Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 2).djvu/206

This page needs to be proofread.

Earl Skule.

Speak, speak! Is he not the son of Håkon Sverresson?

Bishop Nicholas.

Hear me. It was known to none that Inga was with child. Håkon Sverresson was lately dead, and doubtless she feared Inge Bårdsson, who was then king, and you, and—well, and the Baglers[1] too mayhap. She was brought to bed secretly in the house of Trond the Priest, in Heggen parish, and after nine days she departed homewards; but the child remained a whole year with the priest, she not daring to look to it, and none knowing that it breathed saved Trond and his two sons.

Earl Skule.

Ay, ay—and then?

Bishop Nicholas.

When the child was a year old, it could scarce be kept hidden longer. So Inga made the matter known to Erlend of Huseby—an old Birchleg of Sverre's days, as you know.

Earl Skule.

Well?

Bishop Nicholas.

He and other chiefs from the Uplands took the child, bore it over the mountains in midwinter, and brought it to the King, who was then at Nidaros.

Earl Skule.

And yet you can say that——?

  1. See note, p. 125.