VI. — WATER-BEINGS.
Mermen and Mermaids.
THE
mermaid is described as being golden-haired, and possessed of human
shape down to the waist; below that she is like a fish, tail and all.
Icelandic fishermen believe that they sometimes see her, for the most
part north about Gríms-ey. She especially has her eye on young men, and
comes on board the boat to them, if they happen to be nodding, but the
'Credo' in the old Graduale is a good defence against her.
The
merman (marbendil) lives at the bottom of the sea, and never appears
above the surface, unless when fished up. In Landnáma-bók it is told
that Grim, one of the early colonists, went out fishing one winter with
his thralls, taking with him his little son. The boy began to grow
cold, so they put him into a seal-skin bag, which was drawn tight round
his neck. Grím caught a merman, and said to him, "Tell us all our
fortunes, and how long we have to live, otherwise you shall not get
home again.” "It matters little for you to know," said the merman, "for
you will be dead before spring; but your son will take land and settle,
where your mare Skalm lies down under her load." More than this they
could not get out of him.
Mermen
have been caught in this way not unfrequently, and have also been found
driven dead on shore, or in the stomachs of sharks. When they are
caught alive, they always want to get back to the same spot as they
were taken at; they are of few words, and give little heed to men. Once
some fishermen from Höfdi on Latra-strönd caught a woman on one of
their hooks, and took her home with them. She said she lived in the
sea, and was busy screening her mother's kitchen chimney when they
caught her. She continually entreated them to take her out to sea
again, and let her down at the same place as they got her, but they
would not. She remained there for a year, and sewed the vestments that
have been in Lauf-ás ever since. At the end of the year she was taken
out to sea again, for they saw that she would never be happy on land.
She promised to send some cows up on shore, and told them to be ready
to receive them whenever they appeared, and burst the bladder between
their nostrils, otherwise they would immediately run back into the sea.
Not long after this, twelve heifers came up out of the sea, and
proceeded to Höfdi. They were all sea-grey in colour; six of them were
caught and greatly prized, the other six escaped.
"Then Laughed the Merman."
THERE
is an old Icelandic saying, frequently made use of, "Then laughed the
merman," the origin of which is said to be as follows. Once a fisherman
caught a sea-creature, which called itself a "marbendil"; it had a big
head and long arms, but resembled a seal from the waist downwards. The
merman would give the fisher no information of any kind, so he took him
ashore with him, sorely against the merman's will. His young wife came
down to the sea to meet him, and kissed and caressed him, at which the
man was delighted and gave her great praise, while at the same time he
struck his dog for fawning on him. Then laughed the merman, and the
fisherman asked the reason why he did so. "At folly," said the merman.
As the man went homewards, he stumbled and fell over a little mound,
whereupon he cursed it, and wondered why it had ever been made upon his
land. Then laughed the merman, who was being taken along against his
will, and said, "Unwise is the man." The man kept him prisoner for
three nights, and during that time some packmen came with their wares.
The man had never been able to get shoes with soles as thick as he
wished them, and although these merchants thought they had them of the
best, yet of all their stock the man said they were too thin, and would
soon wear through. Then laughed the merman, and said, "Many a man is
mistaken that thinks himself wise." Neither by fair means nor foul
could the man get any more out of him, except on the condition that he
should be taken out again to the same fishing bank where he was caught;
there he would squat on the blade of an out-stretched oar, and answer
all his questions, but not otherwise. The man took him out there, and
after the merman had got out on the oar-blade, he asked him first what
tackle fishermen should use, if they wished to have good catches. The
merman answered, "Bitten iron and trodden shall they have for hooks,
and make them where stream and sea can be heard, and harden them in
horses' tire; have a grey bull's line and raw horseskin cord. For bait
they shall have bird's crop and flounder bait, and man's flesh in the
middle bight, and fey are you unless you fish. Froward shall the
fisher's hook be."
The
man then asked him what the folly was that he laughed at, when he
praised his wife and struck his dog. "At your folly, man," said the
merman, "for your dog loves you as its own life, but your wife wishes
you were dead. The knoll that you cursed is your treasure-mound, with
wealth in plenty under it; so you were unwise in that, and therefore I
laughed. The shoes will serve you all your life, for you have but three
days to live."
With that the merman dived off the oar-blade, and so they parted, but everything turned out true that he had said.
"Well I mind that morning
The merman laughed so low;
The wife to wait her husband
To water's edge did go;
She kissed him there so kindly,
Though cold her heart as snow;
He beat his dog so blindly,
That barked its joy to show."
The Merman and the Mermaid in the Færöes.
THE
merman (marmennil) is like a human being, but considerably smaller in
growth, and with very long fingers. He lives at the bottom of the sea,
and annoys fishers by biting the bait off the hooks and fixing these in
the bottom, so that they have to cut the line. If he is caught, he is
so dexterous that he can loose the thread that ties the hooks to the
line, and so escape from being brought up, and taken on board like any
other fish. One time when he tried to play his tricks at the bottom of
the sea, he was rather unlucky, for just as he was about to lay hold of
the line of Anfinn from Eldu-vík, with intent to make it fast, Anfinn
gave a pull, and caught the merman by the right hand. With one hand he
could not free himself from the line, and so was drawn up; a cross was
made upon him, and he was taken home. Anfinn kept him in his house on
the hearth-stone, but had to remember every evening to make a cross on
the four corners of this. He would eat nothing but fish-bait. When they
went out to fish, they took the merman with them, and had to recollect
to make the mark of the cross on him, when they took him on board the
boat. When they rowed over a shoal of fish, he began to laugh and play
in the boat, and they were sure of a good catch, if they put out their
lines then, especially if he dipped his finger into the sea. Anfinn had
the merman with him for a long time, but one day the sea was pretty
stormy when they launched the boat, and they forgot to make the cross
on him. When they had got out from land, he slipped overboard, and was
never seen again.
The
mermaid is like a human being above the waist, and has long brown hair
like a woman, which floats round about her on the sea, but her arms are
shorter. Below the waist she is like a fish, with a scaly tail. If she
turns towards the boat when she comes up out of the water, a storm is
sure to come, and then it is a case of rowing home as fast as possible,
and so try to escape being drowned. But if the merman comes up beside
her, it will be good weather. The mermaid sings so sweetly that men
lose their senses with listening to her song, and so they must thrust
the thumbs of their gloves into their ears, else in their madness and
frenzy they will leap out of the boat into the sea to her.
The Merman and Mermaid in Norway.
WHEN
the weather is calm, sailors and fishermen sometimes see mermen and
mermaids rise up out of the sea. The former are of a dusky hue, have a
long beard and black hair, and resemble a human being above the waist,
but below it are like a fish. The latter, on the other hand, are fair
and like a beautiful woman above, but below they have also the shape of
a fish. The fishers sometimes catch their children, whom they call
Marmæler, and take them home with them to get knowledge of the future
from them, for they, as well as the old ones, can foretell things to
come. Now-a-days, however, it is very rare to hear mermaids speak or
sing. Sailors dislike to see these beings, as they forebode storm and
tempest. To try to do them harm is dangerous. A sailor who once enticed
a mermaid so near that she laid her hand on the gunwale, and then
hacked it off, was punished for his cruelty with a terrible storm, from
which he only escaped with the greatest difficulty.
The Fisher and the Merman.
ONE
cold winter day a fisherman had gone out to sea. It began to grow
stormy when he was about to return, and he had trouble enough to clear
himself. He then saw, near his boat, an old man with a long gray beard,
riding on a wave. The fisherman knew well that it was the merman he saw
before him, and knew also what it meant. "Uh, then, how cold it is!"
said the merman as he sat and shivered, for he had lost one of his
hose. The fisherman pulled off one of his, and threw it out to him. The
merman disappeared with it, and the fisherman came safe to land. Some
time after this the fisherman was again out at sea, far from land. All
at once the merman stuck his head over the gunwale, and shouted out to
the man in the boat,
"Hear, you man that gave the hose,
Take your boat and make for shore,
It thunders under Norway."
The
fisherman made all the haste he could to get to land, and there came a
storm the like of which had never been known, in which many were
drowned at sea.
The Merman and the Calf.
AN
old woman in Stradil tells the following story after her grandmother.
Once, when no ship had been wrecked for a long time, and the merman
thus had not got his victim, he went up on shore, and cast his hook
into the cows which went about on the sandhills. Just beside the sea
there lived a peasant, who had two pretty red calves that he did not
want to lose, so he coupled them together with rowan tree, and the
merman had no power over them. All the same he fixed his hook in them,
but he could not drag them down into the sea, and had to let go his
hook, with which the calves came home in the evening. The man took it,
guessing it was the merman's, and hung it up beside the stove, where it
hung till one day, when only an old woman was left in the house. Then
the merman came and took his hook, and turning about to the old woman,
said in his own imperfect speech, "Two red cows' first calves; rowan
tree to couple; man couldn't drag them; man has lost many good catch
since." With that he went away with the hook, and never tried to take
cattle on the beach again.
The Dead Merman and the Sand-Drift.
A
DEAD body was once washed ashore on the Danish coast, and buried in the
churchyard of Nissum. No sooner had this been done than the sand began
to blow over the country from the beach, and this continued for three
days, growing always the longer the worse. People now began to think
there was trolldom in the matter, and applied to a wise man for advice.
On his learning that the sand-storm had begun immediately after the
burial of the dead body from the sea, he declared that this was
undoubtedly a merman, and that his burial in Christian ground had
caused the drifting. They must instantly dig him up again, and see
whether he had sucked his fore-finger into his mouth past the second
joint. If he had done this there was no help for it, but if not they
should bury him in the sandhills, and the drifting would cease. They
accordingly dug him up again, and sure enough they found him lying with
his finger in his mouth, but he had got it no further than the second
joint. They then buried him in the sand-hills, and the drifting ceased.
After that all bodies washed ashore were buried in these hills, down to
quite recent times.
The Sea-Sprite.
THE
sea-sprite is seen after sunset standing on out-lying reefs, and when
men row out to fish he calls upon them and asks to be taken on board
the boat. Sometimes they have taken him on board, and set him on one of
the seats to row with the others; during the darkest part of the night
he can row against two at the least, so strong is he. He is good at
finding the fishing-ground when it is not clear enough to see the
land-marks, but he grows smaller and smaller as day approaches, and
fades away into nothing when the sun rises out of the sea. They have
made the sign of the cross on him, but as the eastern sky grew redder
and redder before the sun, he begged more and more piteously to be let
go. One time they would not let him away, but when the sun rose he
disappeared, and his pelvis was left lying on the seat, for the
sea-sprite is said to take to himself a human pelvis, and this is left
behind if the sprite himself disappears. He can also produce ocular
deceptions: sometimes he seems like a man, sometimes like a dog. He is
of a dark-red colour, and hoots and howls so that it can be heard a far
way off. Fire flies from him when he is on shore. He has only one foot
(or tail), but can hop a long way with it, and his tracks have been
seen in the snow. When he meets a man on land he tries to drive him out
into the sea.
The Shepherd and the Sea-Folk.
ONE
time there was a rich yeoman who had a large and splendid house, with a
sitting room all panelled from floor to ceiling, but it had the defect
that any one who stayed there on Christmas eve was found dead next
morning. It was, therefore, difficult to get any one to stay there, for
no one wished to remain at home that night, and yet it was necessary
for some one to do so. Once the yeoman had got a new shepherd, as he
did frequently, for he had many sheep and required an active man to
look after them. The yeoman told the man honestly of this bad point
about the farm, but the shepherd said he did not mind such trifles, and
was quite as willing to come to him for all that. He came to him
accordingly, and they got on very well together. Time passed until
Christmas came, and the yeoman and all his household went to evensong
on Christmas eve, except the shepherd, who was not making ready to go
to church. His master asked why this was. The shepherd said he meant to
stay at home, as it was impossible to leave the farm to itself, and let
the cattle want their food so long. The farmer told him never to mind
that, no one could venture to stay there on Christmas eve, as he had
said before, for every living thing then about the house was killed,
and he would not have him risk it on any account. The shepherd
professed to think this all nonsense, and said he would try it. When
his master found he could not persuade him, he went away with the
others, and left him there alone.
The
shepherd, when left to himself, began to think over his design, and
decided that he had better be prepared for all emergencies, as there
was plainly something wrong. He kindled a light in the sitting-room,
and made it quite bright. Then he looked for a place to hide himself,
and loosening two planks of the panelling at the end of the room, he
crept in there, drawing them into their places again so as to leave no
trace. There he stood between the panelling and the wall, being able to
see all that went on in the room through a chink in the boards.
No
long time after he had thus disposed of himself, he saw two unknown and
very grim-looking men enter the room, and look all round it. Then one
of them said, "The smell of man! the smell of man!" "No," said the
other, "there is no man here." They then took lights, and looked
everywhere in the room, high and low, till at last they found a dog
that was lying below one of beds. Him they took and wrung his neck, and
threw him out at the door. The shepherd saw then that it would not have
done for him to come in contact with these fellows, and thanked his
good fortune that he was where he was. After this the room began to
fill with people, who proceeded to lay the table, and had all their
table-service of silver — dishes, spoons, and knives. Food was then
served up, and they sat down to it, making great noise and mirth, and
were there eating, drinking and dancing all night. Two, however, were
set to watch and tell if they saw any man on the move outside, and
whether day was about to dawn. Thrice during the night they went out
and said they saw no one coming, and that it was not yet day. When the
shepherd thought that it must be dawn, he seized both the loose boards,
sprang out into the floor with the greatest violence, clapped the
boards together, and yelled with all his might, "Day! Day!" The
strangers were so startled at this that they tumbled out, heads over
heels, leaving all their belongings — table, table-service, and clothes
which they had put off during the night to be all the lighter for
dancing. Some were hurt and some trodden under foot, while the shepherd
continued to chase them, clapping his boards and shouting "Day! Day!"
till they reached a lake a little way from the farm, into which they
all dived, and then he saw that they were "sea-folk" or
"water-dwellers." After that he went back home, dragged out the dead
ones, and killed the half-dead, and then burned up the bodies. When his
master came home, he and the shepherd divided between them all that the
visitors had left, and from that time forward nothing strange happened
there on Christmas Eve.
The Origin of the Seal.
SEALS
originally come from mortals who have intentionally drowned themselves
in the sea. Once in the year, on Fastern's Eve, they can take off their
skins, and enjoy themselves as human beings, with dancing and other
amusements, in caves and on the flat rocks beside the beach.
A
young man in Mikladal had heard of this, and there was pointed out to
him a place not far off, where they assembled on that night. Towards
evening he slipped away to this, and kept himself concealed, until he
saw the seals in great numbers come swimming up, take off their skins
and lay them on the rocks. He noticed that a most beautiful girl came
out of one of the seal-skins, and laid it a short distance from where
he had hid himself, so he slipped up and took possession of it. They
danced and played the whole night, but when day began to dawn, every
seal went to look for its skin. The girl was distressed when she missed
hers, and traced it to the man from Mikladal, but as he, in spite of
her entreaties, would not give it back to her, she had to go home with
him. They lived together for many years and had several children, but
he had always to take care that his wife should have no chance of
getting hold of her seal-skin, which he therefore locked up in his
chest, and always carried the key about with him. One day he was out
fishing, and as he sat and fished out at sea, he discovered that he had
left the key at home, and called out to the others, "To-day I have lost
my wife." They pulled up their lines and rowed home in all haste, but
when they reached the house, the woman had disappeared, and only the
children were left. To prevent these coming to harm when she had left
them, she had put out the fire and laid away all the knives. Then she
ran down to the beach, put on the skin and plunged into the sea, where
a male seal came up by her side, — he had all the time been lying out
there waiting for her. Whenever these children came down to the beach,
a seal might often be seen to rise and look towards land, and it was
believed that this was their mother. So a long time passed, and it
happened that the man intended to go into a large cave to kill seals.
The night before this took place, he dreamed that his former wife came
to him and told him that if he went on this expedition, he must take
care not to kill the big seal at the mouth of the cave, for that was
her mate, nor the two young seals at the back of the cave, for these
were her two young sons, and she described to him the colour of their
skins. The man, however, gave no heed to the dream, but went with the
others, and they killed all the seals they could lay their hands on.
The spoil was divided when they came home, and the man got for his
share the big seal and the hands and feet of the two young ones. In the
evening they had boiled the head of the big seal, and the flippers of
the young ones for their supper, but when these were set on the table
there was a great crash in the kitchen, and his former wife came in
like a fearful troll, snuffed at the dishes, and cried, "Here lies the
head of my mate, the hand of Hárek, and the foot of Fridrik, but it
shall be avenged on the men of Mikladal; some of them shall perish on
the sea, and some fall down the cliffs, till their number is so great
that they can reach round the whole island of Kallsö, holding each
other by the hand." After uttering this curse she disappeared and was
never seen again, but to this day some are always being lost on the
dangerous waters and cliffs in this neighbourhood, and it is also said
that there is always a lunatic on the south farm in Mikladal. The
number of those lost must, therefore, still be insufficient to stretch
round the island.
Nykur or the Water-horse
NYKUR
lives both in rivers and lakes, and even in the sea. In shape he most
resembles a horse, generally grey in colour, but sometimes black; all
his hoofs point backwards, and the tuft on the pastern is reversed. He
is, however, not confined to this one shape, but has the property of
being able to change himself at once into other forms at his pleasure.
When cracks come in the ice in winter, and cause loud noises, it is
said that Nykur is neighing. He begets foals, just like stallions, but
always in the water, although it has happened that he has got mares
with foal. It is the mark of all horses that are sprung from Nykur that
they lie down when they are ridden, or bear packs, over water that wets
their belly.
This
property they have from Nykur, who haunts lakes and rivers that are
difficult to cross; he then appears quite tame, and entices people to
ride across on him.
When
any happen to mount him he rushes out into the water, lies down there,
and drags his rider down with him. He cannot bear to hear his own name,
or any word resembling it; at that he changes shape, and springs into
the water.
In
Gríms-ey, in the north, it is believed that Nykur lives in the sea
there, and neighs whenever he knows that the inhabitants have gone to
the mainland for a cow. His neigh drives them mad, and they spring into
the sea and are drowned. To this also points the fact that it is only
of late years that the men of Gríms-ey have ventured to keep a cow on
the island.
Nykur does work as a Grey Horse.
ONCE
the farmers of the parish had to build a wall round the churchyard at
Bard (some say Holt) in Fljót (N. of Iceland). One day they had all
come to the work early except one man, who was thought rather
evil-disposed. Not before mid-day did they see him coming, leading
after him a grey horse. On his arrival he was assailed by those who had
come early, for coming so late to do his share of the work. The man
calmly asked what he was to do, and was set to work along with some
others to bring turf for building the wall, with which he was well
enough pleased. His grey horse was very fierce towards the others, bit
them and kicked them, till at last no horse could stand before him. The
men tried putting heavier loads on him, but that did no good, for he
went with loads half as heavy again just as easily as before, and never
stopped till he drove off all the other horses, and was the only one
left. The man then put on his back as much as all the other horses
together had taken at each journey, and after that he went quietly and
carried all the material needed for the wall. When this work was
finished, the man took the bridle off the horse beside the new-built
wall, and struck him over the loins with it just as he let him go. The
horse not liking this, threw up his heels and struck the wall with
them, thus making a great gap in it that could never be filled up
afterwards, however often it was built again, until at last they came
to use it as a gate to the church. The last seen of the horse was that
as soon as he was loose, he set off and never stopped till he landed in
Holt Lake, and all were sure then that this had been Nykur.
Nennir.
ONE
time a herd-girl was searching after sheep, and was very tired with
walking so far. She then, to her great delight, came upon a grey horse,
for which she made a halter with her garter, laid her apron on his
back, and proceeded to mount him. But just as she did this, she said "I
don't think I care to (nenni) go on its back." With that the horse
started violently, dashed out into a lake near hand, and disappeared.
The girl now saw that this was Nykur, for it is his nature that he must
not hear his name, otherwise he goes off into his lake, and his other
name is Nennir. The same thing happens if Nykur hears the Devil named.
One
time three or four children were playing themselves near their home on
the level banks of a lake. They saw there a grey horse, and went to
look at it. Then one of the children mounted it, and the others
followed, one by one, till only the eldest was left. The others told it
to come up too, the horse's back would be long enough for them all to
sit on. The child would not go, however, and said it did not care to
(ekki nenna). With that the horse started and dashed into the lake with
all the children on its back. The one that was left went home and told
what had happened, and all knew that this must have been Nykur, but
neither he nor the children were ever seen again.
The Long Horse.
IN
the middle of the town of Ryslinge there was in old days a morass
called Tange's Kjær, and the name is still given to a dam which by
draining has taken the place of the morass. One evening, many years
ago, some young girls from Ryslinge had been out at a farm in Skirret,
to help the woman there to card her wool, and it was pretty late before
they started to go home. They followed the path from Skirret to
Ryslinge, which went through the morass. The girls were frightened as
to how they were to get over this dangerous spot, but on coming to it
they found there an old lean horse, so lean that one could count its
ribs. The boldest of the girls immediately mounted on its back, and the
others followed her example, for the more that mounted it the longer
grew the horse. They then rode into the morass, but when they had got
half way over, the foremost girl looked behind her, and when she saw
that they were all on one and the same horse, she was so scared that
she cried out,
"Jesus Christ's cross!
We are sitting all on one horse."
As
soon as this was said, the horse suddenly disappeared, and the girls
were left standing in the middle of the bog, and had to wade to land.
Nykur in the Færöes.
NYKUR
lives in lakes, where he has his abode deep down at the bottom of the
waters, but he often comes up on shore, and it is no good thing to meet
him. Sometimes he is like a pretty little horse, and looks quiet and
tame, and so entices folk to come near to him, and' clap him and stroke
him on the back; but as soon as they happen to touch the tail, they
stick fast to him, and then he lets no one go, but drags them down with
him to the bottom of the water. Sometimes he appears in human shape, as
a fine young fellow, to entice girls to go with him, and promises them
mirth and play in his hall, if they will but follow him; but if they
get a suspicion of who it is that they are giving themselves over to,
they have only to name him by his right name, "Nykur," and he loses all
power over them, and must let them go and return all alone to his lake.
It is said that Nykur can also assume the shape of all four-footed
beasts, but he cannot get the point of a wether's horn made on himself.
So long, however, as he keeps his own shape he is like a horse, and it
has happened that men have got power over him by cutting a cross on his
back, and have then employed him to drag large stones down from the
hills with his tail, to build walls or houses with, such as may still
be seen at Húsavík in Sando, and at Eid in Österö. The huge stones
gathered there bear witness to his great strength. On Takmyre, in
Sandö, lies a huge rock, which they would have had him draw to Húsavík,
but his tail broke, and the stone stands there with part of the tail
still to be seen adhering to it.
The Nök or Neck.
This
water-troll resides mainly in rivers and lakes, but sometimes also in
fjords. He requires a human sacrifice every year, and therefore in
every river or lake where a Nök has his abode, at least one person is
lost every year, and when one is to be drowned, the Nök is often heard
shouting with a hollow and ghostly voice, "Cross over." These
foreboding cries, in some places called "ware-shrieks," are also
sometimes heard like those of a human being in a death-struggle.
The
Nök can change his shape to resemble all kinds of things, sometimes a
half-boat in the water, or a half-horse on land, sometimes gold and
valuables. If any one touches these, the Nök has power over him, and is
especially greedy for little children, but is only dangerous after
sunset. On approaching a water at that time, it is not amiss to say,
"Nyk, nyk, needle in water! the Virgin Mary threw steel in water: you
sink, I float!"
Although
the Nök is a dangerous troll, yet he sometimes finds his master. In
Sund-foss in Gjerrestad, says the story, there lived for a long time a
Nök, who was often the cause of people being lost, when they rowed up
or down the fall. The priest, who feared danger from this Nök, took
with him on his journey four stout fellows, and made them twice row up
the foss with all their might, but each time they were carried back
without getting over it. When they rowed up for the third time, they
saw the priest, at the head of the foss, plunge his hand into the water
and pull out of it a creature which looked like a little black dog. The
priest then told them to row further up the stream, while he set the
Nök between his feet and remained quite silent. As they neared the
cairn beside Tvet, he charmed the Nök into it. Since that time no one
has been lost in Sund-foss, whereas two have been drowned beside the
cairn of Tvet, where cries are often heard as of people in danger of
their lives.
Not
much better did the Nök in Bahus fare. In Nor-land he transformed
himself into a horse, and went on the bank to graze, but a wise man,
who saw that there was something on foot, cast so ingenious a halter on
him that he could not get free again. He kept the Nök beside him the
whole Spring, and worked him well, for he ploughed all his fields with
him. At last the halter gave way by accident, and like a shot the Nök
sprang into the lake, and took the harrow along with him.
The River-Horse.
THE
river-horse (bäck-hästen) is very malicious, for, not content with
leading folk astray and then laughing at them, when he has landed them
in thickets and bogs, he, being Necken himself, alters his shape now to
one thing and now to another, although he commonly appears as a
light-grey horse. A good long time back a peasant got the better of
him. The river-horse wanted to get the man on his back, when he would
soon have carried him out into the stream; but the peasant was wiser
than that, for instead of mounting him he put a bridle on him, and
Grey-coat had to go home with him. He now got something else to do than
go about and play tricks, for the peasant harnessed him to the plough
and to a heavy waggon, so that he had to use all his strength, and the
bridle was never taken off him for a single minute so long as the
peasant remembered about it. One day, however he forgot what kind of
horse he had and took off the bridle, whereupon the river-horse went
off like a shot, and was never again seen in that district.
He
also changes himself sometimes to other animals. On one occasion a
servant-girl went into the cow-house, and found there a new-born calf.
It was a winter day, so she took the calf and carried it into the
house, where she laid it beside the stove. Her master and mistress were
delighted with this, as they had not been expecting one, and asked the
girl whether it was a bull or a cow. She did not know, and when she
proceeded to find out, the calf sprang up and laughed, "Ho, ho, ho!"
and dashed out of the house.
It
is certain that the river-horse still exists, for it is no more than a
few years back that a man in Filborna district, who owned a light-grey
horse, was coming home late one night, and saw, as he thought, the
horse standing beside Väla brook. He thought it strange that his man
had not taken in Grey-coat, and proceeded to do so himself, but just as
he was about to lay hold of it it went off like an arrow, and laughed
loudly. The man turned his coat, so as not to go astray, for he knew
now who the horse was.
In
Kristianstad there was a well, from which all the girls took the
drinking-water, and where a number of boys always gathered as well. One
evening the river-horse was standing there, and the boys, thinking it
was just an old horse, seated themselves on its back, one after the
other, until there was a whole row of them, but the smallest one hung
on by the horse's tail. When he saw how long it was he cried, "Oh, in
Jesus' name!" whereupon the horse threw all the others into the water.
A
worse thing about the river-horse is that he has a great passion for
women who have just given birth to a y-child. He then puts on the
appearance of the genuine husband, and tries to share her bed; but
however he may change his shape he cannot get rid of the horse's hoof,
and by this the wife can distinguish him from her real husband. If she
does not look to this, and allows herself to be deceived by him, she
becomes wrong in the head from that day forward. No woman, however,
receives these ugly visits unless the midwife or some other person has
been so careless as to wash her linen in some stream or river, and dry
it in the open air, for through this the river-horse (or river-man, as
one may call him) gets power to enter the house.
The River-Man.
LIKE
the trolls and the wood-fairies, the river-man belongs to the fallen
angels, and like these also he desires to play wicked pranks on
mankind, so he changes his shape at pleasure. A story is told of a
young girl who engaged herself to an agreeable young man, and the two
were in the habit of meeting beside a stream. The river-man took
advantage of this, put on the shape of her betrothed, and met the girl
several times. She found, however, that he behaved differently from his
usual conduct, and complained to her parents. These suspected mischief,
and told her that the next time she met him, she should pretend to be
very friendly with him, and so get out of him the way to protect
herself against the river-man. She took their advice, and he was
foolish enough to say to her, that whoever carried on their person,
“wall-stone, sausage-bone, and the white under ground,” would be safe
from him. The girl then searched for a stone from a clay-covered
house-wall, a bone-splinter from a meat-sausage, and a garlic-root;
these she carried about with her, and so put an end to his tricks.
The
river-man plays music in the rivers and streams. His music is
wondrously beautiful to hear, but dangerous to listen to, for one can
lose their senses by standing and hearing the dance to the end. Many
village musicians have been known, who have learned from him to play
this elf-dance, and have sometimes played the first parts of it at
Christmas parties and elsewhere. This might be done without any danger
either to themselves or the dancers, but if the player had not sense
enough to stop at the end of the third part, but began to the fourth
and last, then it was too late. At the third part both old and young
danced like mad, but now the musician and tables and benches danced as
well, and could not stop so long as life was in the people, unless some
one from outside entered the room, and cut all the strings of the
violin across with a knife.
Necken is Promised Redemption.
IN
the songs which were composed in old times about Necken, he is
represented, like all the elf-folk, as worthy of sympathy and
compassion, and the country people always listen with a feeling of
melancholy to the sorrowful Necken's song, in which he laments his hard
fate.
"Oh, I am ne'er a knight, though so I seem to you,
I am the wretched Necken, that dwells in billows blue,
In fosses and thundering torrents.
"My dwelling it lies beneath a bridge so low,
Where no one can walk and where no one can go,
And no one can remain till the morning."
Among
the most common and most widely-spread stories of Necken is the
following. A priest was one evening riding over a bridge, when he heard
strains of most melodious music. He turned round, and saw upon the
surface of the water a young man, naked to the waist, wearing a red
cap, with golden locks hanging over his shoulders, and having a gold
harp in his hand. He knew that it was Necken, and addressed him thus:
"Why do you play your harp so merrily? Sooner shall this withered staff
that I hold in my hand grow green and blossom, than you shall get
redemption. The unhappy Necken threw his harp into the water, and wept
bitterly. The priest turned his horse again and rode on his way, but
lo, when he had gone a little way, he noticed that round about the old
pilgrim's staff that he had in his hand green shoots and leaves had
come forth, mingled with the most beautiful flowers. This seemed to him
to be a sign from heaven, to preach the comforting doctrine of
Redemption after another fashion, and he hastened back to the still
mourning Necken, showed him the flowering staff, and said, "See, now my
old staff is green, and blossoms like a rose; so also shall hope
blossom in the hearts of all created beings, for their Redeemer
liveth." Comforted with this, Necken seized his harp again, and joyous
tones sounded over the banks the live-long night.
"The hour is come, but not the man."
IT
was the Nök, or another water-troll, who late one evening shouted from
the lake beside Hvíde-sö Parsonage, "The time is come, but not the
man." As soon as the priest heard of this, he gave orders to watch the
first man who came with intent to cross the lake, and stop him from
going further. Immediately after this, there came a man in hot haste,
and asked for a boat. The priest begged him to put off his journey, but
as neither entreaties nor threats had any effect, the priest made them
use force to prevent his crossing. The stranger became quite helpless,
and remained lying so, until the priest had some water brought from the
lake from which the cry came, and gave him it to drink. Scarcely had he
drunk the water, when he gave up the ghost.
In
southern Vend-syssel in Denmark the river-man is also known as the Nök.
The river Ry there takes one person every year, and when it demands
them, it calls,. "The time and the hour are come, but the man is not
yet come." When this cry is heard from the river, folk must beware of
going too near it, for if they do so, they are seized by an
irresistible desire to spring into it, and then they never come up
again. There are many who are said to have heard the cry, among others
a girl who was going along its bank with a dog by her side. When she
heard the call, she cried out, "Not me, but the dog," which immediately
sprang into the stream and was drowned. She also saw a little man with
a large beard running about in the river; this was the Nök, from whom
the cry no doubt came.
In
Odense river there is also a river-man, who requires-his victim every
year, and if one year passes without any one being drowned there, he
takes good care to have two-in the year following. It is said that two
little boys were once playing on the bank, when one of them fell into
the water. The other tried to help him out, but just as he got hold of
his comrade's hand, a voice was heard out of the river, "No, I shall
have both of you; I got no one last year," and with that this boy also
slipped into the water and both were drowned. Some men, who were
witnesses of the accident from the opposite bank, hurried with a boat
to lend their aid, but came too late. The bodies were never found
either, the river-man had kept them.
The River-Man.
THERE
was a river-man in a stream which runs on the south side of
Maarup-gaard in Fjaltring. The man on the farm was well acquainted with
him, and the river-man gave him permission to pasture his cattle along
his possessions. Finally, however, they fell out, as the river-man
thought that the farmer was coming too close to him; so he decided to
play him a trick. The meadow had just been mown, and a pair of bullocks
were pasturing on it, one of which he resolved to take when it came
down to drink. One of them had a piece of a tether round its neck, and
as it bent down its head to drink, the river-man fixed his gold hook in
this, and tried to drag it down into the stream. The bullock, however,
dragged the hook from him, and ran straight home with it. The farmer
came out into the yard, and saw this big gold hook hanging at the
bullock's neck, so he took it off and hung it up in his parlour. In a
little the river-man came and asked it back, but the man said, "No; it
is hanging in a place that you cannot take it from." "Oh, never mind,"
said he, "you can just keep it for the services you have done me in
time past; I wanted you to have it as a reminder of me, and there is a
blessing along with it, for you and your descendants wiil never come to
poverty so long as you have it." This has been fulfilled, for there has
always been prosperity on that farm, as far back as any one can
remember.
The Kelpie.
IN
Gerrestad, they formerly used to set down a bowl of gruel, or something
of that kind, beside the mill, so that the kelpie might increase the
meal in the sacks. For a long time he lived in Sand-ager-foss, where a
man had a mill. Whenever he tried to grind corn, the mill stopped, and
the man, who knew that it was the kelpie who caused this annoyance,
took with him one evening some pitch in a pot, under which he lighted a
fire. As soon as he had started the mill, it stopped as usual. He then
pushed down a pole to drive away the kelpie, but in vain. Finally, he
opened the door to look out, but right in the doorway stood the kelpie,
with open mouth, which was so big, that his under-jaw rested on the
threshold and the upper one on the lintel. "Have you ever seen anything
gape so wide?" said he to the man, who straightway caught up the pot of
boiling pitch, and threw it into his mouth, with the words, "Have you
ever felt anything taste so hot?" The kelpie disappeared, roaring
loudly, and has never been seen since.
Sea-Serpents.
IN
the fresh-water lakes and rivers, as well as along the coasts of
Norway, are found monstrous sea-serpents, which, however, differ in
respect both of their appearance and magnitude. According to the
general belief, they are born on land, and have their first abode in
forests and stone-heaps, from which, when they are full-grown, or have
tasted human blood, they make their way down to inland lakes, or to the
sea, where they grow to a monstrous size. They seldom show themselves,
and when they do, they are regarded as omens of important events. In
most lakes and rivers of any importance these monsters have, according
to tradition, been seen some time or other rising from the depths of
the waters, and thereby foretelling some great event. In the
fresh-water lakes none have shown themselves within living memory, but
they are sometimes seen in the firths when it is perfectly calm. In
Snaasen Lake is found a large serpent, which yearly demands a human
life, and in Sælbo Lake there exists one which has lain there since the
Deluge. When once it turns itself, it will break down the mountain that
now dams in the lake, and the result will be that Trondhjem will be
overflowed. Some time after the black death, says tradition, there came
two large serpents from Foksö past By and down into Lougen; one of them
is said to be still there, but the other, a couple of centuries ago,
tried to go down the river to Gulosen, and was killed in the waterfall,
and drifted over to Braaleret, beside By-nes in the neighbourhood of
Trondhjem, where it rotted and gave out such a stench that no one could
go near the spot.
The Sea-Serpent in Mjösen.
IN
Mjösen there once lived a sea-serpent, and one time, when it was fine
summer weather, it came to the surface to sun itself, throwing the
water into the air, while it reared its head above a reef. Its eyes
were large, and glowed like a carbuncle; a long mane like sea-tangle
hung down its neck; and its body, covered with scales which glanced
with a thousand colours, stuck up here and there. As it was unable to
go away again, and lay and beat its head upon the reef, there was a
monk, a daring fellow, who shot an arrow into one of its eyes. It died
in terrible convulsions, so that the waves became both red and green
with blood and venom, and finally it drove ashore at Pulstö on Helge-ö.
It lay there and rotted till the stench became so intolerable, that the
inhabitants had to cart wood and burn it up. They afterwards set up its
ribs, which were so high that a man on horseback could ride under them.
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