第 40 节
作者:
浮游云中 更新:2021-02-20 16:28 字数:9321
they knew nothing。 The next night the red cock crew'9' over ten farms
in the valley; and it happened to he theirs who had spoken against King
Olaf's god。 Then the peasants flocked to the Ting…stone and received the
baptism of Christ the White。 Some few; who had mighty kinsmen in the
North; fled and spread the evil tidings。 Only one neither fled nor was
baptized; and that one was Lage Ulfson Kvaerk; the ancestor of the present
Lage。 He slew his best steed before Asathor's altar; and promised to give
him whatever he should ask; even to his own life; if he would save him
from the vengeance of the king。 Asathor heard his prayer。 As the sun
set; a storm sprung up with thick darkness and gloom; the earth shook;
Asathor drove his chariot over the heavens with deafening thunder and
swung his hammer right and left; and the crackling lightning flew through
the air like a hail…storm of fire。 Then the peasants trembled; for they
knew that Asathor was wroth。 Only the king sat calm and fearless with
his bishop and priests; quaffing the nut…brown mead。 The tempest raged
until morn。 When the sun rose; Saint Olaf called his hundred swains;
sprang into the saddle and rode down toward the river。 Few men who
saw the angry fire in his eye; and the frown on his royal brow; doubted
whither he was bound。 But having reached the ford; a wondrous sight
met his eye。 Where on the day before the highway had wound itself up
the slope toward Lage Kvaerk's mansion; lay now a wild ravine; the rock
was shattered into a thousand pieces; and a deep gorge; as if made by a
single stroke of a huge hammer; separated the king from his enemy。
Then Saint Olaf made the sign of the cross; and mumbled the name of
Christ the White; but his hundred swains made the sign of the hammer
under their cloaks; and thought; Still is Asathor alive。
'9' 〃The red cock crew〃 is the expression used in the old Norwegian
Fagas for incendiary fire。
That same night Lage Ulfson Kvaerk slew a black ram; and thanked
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Asathor for his deliverance; and the Saga tells that while he was sprinkling
the blood on the altar; the thundering god himself appeared to him; and
wilder he looked than the fiercest wild Turk。 Rams; said he; were every…
day fare; they could redeem no promise。 Brynhild; his daughter; was the
reward Asathor demanded。 Lage prayed and besought him to ask for
something else。 He would gladly give him one of his sons; for he had
three sons; but only one daughter。 Asathor was immovable; but so long
Lage continued to beg; that at last he consented to come back in a year;
when Lage perchance would be better reconciled to the thought of
Brynhild's loss。
In the mean time King Olaf built a church to Christ the White on the
headland at the river; where it stands until this day。 Every evening; when
the huge bell rumbled between the mountains; the parishioners thought
they heard heavy; half…choked sighs over in the rocks at Kvaerk; and on
Sunday mornings; when the clear…voiced chimes called them to high…mass;
a suppressed moan would mingle with the sound of the bells; and die away
with the last echo。 Lage Ulfson was not the man to be afraid; yet the
church… bells many a time drove the blood from his cheeks; for he also
heard the moan from the mountain。
The year went; and Asathor returned。 If he had not told his name;
however; Lage would not have recognized him。 That a year could work
so great a change in a god; he would hardly have believed; if his own eyes
had not testified to it。 Asathor's cheeks were pale and bloodless; the
lustre of his eye more than half quenched; and his gray hair hung in
disorder down over his forehead。
〃Methinks thou lookest rather poorly to…day;〃 said Lage。
〃It is only those cursed church…bells;〃 answered the god; 〃they leave
me no rest day or night。〃
〃Aha;〃 thought Lage; 〃if the king's bells are mightier than thou; then
there is still hope of safety for my daughter。〃
〃Where is Brynhild; thy daughter?〃 asked Asathor。
〃I know not where she is;〃 answered the father; and straightway he
turned his eyes toward the golden cross that shone over the valley from
Saint Olaf's steeple; and he called aloud on the White Christ's name。
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Then the god gave a fearful roar; fell on the ground; writhed and foamed
and vanished into the mountain。 In the next moment Lage heard a hoarse
voice crying from within; 〃I shall return; Lage Ulfson; when thou shalt
least expect me!〃
Lage Ulfson then set to work clearing a way through the forest; and
when that was done; he called all his household together; and told them of
the power of Christ the White。 Not long after he took his sons and his
daughter; and hastened with them southward; until he found King Olaf。
And; so the Saga relates; they all fell down on their knees before him;
prayed for his forgiveness; and received baptism from the king's own
bishop。
So ends the Saga of Lage Ulfson Kvaerk。
II。
Aasa Kvaerk loved her father well; but especially in the winter。
Then; while she sat turning her spinning…wheel in the light of the crackling
logs; his silent presence always had a wonderfully soothing and calming
effect upon her。 She never laughed then; and seldom wept; when she felt
his eyes resting on her; her thoughts; her senses; and her whole being
seemed by degrees to be lured from their hiding… place and concentrate on
him; and from him they ventured again; first timidly; then more boldly; to
grasp the objects around him。 At such times Aasa could talk and jest
almost like other girls; and her mother; to whom 〃other girls〃 represented
the ideal of womanly perfection; would send significant glances; full of
hope and encouragement; over to Lage; and he would quietly nod in return;
as if to say that he entirely agreed with her。 Then Elsie had bright visions
of wooers and thrifty housewives; and even Lage dreamed of seeing the
ancient honor of the family re…established。 All depended on Aasa。 She
was the last of the mighty race。 But when summer came; the bright
visions fled; and the spring winds; which to others bring life and joy; to
Kvaerk brought nothing but sorrow。 No sooner had the mountain brooks
begun to swell; than Aasa began to laugh and to weep; and when the first
birches budded up in the glens; she could no longer be kept at home。
Prayers and threats were equally useless。 From early dawn until evening
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she would roam about in forests and fields; and when late at night she
stole into the room and slipped away into some corner; Lage drew a deep
sigh and thought of the old tradition。
Aasa was nineteen years old before she had a single wooer。 But
when she was least expecting it; the wooer came to her。
It was late one summer night; the young maiden was sitting on the
brink of the ravine; pondering on the old legend and peering down into the
deep below。 It was not the first time she had found her way hither; where
but seldom a human foot had dared to tread。 To her every alder and
bramble…bush; that clothed the naked wall of the rock; were as familiar as
were the knots and veins in the ceiling of the chamber where from her
childhood she had slept; and as she sat there on the brink of the precipice;
the late summer sun threw its red lustre upon her and upon the fogs that
came