
A Farmer Tricks A Troll
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Thomas Keightley
The Fairy Mythology
George Bell And Sons, London & New York
1892
Norway
A Farmer Tricks A Troll cunning, peasant wit, trickery, triumph over brute force
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a
A Farmer Tricks A Troll
A farmer, on whose ground there was a little hill, resolved not to let it lie idle, so he began at one end to plough it up. The hill-man, who lived in it, came to him and asked him how he dared to plough on the roof of his house. The farmer assured him that he did not know that it was the roof of his house, but at the same time represented to him that it was at present equally unprofitable to them both to let such a piece of land lie idle. He therefore took the opportunity of proposing to him that he should plough, sow, and reap it every year on these terms: that they should take it year and year about, and the hill-man to have one year what grew over the ground, and the farmer what grew in the ground; and the next year the farmer to have what was over, and the hill-man what was under.
The agreement was made accordingly; but the crafty farmer took care to sow carrots and corn year and year about, and he gave the hill-man the tops of the carrots and the roots of the corn for his share, with which he was well content. They thus lived for a long time on extremely good terms with each other.
Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy