iles were fetched from the far South.
And in the autumn there was such a wedding that the whole land heard and
talked about it.
But it was not long before Bardun began to find that to be a fact which
was already a rumour, to wit, that the man who had got his daughter
would fain have his own way also.
He laid down the law, and gave judgment like Bardun himself; and he
over-ruled Bardun, not once nor twice.
Then Bardun went to Boel, and bade her take her husband to task, and
look sharp about it. He had never yet seen the man, said he, who
couldn't be set right by his bride in the days when they did nothing but
eat honey together.
But Boel said that she had wedded a man who, to her mind, was no less a
man than her own father; and it was his office, besides, to uphold the
law and jurisdiction of the king.
Young folks are easy to talk over, thought Bardun. One can do anything
with them when one only makes them fancy they are having their own way.
And it is wonderful how far one can get if one only bides one's time,
and makes the best of things. Whatever was out of gear he could very
easily put right again, when once he got a firm grip of the reins.
So he praised everything his son-in-law did, and talked big about him,
so that there was really no end to it. He was glad, he said, that such a
wise and stately ruler was there, ready to stand in his shoes against
the day when he should grow old.
And so he made himself small, and his voice quivered when he spoke, as
if he were really a sick and broken-down man.
But it didn't escape Boel how he slammed to the doors, and struck the
stones with his stick till the sparks flew.
Next time the court met, Bardun was taxed to a full tenth of the value
of all his property, according to the king's law and justice.
Then only did he begin to foresee that it might fare with the
magistrates now as it had done formerly.
But all women like pomp and show, thought he, and Boel was in this
respect no different to other people. And she was no daughter of his
either, if she couldn't keep the upper hand of her husband.
So he bought her gold and jewels, and other costly things. One day he
came with a bracelet, and another day with a chain; and now it was a
belt, and now a gold embroidered shoe. And every time he told her that
he brought her these gifts, because she was his dearest jewel. He knew
of nothing in the world that was too precious for her.
Then, in his most pleasa
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