
In a remote forest clearing, a newborn boy named Öyvind bursts into the world crying, yet within moments his laughter fills the twilight as his mother cradles him, already predicting greatness. The simple cottage is surrounded by low hills, birches and a stream, and the boy quickly befriends a small wooden doll that he tends to like a pet, keeping it safely on the roof. Their days pass in playful routines, the doll perched on the roof while Öyvind gathers leaves and grass for it, and the child’s imagination turns the ordinary landscape into a realm of wonder.
One evening a mysterious little girl appears, kneeling beside the doll and demanding it in exchange for a single piece of sweet candy. Öyvind, hungry and naïve, trades the treat, savoring each bite until the candy disappears, only to watch the doll slip away into the girl’s hands. The loss leaves the boy stunned, his heart pounding with a sudden, unfamiliar sorrow that hints at the fragile line between generosity and longing.
Language
fi
Duration
~2 hours (168K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1910
A towering figure in 19th-century Norwegian literature, he wrote poems, plays, novels, and stories that helped shape Norway’s cultural identity. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1903 and is also remembered for writing the lyrics to Norway’s national anthem.
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