In the reign of King Arthur there
lived in the County of Cornwall a worthy farmer, who had an only
son, named Jack. Jack was strong and brave and very daring, and was
never backward when danger was in the way.
Now, in those days there lived a huge giant in a gloomy cavern on
St. Michael's Mount, which rises out of the sea near the shores of
Cornwall. The Cornish people had suffered greatly from his thefts
and pillaging; for he used to wade through the sea to the mainland,
and carry off half a dozen or more of their oxen at a time.
At last Jack made up his mind to destroy this monster. He took a
horn, a shovel, a pickaxe, and a dark lantern, and one winter's
evening swam over the sea to the Mount. Then he set to work, and
before morning had dug a great pit. He covered it carefully over
with sticks and straw, and strewed some earth on the top to make it
look like solid ground. And then he blew his horn so loudly that the
Giant awoke, and came out roaring like thunder:
"You impudent villain—you shall pay dearly for disturbing my rest. I
will broil you for my breakfast!"
But almost as he spoke, he tumbled headlong into the pit.
"Oh, ho, Mr. Giant!" said Jack. "How is your appetite now! Will
nothing serve you for breakfast but broiling poor Jack?"
Then he struck the giant such a blow on the head with a pickaxe that
he killed him.
When the Justices of Cornwall heard of this valiant deed, they sent
for Jack, and declared that he should always be called Jack the
Giant Killer; and they gave him a sword, and a belt upon which was
written, in letters of gold:
"This is the valiant Cornishman
Who slew the giant Cormoran."
There was another giant in England called Blunderbore, who vowed to
take revenge on Jack for this exploit. One day, as Jack was passing
through a wood on a journey to Wales, he fell asleep by the side of
a fountain. The Giant, coming along, found him there; and, seeing by
the writing on the belt who Jack was, he lifted him on his shoulder
and carried him off to his castle.
When Jack awoke and found himself in the clutches of Blunderbore he
was terribly frightened. The giant carried him into a room and
locked him up, while he went to fetch another giant who lived close
by to help him eat Jack for dinner. While he was gone, Jack heard
dreadful shrieks and groans from different parts of the castle, and
soon after he heard a mournful voice saying:
"Haste, valiant stranger, haste away,
Lest you become the giant's prey.
On his return he'll bring another,
Still more savage than his brother;
A horrid, cruel monster, who
Before he kills will torture you!"
Poor Jack looked out of the window, which was just over the gate of
the castle, and saw two giants coming along arm in arm.
"Now," thought he, "death or freedom is at hand." There happened to
be two strong cords in the room, and Jack made a large noose with a
slip-knot in each of them. Then, just as the giants were coming
through the gate he threw the ropes over their heads, and, fastening
the other ends to a beam in the ceiling, he pulled the ropes with
all his might until he had nearly strangled the giants. Then he drew
his sword and slipped down the ropes and killed them both.
Next Jack took the keys from Giant Blunderbore and searched through
the castle. In one of the rooms he found three ladies who told him
that their husbands had been killed by the giant, who had afterwards
condemned them to be starved to death.
Jack gave them the castle and all the riches it contained to make
some amends for the dreadful pains they had suffered, and then went
on his way.
After traveling some days, he lost himself in a lonely valley; but,
when he had wandered about some while, he at length succeeded in
finding a large house. He went up to it and knocked loudly at the
gate, when, to his great horror, a monstrous giant with two heads
came forth. He spoke very civilly, however, and took Jack into the
house, leading him to a room where there was a good bed, in which he
could pass the night.
Jack took off his clothes; but, though he was very tired, he could
not go to sleep. Presently he heard the giant walking about in the
bedchamber, which was the next room, saying to himself:
"Though here you lodge with me this night;
You shall not see the morning light;
My club shall dash your brains out quite."
When he heard this, Jack got out of bed, and, taking a large, thick
piece of wood, he laid it in his own place in the bed, and hid
himself in a dark corner of the room.
In the middle of the night, the giant came with his great club, and
struck several heavy blows upon the bed. Then he went off, thinking
he had broken all Jack's bones.
Early next morning Jack walked into the giant's room and thanked him
for the night's lodging. The giant was terribly startled to see him,
and stammered out:
"Oh, dear me! Is it you? Pray, how did you sleep last night? Did you
hear or see anything to disturb you?"
"Nothing worth speaking of, thank you," answered Jack, carelessly.
"A rat, I believe, gave me three or four slaps with his tail; but
that was all."
The giant said nothing; but went and fetched two bowls of hasty
pudding for their breakfast.
Jack did not wish the giant to think that he could not eat as much
as himself, so he contrived to fasten a leathern bag inside his
coat. He then managed to slip the pudding into this bag, while
pretending to eat it.
When breakfast was done, he said to the giant:
"Now I will show you a fine trick. I can cure all wounds with a
touch. You shall see an example." He then took a knife, ripped up
the leathern bag, and all the hasty pudding tumbled out upon the
floor.
"Ods splutter hur nails!" cried the giant, who was ashamed to be
outdone by such a little fellow. "Hur can do that hurself!" and,
snatching up the knife, he plunged it into his stomach and fell down
dead.
After this, Jack went farther on his journey. In a few days he met
King Arthur's only son, who was traveling into Wales to deliver a
beautiful lady from the power of a wicked magician. Jack attached
himself to the Prince, and they traveled on together.
The Prince was very generous, and soon gave away all the money he
possessed.
After having parted with his last penny to an old beggar-woman, he
was very uneasy as to where they were to pass the night.
"Sir," said Jack, "two miles farther on there lives a giant with
three heads, who can fight five hundred men at once and make them
fly. I will go on and visit him—do you wait here until I return."
Jack rode on to the gates of the castle, and gave a loud knock. The
giant, with a voice like thunder, roared out:
"Who is there?"
"No one but your poor Cousin Jack."
"Well, what news, Cousin Jack?"
"Dear Uncle, I have bad news for you. Here is the King's son coming
with two thousand men to kill you!"
"Cousin Jack, this is bad news indeed! But I have a large cellar
underground, where I shall hide myself, and you shall lock, bolt and
bar me in until the King's son is gone."
So Jack locked, bolted and barred the giant in the cellar, and then
went back and fetched the Prince, and they feasted and made merry,
and spent the night very comfortably in the castle.
In the morning Jack gave the Prince gold and silver from the giant's
treasury. Then the Prince set forth on his journey, while Jack let
the giant out of the cellar.
The giant thanked Jack very much for saving him, and asked what he
should give him as a reward?
"Why, good Uncle," said Jack, "I desire nothing but the coat and
cap, with the rusty sword and the slippers which are hanging beside
the bed."
"Take them," said the giant, "and keep them for my sake. They will
be very useful to you. The coat will make you invisible; the cap
will give you knowledge; the sword will cut through anything, no
matter what it may be, and the shoes are of vast swiftness."
Jack took the gifts, thanked the giant, and then quickly caught up
with the Prince.
After a few day's further journey they reached the dwelling of the
beautiful lady whom the Prince had come to rescue.
She received the Prince very graciously and made a feast for him.
When it was ended she rose, and, taking her handkerchief, said:
"My lord; to-morrow morning I command you to tell me on whom I have
bestowed this handkerchief—or else lose your head."
The Prince went to bed very mournfully; but Jack put on the cap of
knowledge, which told him that the lady was forced by the power of
enchantment to meet the wicked magician every night in the forest.
He, therefore, put on his coat of darkness, and his shoes of
swiftness, and was there before her. When the lady came, she gave
the handkerchief to the magician. Jack with his sword of sharpness
cut off his head with one blow; and the enchantment was ended in a
minute.
The next day the lady was married to the Prince, and soon after went
with her husband to the Court of King Arthur, where Jack was made
one of the Knights of the Round Table for his heroism.
Very soon Jack set off in search of new adventures. On the third day
of his travel he came to a wide forest. Hardly had he entered it
when he heard dreadful shrieks and cries, and soon he saw a
monstrous giant dragging along by the hair of their heads a handsome
knight and a beautiful lady. Their tears and cries melted Jack's
heart. He alighted from his horse, and put on his invisible coat,
and immediately attacked the giant. He could not reach up to the
giant's body; so, taking a mighty blow, he cut off both the
monster's legs just below the garter, so that he fell full length
upon the ground. Then Jack set his foot upon his neck and plunged
his sword into the giant's body.
The knight and the lady, overjoyed, begged Jack to come to their
house to refresh himself after this fight; but Jack, hearing that
the giant had a brother who was more cruel and wicked even than
himself, would not rest until he had also destroyed him.
Soon he came in sight of the cavern where the giants lived. There
was the other giant sitting on a huge block of timber, with a
knotted iron club lying by his side. Jack, in his coat of darkness,
was quite invisible. He drew close up to the giant and struck a blow
at his head with his sword of sharpness; but he missed his aim and
only cut off his nose. The giant roared with pain, and his roars
were like claps of thunder. He took up his iron club and began to
lay about him, but not being able to see Jack, he could not hit him;
for Jack slipped nimbly behind, and jumping upon the block of wood,
stabbed the giant in the back; and after a few howls, the monster
dropped down dead.
Having thus killed the two monsters Jack entered the cave to search
for the treasure. One room contained a great boiling cauldron and a
dining table, where the giants feasted. Another part of the cave was
barred with iron and was full of miserable men and women whom the
giants had imprisoned. Jack set them all free and divided the
treasure among them.
Jack cut off the giant's head, and sent it with the head of his
brother to the Court of King Arthur; then he returned to the house
of the knight and his lady.
He was received with the greatest joy; and the knight gave a grand
feast in his honor. When all the company was gathered together, the
knight presented Jack with a ring, on which was engraved the picture
of the giant dragging the knight and the lady by the hair, with this
motto round it—
"Behold, in dire distress were we,
Under a giant's fierce command,
But gained our lives and liberty
From valiant Jack's victorious hand."
But while the merriment was at its height, a herald rushed into the
room and told the company that Thundel, a savage giant with two
heads, had heard of the death of his two kinsmen, and was come to
take his revenge on Jack. The guests trembled with terror and
fright; but Jack only drew his sword and said, "Let him come!"
The knight's house was surrounded by a moat over which there was a
drawbridge. Jack set men to work to cut the bridge on both sides,
nearly to the middle, and then, dressed in his magic coat, went out
to meet the giant. As the giant came along, although he could not
see Jack, yet he could tell that someone was near for he cried out:
"Fa, fe, fi, fo, fum,
I smell the blood of an Englishman
Be he alive, or be he dead,
I'll grind his bones to make my bread."
"Say you so, my friend," cried Jack. "You are indeed a monstrous
miller!"
"Ah!" cried the giant; "you are the villain that killed my kinsmen!
I will tear you with my teeth, and grind your bones to powder!"
"You must catch me first!" said Jack. Then he threw off his coat and
put on his shoes of swiftness, and began to run, the giant following
him like a walking castle. Jack led him round and round the house,
and then he ran over the drawbridge, while the giant rushed after
him with his club. But when he came to the middle of the bridge,
where it had been cut on both sides, his great weight broke it, and
he tumbled into the water.
Jack now got a cart rope and flung it over his two heads, and then,
by the help of a team of horses, drew him to the edge of the moat,
where he cut off his heads.
Once again, Jack set out in search of new adventures. He went over
fields and dales without meeting with any, until he came to the foot
of a high mountain. Here was a little, lonely house; and when he
knocked at the door it was opened by an old man with a beard as
white as snow. This old man was a good hermit, and when Jack had
eaten well, he said:
"My son, I know that you are the famous conqueror of giants. I know,
at the top of this mountain there is an enchanted castle, kept by a
giant named Galligantes, who, by the help of a magician, gets many
knights into his power—whom he changes into beasts. Above all, I
lament the hard fate of a duke's daughter, whom they have changed
into a deer. Many knights have tried to destroy the enchantment, yet
none have been able to do so, because of two fiery griffins who
guard the gates of the castle. But as you, my son, have an invisible
coat, you may pass them by without being seen. On the gates of the
castle you will find engraved the means by which the enchantment may
be broken."
Jack promised that in the morning he would risk his life in an
endeavor to break the enchantment; and, after a sound sleep, he
arose early and set out on his attempt.
He passed by the fiery griffins without the least fear of danger;
for they could not see him, because of his invisible coat.
On the castle gate he found a golden trumpet hanging, under which
were written these words—
"Whoever can this trumpet blow,
Shall cause the giant's overthrow."
Jack seized the golden trumpet and blew a mighty blast, which made
the gates fly open and shook the castle to its foundations. The
giant and the magician, knowing that their end was now near, stood
biting their thumbs and shaking with terror. Jack, with his magic
sword, soon killed the giant, and the magician was carried off by a
whirlwind. The castle vanished away like smoke, and the duke's
daughter and all the knights and lovely ladies who had been turned
into birds and beasts returned to their proper shape.
Jack's fame rang through the whole country, and the King gave him a
large estate to reward him for all his brave and knightly deeds. And
Jack married the duke's daughter, and lived in joy and contentment
for the rest of his days.