Haabet</i> was bound for Bordeaux, to exchange her timber
-for the light St. Julien’s claret, of which so much is drunk in
-the north, and the fishermen had taken their passage in her
-on the chance, which amounted to almost a certainty, of
-meeting with an English coaster that would put them on
-shore somewhere. This they had not been able to meet
-with on the east coast, for foreigners are too much afraid
-of the shoals to allow themselves to go near a track
-which, by English vessels, is as well beaten as a turnpike
-road.</p>
-
-<p>“A leg of mutton!” said the Parson; “you are as bad
-as a Swede,—always thinking of your dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I have eaten such a lot of trash in
-that country that it is very excusable to long for the sweet
-simplicity of English roast and boiled; we have not had one
-single wholesome, unsophisticated meal since we got there;
-it was all grease, and sugar, and gravy, and preserves, except,
-indeed, where we boiled our own salmon on the Torjedahl,
-or toasted our own ‘mutton,’ as Moodie calls it, at the
-skal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, poor Moodie! I wonder whether he has found out
-yet that mutton is not made out of elk’s meat? But that
-lugger is nearing us fast; I think we had better talk to Torgensen
-about it, and get our traps on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>Torgensen was sorry to part with his passengers, and they,
-though to a certain extent reciprocating his grief, were much
-more sorry to part from Torgensen than from the <i>Haabet</i>. But,
-sorry or glad, it was all the same, the brig and the lugger, on
-their respective courses, rapidly approached each other; a
-weft hoisted by the former was answered by the latter, and,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418"></a>[418]</span>
-in a few minutes, her mast-heads were seen bobbing about
-over the brig’s lee quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Less than half a minute sufficed to transfer the fishermen
-and their belongings from one deck to the other, and then,
-hands shaking,—caps waving,—hoist away the lugs,—and up-helm
-for merry England.</p>
-
-<p>Away flew the lugger, “her white wings flying,”—it could
-not be added “never from her foes,” for she turned out afterwards
-to be a noted smuggler that no revenue cutter could
-ever catch. Up rose the white cliffs,—plainer and plainer
-grew the objects on shore: now the white houses of Dover
-came in view,—then the sheep on the downs, and the men
-on the piers,—then the rising sunbeams flashed back a merry
-welcome from the windows,—then the pier-heads opened,
-with the tide bubbling up against them like a river in flood,
-which, taking the lugger under the counter, gave her a final
-slew, as she rushed between them,—then through the inner
-harbour, and down sails, carrying on with the way already
-acquired,—then run up alongside the Custom-house quay.</p>
-
-<p>“Home at last!” said the Captain, as he leaped on shore.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hic longæ finis chartæque viæque.</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">PRINTED BY COX (BROS.) AND WYMAN, GREAT QUEEN STREET.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> The families of Lejonhöved and Svinhöved were conspicuous in
-the wars of Gustavus Vasa, at which time Sweden threw off the yoke
-which Denmark, with the concurrence of Norway, had fixed on them,
-by taking undue advantage of the conditions stipulated in the Union
-of Calmar. The head of the former family perished in the treacherous
-massacre at Stockholm, generally spoken of by the name of the “Bloodbath.”
-Both families derive their names from their armorial bearings,
-as at that time there were no surnames in Sweden. These signify
-Lion-head and Boar-head, or Pig-head, respectively. Hence the Parson’s
-sarcasm.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Långref—a poaching method of catching fish.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Tjäder—the capercailzie. Taking him in his lek—that is to say,
-during his play, a very singular method which both the tjäder and the
-black-cock has of calling together the females of their respective species,
-is strictly contrary to law.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Fjeld Ripa—The mountain grouse; a bird something like our
-ptarmigan, the pursuit of which is always attended with toil, and sometimes
-danger.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> According to ancient Scandinavian mythology, the earth, which is
-flat and surrounded by water, is continually guarded by Jörmungard
-the Sea Serpent, the daughter of Loki; who is so large that she encircles
-the whole earth, holding her tail in her mouth. She is sometimes
-called the Midgard Serpent;—Midgard meaning middle guard half way
-between the earth and the realms of the Hrimthursar, or Frost Giants,
-which is her post.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> The god Kvasir, or Unerring Wisdom, was the joint offspring of
-all the gods, and was created to aid their negociations with the Vanir.
-His blood, sweetened by mead, forms the drink of Poetic Inspiration,
-which was guarded by Gunlauth, the daughter of Thjassi, the chief of
-the Frost Giants. Odin, who was her lover, prevailed on her to give
-it up to him, and it is at present lodged in the heights of Asgard. That
-Poetic Inspiration should be wisdom, sweetened by honey and guarded
-by love, is in itself a beautiful allegory—and not less beautiful that it
-should be won by the gods and lodged in Heaven;—but the generation
-of Kvasir involves a most curious anomaly, and that is, that the gods
-should be able to create a being more intelligent than themselves,—unless,
-indeed, we interpret the allegory as implying that mutual
-council is more unerring than the unaided intelligence of any individual.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> The Indelta has very erroneously been stated, by one or two travellers
-in Sweden, to be the militia of the country. Sweden has a
-militia, and a very efficient force it is; but the Indelta is a feudal army
-raised and maintained by the holders of crown lands. The constitution
-of this force will be explained more fully hereafter; it is exclusively a
-Swedish institution, and does not exist in Norway.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> “Come over the river.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> “Quick, here, with the boat! and so you shall have some money
-for drink.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> One of the wild ideas of Scandinavian mythology is, that the sun
-is the eye of Odin, and that he once had two like other people; but,
-that coming one day to the well of Mimiver, the waters of which are
-pure wisdom, he bargained for a draught, and bought the horn gjoll
-full at the price of one of his eyes; no such great quantity either, if
-gjoll be the original of our English gill. However, this fully accounts
-for the fact that the moon is not now so bright as the sun, which it
-probably once was. It must be confessed that the whole of this story
-is entirely inconsistent with the theory of the sun and moon in the
-prose “Edda,” where these are represented as separate and independent
-divinities, the son and daughter of the giant Mundilfari,—the sun
-being feminine and the moon masculine; a tradition contrary to the
-notions of our poets, but fully borne out by our English peasants, who
-invariably speak of the moon as “he,” and the sun as “she.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Full-grown salmon have two or three ranges of very small teeth,
-whereas grauls (Scoticè, grilse) have only one. It is this distinction
-which, on the Erne, is technically termed “the mask,” and not the
-size, which determines the difference between a graul and a salmon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> An ort, or mark, is the fifth part of a specie-daler, equivalent to
-ninepence or tenpence of our money. A skilling is about the same as
-an English halfpenny; the word, however, is pronounced exactly the
-same as our English word shilling, the <i>k</i> being soft before <i>i</i>; a circumstance
-which rather perplexes the stranger in his calculations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> Since the abolition of capital punishment in Norway—a measure
-that does not seem to answer at all—murderers are confined, like other
-criminals, in the castle at Christiania. They may be seen in dresses of
-which each sleeve and leg has its own colour, sweeping the streets and
-doing other public work; and a very disgusting sight it is. The average
-of crime is very high in Norway—perhaps higher than in any country
-known, and particularly crimes of violence. This may be accounted
-for, partly by their wonderful drunkenness, and partly by the very
-inefficient state of the Church, and the almost total absence of the religious
-element in an education which is artificially forced by state enactments.
-In Norway there is a very great disproportion between intellect
-and religion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Manchester has its faults, and a good many of them, but among
-them all its Anglo-Saxon virtue of order and capacity for self-government
-come out in strong relief.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are your policemen?” asked the Duke, as he glanced at the
-masses that thronged the streets during the Queen’s visit,—perhaps the
-largest crowd that had ever been collected in England. The streets of
-the Borough of Manchester were not staked and corded off, and guarded
-by men in blue; but thousands of strong, active warehousemen and
-mechanics formed, by joining hands, a novel barricade. And in the
-evening, when numbers beyond computation were assembled in the
-streets to witness the illumination, amidst all the confusion there was
-nothing but good-humour.—<i>Fraser.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Alluding to a custom in Norway, of mixing the inner rind of the
-birch tree with their rye meal, during times of scarcity.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> The fisherman is very much recommended to tie his own flies for
-the Tay, or to get them at Edmondson’s. The author bought a good
-many pretty-looking specimens in the country, by way of patterns, all
-of which whipped to pieces in half-an-hour’s fishing. The fact is, there
-is a cheap way of tying flies, which it is impossible to detect by the eye;
-and it is just as well that the young fisherman should ask the <i>character</i>
-of his tackle-maker before investing his money in such very ticklish
-wares; the worthlessness of which he will not find out till he reaches
-his fishing-ground. The author, a fisherman of some experience, has
-tied a good many flies in his time, and has had a good many tied for
-him by his attendants and other professionals on the river’s banks; but
-the only tradespeople he has ever found trustworthy, in all points, in
-such matters are, Chevalier, of Bell-yard, London, and Edmondson, of
-Church-street, Liverpool. Their flies have never failed him, whether
-in their hooks, their gut, or their tying. All that the fisherman will
-want in their shops will be a little science, to enable him to choose his
-colours, <i>and a little money to enable him to pay his bills</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> The real scene of this piscatorial exploit is on the Mandahl river.
-There is a Hell Fall on the Torjedahl also; indeed, the name is common in
-Norway, and in Sweden too, so as to become almost generic for a dark,
-gloomy rush of waters; but the Hell Fall of the Torjedahl is inaccessible
-to salmon, which, notwithstanding all that Inglis says to the contrary,
-are unable to surmount the great falls of Wigeland about a mile below
-it. It is, therefore, worthless as a fishing-place; and, the author
-suspects, altogether too dangerous to be attempted without good reason.
-When the water is low, the fall of the Mandahl may be fished in the
-ordinary manner from a boat, and it is well worth the trial; but if the
-river be full, the birch rope will be found necessary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> The lower part of the Torjedahl is perfectly free from musquitoes,
-which cannot be said of all the rivers in Norway; this probably is
-owing to its rapidity, and to the absence of all tributaries and still
-water.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> It is no inaccuracy to give Birger a Scotch song, for there is a
-considerable infusion of Scotch blood among the Swedes, and Scotch
-family names are by no means uncommon among the nobility. In fact,
-Scotch names are to be met with even in their national ballads: for
-instance—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">It was young Folmer Skot</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Who rode by dale and hill,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And after rides Morton of Fogelsang,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Who bids him hear his will.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> The thirtieth of April.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent20">Lie still, my child;</div>
- <div class="verse indent20">In the morning comes Fin</div>
- <div class="verse indent20">Thy father,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And gives thee Esberne Snorre’s eyes and heart to play with.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> Esberne Snorre is the Danish Faust. In no country whatever
-was the reformation popular among the peasantry, and therefore the
-popular legends invariably assign the leaders and causes of it to the
-devil, as in the case of Faust himself, who, whatever Goëthe may say,
-really was a very respectable tradesman, and had no more to do with
-the devil than is involved in the invention of that art which became so
-powerful an instrument in the hands of reformers—printing. Esberne
-Snorre was what very few of the Danish Reformers were, a really good
-and conscientious man, who might well have built the Church of
-Kallendborg, or even have given his eyes for it. Nevertheless, pre-eminently
-before all the reformers, the devil carries him off bodily in
-every legend of the time, just as he did Faust.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> Equivalent to “spoiling a market” in Ireland, or “opening a
-Sheriff’s ball” in England,—“Goth’s garden” being the cant name for
-a place of execution in Stockholm, which is adorned with permanent
-gibbets, and is so called from the name of the first man who was hanged
-there. The saying is Swedish, not Norwegian, not only because it is
-local, but because there are no capital punishments at all in Norway.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Christina, daughter of the great Gustavus Adolphus, a popular
-and able sovereign, abdicated voluntarily,—wearied of the toils of
-government,—and is said to have uttered some such speech as that
-attributed to her by Torkel on crossing the little stream which in those
-days separated her late dominions from those of Denmark.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> Between “the two lights,”—that is to say, twilight,—is always the
-time in which all spirits of the middle earth have the greatest power;
-of course the reason is, that seen indistinctly in the doubtful light of
-morning or evening, natural objects take strange forms, and exhibit
-appearances which are ascribed to the supernatural.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> A sort of scallop, of very beautiful colour.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> In the Swedish Church there used to be a regular private confession
-made to the priest before every Communion, on which occasion an offertory,
-called confession-money, was deposited on the altar. It is, indeed,
-the rule of the Church still, though, since a royal ordinance, in 1686,
-forbade penitents to select their own confessors, confining them to the
-priest of their parish, the custom has fallen into disuse; still the old
-expressions are frequently retained.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> The mal is said to be a great-headed, wide-mouthed monster, with a
-long beard, of the same colour as the eel; and, like the eel, slimy and
-without any perceptible scales. It is said to grow to the length of
-twelve or fourteen feet, to weigh three or four hundred pounds, and to
-carry on his back fin a strong, sharp lance, which it can elevate or depress at
-pleasure. It is supposed to lie seeking whom or what it may devour
-in the deepest and muddiest holes of rivers or lakes. The author has
-heard this fish talked of very often, but has never seen one, and believes
-fully that it may safely be classed with the Black Horse, the Mid-Gard
-Serpent, and Dr. Clarke’s Furia Infernalis.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> The leading fish of each shoal, or school, as it is called,—usually a
-salmon of considerable weight and experience—is so termed by the Irish
-fishermen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> Frue is properly a title of nobility, and is of Danish origin. No
-Norwegian titles date earlier than the Union of Kalmar. These, however,
-have been all abolished by a Storthing, which, consisting mostly
-of peasants, set itself strongly against aristocratical distinctions; and,
-taking advantage of that clause in the constitution which provides, that
-if a bill be carried three times it overrides the king’s veto, have succeeded
-in abolishing them. Habit and custom, however, are stronger
-than parliaments; and the mistress of a wealthy establishment is frequently
-designated, not by her husband’s name, but as Lady Marie,
-Lady Brigetta, or, as in the present case, Lady Christina—for that is
-the meaning of the title Frue.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> Not many years ago, the “summer parlour” was the only room in
-any house that had windows that would open.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> All livings in Norway have a dowager-house and farm belonging
-to them, for the widow of the late incumbent. At her death, it passes
-back to the present possessor of the living.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> Deep water.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Here the Neck strikes his harp in his city of glass,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the Mermaids comb out their bright hair, green as grass,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">And bleach here their glittering clothes.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> Those who are drowned at sea, and whose bodies are never recovered,
-are said to have been enticed away to the mermaids’ caves beneath the
-deep water.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> Those who are lost and starved to death in the forest—a thing which
-is of perpetual occurrence,—are said to be detained through the love of
-the Skogsfrue.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“We fly from day’s dazzling light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But we joy in the shades of night,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though we journey on earth, our home must be</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath the shell of the earth and the sea.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Mathisen.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> This legend is taken from the Brage Rädur, which, in the original,
-is obscure enough. Finn Magnussen, however, seems to have hit upon
-the right interpretation of it, which we have followed here. His explanation,
-as given in “Blackwell’s Northern Antiquities,” is this:—“Iduna,
-the ever-renovating Spring-being, in the possession of Thjasse,
-the desolating Winter,—all nature languishes until she is delivered from
-her captivity. On this being effected, her presence again diffuses joy
-and gladness, and all things revive; while her pursuer, Winter, with
-his icy breath, dissolves in the solar rays, indicated by the fires lighted
-on the walls of Asgard.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> Niord and his wife, Skadi, had naturally some disputes about
-their future residence,—he preferring the brightness of his own palace,
-Noatun, she very naturally yearning after Thrymheim, the abode of
-her chilly father. The dispute was referred to Forseti, the son of
-Baldur, the heavenly attorney-general, who decided that they should
-alternately occupy Noatun for three months and Thrymheim for nine,—which
-is about the Norwegian proportion of summer and winter.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Thrymheim, the land</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where Thjasse abode,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That mightiest of giants,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But snow-skating Skadi</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now dwells there, I trow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In her father’s old mansion.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>Elder Edda.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> A proof of the authenticity of this legend is to be found in the
-etymology of the word, “gate,” (gatin—the street), being a Norwegian
-word.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> Hermod and Baldur were both sons of Odin. That is to say, Courage
-and Innocence are both children of Heavenly Wisdom.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> The moral of this legend is admirable. The Principle of Evil is of
-itself powerless against the Principle of Good, until it is assisted by
-well-intentioned, but blind Prejudice; but that same Prejudice, after
-its enlightenment, becomes its partner and ally.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> An attentive reader, who is also a fisherman, will see, by reverting to
-the time which the adventures in the Torjedahl and Soberud-dahl must
-have taken, that this voyage must have taken place much later in the
-year than the 24th of June, and that consequently he could not have seen
-the bale-fires he describes. The fact is, the author made two visits to
-Christiansand; he arrived there in June, but, finding the snow-water
-still in the river, he made a voyage among the islands, to occupy the
-time, and visited the place again at the end of July. To prevent unnecessary
-confusion, the incidents of both these visits are told together;
-but the fisherman must not conclude from this, that anything is to be
-done in any of the Tellemarken rivers before the second week in July.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> The whole Norwegian navy consists of one frigate, two corvettes,
-two brigs, three schooners, and a hundred and forty of these gun-boats.
-The Swedes, who have upon the whole rather a powerful navy, considering
-the poverty of their country,—that is to say, thirteen line-of-battle
-ships, fourteen frigates, some of them very heavy ones, and
-twenty-two steamers—possess also three hundred of these gun-boats.
-They carry generally one long tomer forward, and sometimes a carronade,
-sometimes a smaller gun aft. They are quite open, except a couple
-of bunks for the officers’ sleeping places, pull from twenty to thirty
-oars, and are generally sent to sea in squadrons, with a frigate or
-corvette to take care of them,—like an old duck with a brood of ducklings.
-The frigate forms a rallying point and place of refuge, as well
-as a place of rest, for the crews are changed from time to time, and in
-their turns enjoy a week’s rest and cover on board of her.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> In Sweden there really is an order of the Seraphim, and in Denmark
-one of the Elephant,—for the Goose and Gridiron we will not
-vouch.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> That ancient and distinguished family are said to read Gen. vi. 4
-thus: “And there were Grants in the earth in those days.” The word
-“giants” being, according to the best authorities in that family, a
-modern reading.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> Bjornstjerna, a not uncommon name in Sweden, signifies “bear’s
-star.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> Bör, civilized man,—from <i>beran</i>, to bear; the same etymology as
-that of <i>barn</i>, a child. Ymir, Chaos,—literally, a confused noise; the
-meaning is, “before civilization had subdued Chaos.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> It must be remembered that the letter o, in Swedish, is pronounced
-like our oo, and that the g before ä e i ö, as well as the final g, is pronounced
-like the English y; the word “Modige,” therefore, will be
-pronounced very like the English word “Moodie.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> <i>Rubus Chamœmorus</i>; called in the country, <i>Möltebär</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> Baldur’s Eye-brow—<i>Anthemis Cotula.</i>—<span class="smcap">Linn.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> The Puritan Abbott, Archbishop of Canterbury, got into great
-trouble from his sporting propensities. One day, as he was shooting
-with Lord de le Zouch, at Branshill Park, he shot a keeper. According
-to canon law, a clergyman killing a man becomes, from that time forward,
-incapable of performing any clerical function; and three Bishops elect
-refused consecration at his hand,—“Not,” as they said, “out of enmity
-or superstition, but to be wary that they might not be attainted
-with the contagion of his scandal and uncanonical condition.” He was
-re-instated by a committee of Bishops, appointed for the purpose, but
-never entirely recovered his position.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> According to Scandinavian mythology, the sacred ash of Yggdrasil,
-which typifies the Vital Principle of the world, has seated on its topmost
-boughs an eagle, bearing perched between his eyes a falcon,—emblematic
-of Energy and Activity.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> According to the Prose Edda, the gods had originally no poetry in
-their souls. The mead of Poetic Inspiration was in the keeping of the
-giant Suttung, who entrusted it to his daughter, Gunlauth. Odin made
-love to her,—obtained possession of the mead, and deserted her. He
-had, however, the grace to be ashamed of himself, for these are the
-words of the Hávamál, in which he evidently alludes to this not very
-creditable passage in his life:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Gunlauth gave me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On a golden chair seated,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A draught of mead delicious;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But the return was evil</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which she experienced,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With all her faithfulness—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With all her deep love!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“A holy ring oath</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I mind me gave Odin,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now, who can trust him?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Suttung is cheated—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His mead is stolen—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gunlauth is weeping!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> A Norwegian slang expression, for “early rising.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> There is a beautiful superstition—if it is not a real religious truth—in
-Norway, that those we have loved best on earth become our unseen
-guardians, and follow us always, to warn us of danger.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Then shall brethren be</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each other’s bane,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And sister’s children rend</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The ties of kin.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hard will be the age,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And harlotry prevail,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">An axe-age, a sword-age—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shields oft cleft in twain,—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A storm-age, a wolf-age,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ere earth shall meet its doom.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><i>The Völuspà.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> Stags are not common so far north, but they are to be met with
-now and then. Elks are much more often seen, and are now pretty
-plentiful. In the days of which the author is writing, the Game Laws
-were, on paper at least, very strict about both elks and red-deer. Time
-was, when the former of these were classed with the bear and the
-lynx, and were absolutely outlawed as noxious beasts. At the time
-the author was in Sweden, the laws had gone to the other extreme, and
-they were absolutely protected,—everybody being forbidden to shoot
-them; a prohibition which, though it prevented men from going after
-them openly, was, in fact, as little regarded as most laws are in the
-fjeld. Now, they may be shot, only under certain restrictions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> A cant phrase in Sweden, for “going on foot.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a> The only time the author ever did get a sight of one was in the
-fjeld on the right bank of the Gotha, near Trollhättan, when he was
-making his way through some tangled ground in search of a lake, which
-lies at no very great distance from the fall. On leaping down from a
-low ledge of rock, he very nearly pitched upon the top of a filfras, as
-much to his own surprise as that of the beast. He struck at him with
-his spiked fishing-rod—the only weapon he had with him. Fortunately
-for both parties, as he now thinks, he missed him; so they parted,
-much to their mutual satisfaction, and have not met since.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> Nalle is the cant name for the bear kind, as with us Reynard is the
-cant name for a fox.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> “Rig,” the earthly name of Heimdall, the watcher of Heaven’s
-gate, when he disguises himself to go skylarking on earth. Hence the
-slang expression, “Running a Rig.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> The Sun and Moon are continually pursued by the wolf Fenrir and
-her progeny, who sometimes nearly catch her. Hence the eclipses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">[64]</a> The author will not answer for his orthography in the word “pein-compassen.”
-He can work a reckoning by it, but has never seen it
-spelt.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">[65]</a> There is no book so popular in Sweden as what they call “Peter
-Simpel aff Kapten Marrjatt.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">[66]</a> In Preadamite times—that is to say, the times of Drake and
-Raleigh—this was the custom of the English service also; but it having
-been discovered that “what is everybody’s business is nobody’s business,”
-and that accidents and negligences were continually happening during
-the dog watch, a regular afternoon watch was established, and the
-dog watch reduced to four hours, and divided into two; so that the
-whole ship’s company could relieve one another systematically, and not,
-as before, by private arrangement; and that the whole could have two
-uninterrupted hours below, between four and eight in the evening, for
-their evening meal, or any other occupation. The whole afternoon
-watch was called the dog watch, because in the full light,—and Norwegian
-ships did not go to sea in the winter because they were frozen
-up,—the work was supposed to be so easy that the dogs were sufficient
-to keep it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">[67]</a> Those drowned at sea, whose bodies are never found, are supposed
-to have been invited by the mermaids to their caves, and to have been
-fascinated by the beauty of their entertainers. Homer’s story of the
-Syrens enticing the comrades of Ulysses, has some such foundation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">[68]</a> The words “smart” and “smartly,” which, at sea, have a signification
-very different from their shore-going meaning, are pieces of
-mis-spelling. They are evidently derived from the Norwegian words
-“snart” and “snartlig,” which bear precisely the same nautical meaning
-as our English words.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">[69]</a> This is a literal fact. Three weeks after sailing from Christiansand,
-and seventeen days after losing sight of land of any kind,—during which
-time there had been but two days in which the brig could lie her course,—the
-author was in the fore-rigging, on the look-out for the Outer
-Garboard buoy. He had but small hopes of seeing it, he admits, for
-the brig had been navigated by log, lead, and compass alone; nevertheless
-it is true, that within half-an-hour of his taking up his look-out
-place, and precisely in the direction in which he was looking, there
-was the buoy,—a little black speck, like a dancing boat. This, considering
-that the steamer in which he had gone out—a vessel commanded by
-a lieutenant in her Majesty’s navy—was fifty miles out of her reckoning,
-after a straight course of four days, seemed, to say the least, remarkable.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOREST SCENES IN NORWAY AND SWEDEN: BEING EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF A FISHERMAN ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
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