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The boy's mother went to Queen Ingegerd, with whom she was acquainted, and showed her the lad.The queen said she knew no remedy for it."Go," said she, "to King Olaf, he is the best physician here; and beg him to lay his hands on thy lad, and bring him my words if he will not otherwise do it." She did as the queen told her; and when she found the king she says to him that her son is dangerously ill of a boil in his neck, and begs him to lay his hand on the boil.The king tells her he is not a physician, and bids her go to where there were physicians.She replies, that the queen had told her to come to him; "and told me to add the request from her, that you would would use the remedy you understood, and she said that thou art the best physician here in the town." Then the king took the lad, laid his hands upon his neck, and felt the boil for a long time, until the boy made a very wry face.Then the king took a piece of bread, laid it in the figure of the cross upon the palm of his hand, and put it into the boy's mouth.He swallowed it down, and from that time all the soreness left his neck, and in a few days he was quite well, to the great joy of his mother and all his relations.
Then first came Olaf into the repute of having as much healing power in his hands as is ascribed to men who have been gifted by nature with healing by the touch; and afterwards when his miracles were universally acknowledged, this also was considered one of his miracles.
201.KING OLAF BURNS THE WOOD SHAVINGS ON HIS HAND FOR HISSABBATH BREACH.
It happened one Sunday that the king sat in his highseat at the dinner table, and had fallen into such deep thought that he did not observe how time went.In one hand he had a knife, and in the other a piece of fir-wood from which he cut splinters from time to time.The table-servant stood before him with a bowl in his hands; and seeing what the king was about, and that he was involved in thought, he said, "It is Monday, sire, to-morrow."The king looked at him when he heard this, and then it came into his mind what he was doing on the Sunday.Then the king ordered a lighted candle to be brought him, swept together all the shavings he had made, set them on fire, and let them burn upon his naked hand; showing thereby that he would hold fast by God's law and commandment, and not trespass without punishment on what he knew to be right.
202.OF KING OLAF.
When King Olaf had resolved on his return home, he made known his intention to King Jarisleif and Queen Ingegerd.They dissuaded him from this expedition, and said he should receive as much power in their dominions as he thought desirable; but begged him not to put himself within the reach of his enemies with so few men as he had.Then King Olaf told them of his dream; adding, that he believed it to be God's will and providence that it should be so.Now when they found he was determined on travelling to Norway, they offered him all the assistance to his journey that he would accept from them.The king thanked them in many fine words for their good will; and said that he accepted from them, with no ordinary pleasure, what might be necessary for his undertaking.
203.OF KING OLAF'S JOURNEY FROM RUSSIA.
Immediately after Yule (A.D.1080), King Olaf made himself ready;and had about 200 of his men with him.King Jarisleif gave him all the horses, and whatever else he required; and when he was ready he set off.King Jarisleif and Queen Ingegerd parted from him with all honour; and he left his son Magnus behind with the king.The first part of his journey, down to the sea-coast, King Olaf and his men made on the ice; but as spring approached, and the ice broke up, they rigged their vessels, and when they were ready and got a wind they set out to sea, and had a good voyage.
When Olaf came to the island of Gotland with his ships he heard the news -- which was told as truth, both in Svithjod, Denmark, and over all Norway -- that Earl Hakon was missing, and Norway without a head.This gave the king and his men good hope of the issue of their journey.From thence they sailed, when the wind suited, to Svithjod, and went into the Maelar lake, to Aros, and sent men to the Swedish King Onund appointing a meeting.King Onund received his brother-in-law's message in the kindest manner, and went to him according to his invitation.Astrid also came to King Olaf, with the men who had attended her; and great was the joy on all sides at this meeting.The Swedish king also received his brother-in-law King Olaf with great joy when they met.
204.OF THE LENDERMEN IN NORWAY.
Now we must relate what, in the meantime, was going on in Norway.
Thorer Hund, in these two winters (A.D.1029-1030), had made a Lapland journey, and each winter had been a long time on the mountains, and had gathered to himself great wealth by trading in various wares with the Laplanders.He had twelve large coats of reindeer-skin made for him, with so much Lapland witchcraft that no weapon could cut or pierce them any more than if they were armour of ring-mail, nor so much.The spring thereafter Thorer rigged a long-ship which belonged to him, and manned it with his house-servants.He summoned the bondes, demanded a levy from the most northern Thing district, collected in this way a great many people, and proceeded with this force southwards.Harek of Thjotta had also collected a great number of people; and in this expedition many people of consequence took a part, although these two were the most distinguished.They made it known publicly that with this war-force they were going against King Olaf, to defend the country against him, in case he should come from the eastward.
205.OF EINAR TAMBASKELFER.