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ing looked at Guthorm, made a wry face, and pretended to be angry at them: at which the boys were afraid. Then Asta brought her youngest son, called Harald, who was three years old, to him. The king made a wry face at him also; but he looked the king in the face without regarding it. The king took the boy by the hair, and plucked it; but the boy seized the king's whiskers, and gave them a tug. "Then," said the king, "thou wilt be revengeful, my friend, some day." The following day the king was walking with his mother about the farm, and they came to a playground, where Asta's sons, Guthorm and Halfdan, were amusing themselves. They were building great houses and barns in their play, and were supposing them full of cattle and sheep; and close beside them, in a clay pool, Harald was busy with chips of wood, sailing them, in his sport along the edge. The king asked him what these were; and he answered, these were his ships of war. The king laughed, and said, "The time may come, friend, when thou wilt command ships." Then the king called to him Halfdan and Guthorm; and first he asked Guthorm, "What wouldst thou like best to have?" "Corn land," replied he. "And how great wouldst thou like thy corn land to be?" "I would have the whole ness that goes out into the lake sown with corn every summer." On that ness there are ten farms. The king replies, "There would be a great deal of corn there." And, turning to Halfdan, he asked, "And what wouldst thou like best to have?" "Cows," he replied. "How many wouldst thou like to have?" "When they went to the lake to be watered I would have so many, that they stood as tight round the lake as they could stand." "That would be a great housekeeping," said the king; "and therein ye take after your father." Then the king says to Harald, "And what wouldst thou like best to have?" "House-servants." "And how many wouldst thou have?" "Oh! so many I would like to have as would eat up my brother Halfdan's cows at a single meal." The king laughed, and said to Asta, "Here, mother, thou art bringing up a king." And more is not related of them on this occasion. 76. THE DIVISION OF THE COUNTRY. In Svithjod it was the old custom, as long as heathenism prevailed, that the chief sacrifice took place in Goe month at Upsala. Then sacrifice was offered for peace, and victory to the king; and thither came people from all parts of Svithjod. All the Things of the Swedes,
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