English Fairy Tales


JACK AND HIS GOLDEN SNUFF-BOX



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JACK AND HIS GOLDEN SNUFF-BOX
O
NCE
UPON
A
TIME
, and a very good time it was, though it
was neither in my time nor in your time nor in any one else’s
time, there was an old man and an old woman, and they had
one son, and they lived in a great forest. And their son never
saw any other people in his life, but he knew that there was
some more in the world besides his own father and mother,
because he had lots of books, and he used to read every day
about them. And when he read about some pretty young
women, he used to go mad to see some of them; till one day,
when his father was out cutting wood, he told his mother
that he wished to go away to look for his living in some
other country, and to see some other people besides them
two. And he said, “I see nothing at all here but great trees
around me; and if I stay here, maybe I shall go mad before I
see anything.” The young man’s father was out all this time,
when this talk was going on between him and his poor old
mother.
The old woman begins by saying to her son before leav-
ing, “Well, well, my poor boy, if you want to go, it’s better


53
Joseph Jacobs
for you to go, and God be with you.”—(The old woman
thought for the best when she said that.)—”But stop a bit
before you go. Which would you like best for me to make
you, a little cake and bless you, or a big cake and curse you?”
“Dear, dear!” said he, “make me a big cake. Maybe I shall be
hungry on the road.” The old woman made the big cake,
and she went on top of the house, and she cursed him as far
as she could see him.
He presently meets with his father, and the old man says
to him: “Where are you going, my poor boy?” when the son
told the father the same tale as he told his mother. “Well,”
says his father, “I’m sorry to see you going away, but if you’ve
made your mind to go, it’s better for you to go.”
The poor lad had not gone far, when his father called him
back; then the old man drew out of his pocket a golden
snuff-box, and said to him: “Here, take this little box, and
put it in your pocket, and be sure not to open it till you are
near your death.” And away went poor Jack upon his road,
and walked till he was tired and hungry, for he had eaten all
his cake upon the road; and by this time night was upon
him, so he could hardly see his way before him. He could
see some light a long way before him, and he made up to it,
and found the back door and knocked at it, till one of the
maid-servants came and asked him what he wanted. He said
that night was on him, and he wanted to get some place to
sleep. The maid-servant called him in to the fire, and gave
him plenty to eat, good meat and bread and beer; and as he
was eating his food by the fire, there came the young lady to
look at him, and she loved him well and he loved her. And
the young lady ran to tell her father, and said there was a
pretty young man in the back kitchen; and immediately the
gentleman came to him, and questioned him, and asked what
work he could do. Jack said, the silly fellow, that he could do
anything. (He meant that he could do any foolish bit of
work, that would be wanted about the house.)
“Well,” says the gentleman to him, “if you can do any-
thing, at eight o’clock in the morning I must have a great
lake and some of-the largest man-of-war vessels sailing be-
fore my mansion, and one of the largest vessels must fire a
royal salute, and the last round must break the leg of the bed
where my young daughter is sleeping. And if you don’t do
that, you will have to forfeit your life.”


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