English Fairy Tales



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English Fairy Tales
Folk-lore. It is, perhaps, not necessary to inform readers who
are not fellow-students that the study of Folk-tales has pre-
tensions to be a science. It has its special terminology, and its
own methods of investigation, by which it is hoped, one of
these days, to gain fuller knowledge of the workings of the
popular mind as well as traces of archaic modes of thought
and custom. I hope on some future occasion to treat the
subject of the English Folk-tale on a larger scale and with all
the necessary paraphernalia of prolegomena and excursus. I
shall then, of course, reproduce my originals with literal ac-
curacy, and have therefore felt the more at liberty on the
present occasion to make the necessary deviations from this
in order to make the tales readable for children.
Finally, I have to thank those by whose kindness in waiv-
ing their rights to some of these stories, I have been enabled
to compile this book. My friends Mr. E. Clodd, Mr. F. Hindes
Groome, and Mr. Andrew Lang, have thus yielded up to me
some of the most attractive stories in the following pages.
The Councils of the English and of the American Folk-lore
Societies, and Messrs. Longmans, have also been equally
generous. Nor can I close these remarks without a word of
thanks and praise to the artistic skill with which my friend,
Mr. J. D. Batten, has made the romance and humour of
these stories live again in the brilliant designs with which he
has adorned these pages. It should be added that the dainty
headpieces to “Henny Penny” and “Mr. Fox” are due to my
old friend, Mr. Henry Ryland.
JOSEPH JACOBS.


9
Joseph Jacobs
TOM TIT TOT
O
NCE
UPON
A
TIME
there was a woman, and she baked five
pies. And when they came out of the oven, they were that
overbaked the crusts were too hard to eat. So she says to her
daughter:
“Darter,” says she, “put you them there pies on the shelf,
and leave ‘em there a little, and they’ll come again.”—She
meant, you know, the crust would get soft.
But the girl, she says to herself: “Well, if they’ll come again,
I’ll eat ‘em now.” And she set to work and ate ‘em all, first
and last.
Well, come supper-time the woman said: “Go you, and
get one o’ them there pies. I dare say they’ve come again
now.”
The girl went and she looked, and there was nothing but
the dishes. So back she came and says she: “Noo, they ain’t
come again.”
“Not one of ‘em?” says the mother.
“Not one of ‘em,” says she.
“Well, come again, or not come again,” said the woman
“I’ll have one for supper.”
“But you can’t, if they ain’t come,” said the girl.
“But I can,” says she. “Go you, and bring the best of ‘em.”
“Best or worst,” says the girl, “I’ve ate ‘em all, and you
can’t have one till that’s come again.”
Well, the woman she was done, and she took her spinning
to the door to spin, and as she span she sang:
“My darter ha’ ate five, five pies to-day.
My darter ha’ ate five, five pies to-day.”
The king was coming down the street, and he heard her
sing, but what she sang he couldn’t hear, so he stopped and
said:
“What was that you were singing, my good woman?”
The woman was ashamed to let him hear what her daugh-
ter had been doing, so she sang, instead of that:
“My darter ha’ spun five, five skeins to-day.
My darter ha’ spun five, five skeins to-day.”


10
English Fairy Tales
“Stars o’ mine!” said the king, “I never heard tell of any
one that could do that.”
Then he said: “Look you here, I want a wife, and I’ll marry
your daughter. But look you here,” says he, “eleven months
out of the year she shall have all she likes to eat, and all the
gowns she likes to get, and all the company she likes to keep;
but the last month of the year she’ll have to spin five skeins
every day, and if she don’t I shall kill her.”
“All right,” says the woman; for she thought what a grand
marriage that was. And as for the five skeins, when the time
came, there’d be plenty of ways of getting out of it, and like-
liest, he’d have forgotten all about it.
Well, so they were married. And for eleven months the
girl had all she liked to eat, and all the gowns she liked to
get, and all the company she liked to keep.
But when the time was getting over, she began to think
about the skeins and to wonder if he had ‘em in mind. But
not one word did he say about ‘em, and she thought he’d
wholly forgotten ‘em.
However, the last day of the last month he takes her to a
room she’d never set eyes on before. There was nothing in it
but a spinning-wheel and a stool. And says he: “Now, my
dear, here you’ll be shut in to-morrow with some victuals
and some flax, and if you haven’t spun five skeins by the
night, your head’ll go off.”
And away he went about his business.
Well, she was that frightened, she’d always been such a
gatless girl, that she didn’t so much as know how to spin,
and what was she to do to-morrow with no one to come
nigh her to help her? She sat down on a stool in the kitchen,
and law! how she did cry!
However, all of a sudden she heard a sort of a knocking
low down on the door. She upped and oped it, and what
should she see but a small little black thing with a long tail.
That looked up at her right curious, and that said:
“What are you a-crying for?”
“What’s that to you?” says she.
“Never you mind,” that said, “but tell me what you’re a-
crying for.”
“That won’t do me no good if I do,” says she.
“You don’t know that,” that said, and twirled that’s tail
round.


11
Joseph Jacobs
“Well,” says she, “that won’t do no harm, if that don’t do
no good,” and she upped and told about the pies, and the
skeins, and everything.
“This is what I’ll do,” says the little black thing, “I’ll come
to your window every morning and take the flax and bring
it spun at night.”
“What’s your pay?” says she.
That looked out of the corner of that’s eyes, and that said:
“I’ll give you three guesses every night to guess my name,
and if you haven’t guessed it before the month’s up you shall
be mine.”
Well, she thought she’d be sure to guess that’s name before
the month was up. “All right,” says she, “I agree.”
“All right,” that says, and law! how that twirled that’s tail.
Well, the next day, her husband took her into the room,
and there was the flax and the day’s food.
“Now there’s the flax,” says he, “and if that ain’t spun up
this night, off goes your head.” And then he went out and
locked the door.
He’d hardly gone, when there was a knocking against the
window.
She upped and she oped it, and there sure enough was the
little old thing sitting on the ledge.
“Where’s the flax?” says he.
“Here it be,” says she. And she gave it to him.
Well, come the evening a knocking came again to the win-
dow. She upped and she oped it, and there was the little old
thing with five skeins of flax on his arm.
“Here it be,” says he, and he gave it to her.
“Now, what’s my name?” says he.
“What, is that Bill?” says she.
“Noo, that ain’t,” says he, and he twirled his tail.
“Is that Ned?” says she.
“Noo, that ain’t,” says he, and he twirled his tail.
“Well, is that Mark?” says she.
“Noo, that ain’t,” says he, and he twirled his tail harder,
and away he flew.
Well, when her husband came in, there were the five skeins
ready for him. “I see I shan’t have to kill you to-night, my
dear,” says he; “you’ll have your food and your flax in the
morning,” says he, and away he goes.
Well, every day the flax and the food were brought, and


12

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