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Northern Fairy Tales
The Troll and Farmer Brown Farmer Brown was working in his field one day. He worked all
day until the evening began to draw on. 'Time to head home,' he told himself, and stepped out for his
stead. On his way home, he saw a heap of burning coals in the middle
of one of his fields. Surprised, he went over to investigate further. As he arrived up at the heap of coals, he discovered a figure
sitting on it. The figure was all in black, a lean character, his hair glimmering
red in the last light of the setting sun. The farmer sensed something uncanny about him. He suspected this
chap might be a troll – and he knew there was no love lost between trolls and
men. He glanced about, looking for other trolls in mischief, but there
was nobody else. Clearing his throat, Farmer Brown said, 'Are you comfortable
there?' 'To tell you the truth, I am,' replied the troll, smoothly, examining
his nails. 'But how can you be sitting there in comfort? Those coals look
red hot to me!' 'These aren't red-hot coals,' replied the troll. 'Look again.' Farmer Brown blinked and rubbed his eyes. Sure, enough, they
weren't red-hot coals, but instead the troll sat on a shining spider's web,
glistening with drops of dew, glimmering like a net of stars in the gloaming. 'That's very curious,' said Farmer Brown. 'What's it all mean?' 'It means that I am sitting on a treasure,' replied the troll,
smiling and showing his square, misshapen teeth. 'You are sitting on a treasure?' repeated Farmer Brown. 'Yes, sir, you better believe it,' replied the troll. 'Here lies
the ancient treasure of Loki. Just like him it's of a shape-shifty character.
This is the treasure which Loki conned from the Nibelungs, and it contains more
gold and silver than you have ever seen in your life.' 'The treasure lies in my field,' said Farmer Brown, 'and by the
laws of treasure trove, that means it belongs to me.' 'It can be yours,' answered the troll, 'if you can find it.' Farmer Brown blinked again and there was nothing there, except
a great big hole in the ground. When he peered down into it he could hear serpents
hissing at the bottom. 'It changes shape when it feels like it,' explained the troll.
'Naturally, it's only worth anything when it's gold and silver. I, however,
know the secret of keeping it gold and gemstones. Which I might be prepared
to tell you.' 'For a consideration, no doubt,' said Farmer Brown, frowning
darkly, edging back from the snake pit. The troll smiled and tried to look business-like and reasonable.
'All you have to do, Farmer Brown, is – for the next two years, you have to
give me one half of everything your field produces. I am quite well fixed as
far as money goes. I have always had a hankering to be a farmer, a tiller of
the soil, but being a troll, I can't show myself in daylight.' Farmer Brown stroked his beard. 'One half of everything this
field produces, you say?' The troll nodded and glanced at the snake pit – it was no longer
a hole in the ground filled with venomous reptiles. It was now a mound of precious
stones and gold coins, twinkling like a veritable mountain of heaped up stars. Farmer Brown gulped on a dry throat. 'It's a deal.' They shook hands solemnly on their business venture. Then Farmer Brown added: 'I hope we don't fall out over this.
I think we should split the produce in this manner: everything that is above
ground will go to you, and everything under the earth goes to me.' The troll scratched his head. 'Well, I'm new to this farming
lark, and I'm prepared to accept advice. If you were me would you take this
deal?' 'There's no way you can lose,' said Farmer Brown, smiling amiably. The troll nodded. 'All right. When do we divide the harvest?' 'Come back in six months' time,' replied Farmer Brown, 'and you
can have all the turnips you can eat.' 'Oh, turnips,' cooed the troll. 'I like the sound of this already.' With that, the troll walked off into the darkness and the treasure
of Loki turned into a big rock of granite. Farmer Brown touched it – it was
quite as hard and gritty as he expected it to be. He patted it fondly and said,
'Don't go away now, y'hear?' When planting time came, Farmer Brown sowed the field with turnips
as he had promised. Harvest time came, the troll appeared and wanted to take away
his crop. 'What's all this!' he cried, full of dismay. He discovered that his bargain meant that all he was going to
get were the yellow withered leaves – the only part of a turnip that shows above
the ground! Farmer Brown chuckled in delight, for he was digging up his lovely
plump, round turnips. The troll narrowed his eyes in suspicion. 'You have had the best
of it for once, but the next time that won't do. What grows above ground shall
be yours, and what is under it, mine.' 'That suits me,' replied Farmer Brown with a merry twinkle. When the time came to sow, Farmer Brown did not sow turnips.
This time he put in wheat. The grain ripened, and Farmer Brown went out and
cut the golden stalks down to the ground. When the troll came, he found nothing but the stubble, and went
away in a fury down into a cleft in the rocks. 'That is the way to cheat a troll!' exclaimed Farmer Brown. He
glanced over at the granite boulder and it had changed into a mass of gold and
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