Once on a time there was a Little
Old Woman who lived in a Shoe. This shoe stood near a great forest,
and was so large that it served as a house for the Old Lady and all
her children, of which she had so many that she did not know what to
do with them.
But the Little Old Woman was very fond of her children, and they
only thought of the best way to please her. Strong-arm, the eldest,
cut down trees for firewood. Peter made baskets of wicker-work. Mark
was chief gardener. Lizzie milked the cow, and Jenny taught the
younger children to read.
Now this Little Old Woman had not always lived in a Shoe. She and
her family had once dwelt in a nice house covered with ivy, and her
husband was a wood-cutter, like Strong-arm. But there lived in a
huge castle beyond the forest, a fierce giant, who one day came and
laid their house in ruins with his club; after which he carried off
the poor wood-cutter to his castle beyond the forest. When the
Little Old Woman came home, her house was in ruins and her husband
was no where to be seen.
Night came on, and as the father did not return, the Old Lady and
her family went to search for him. When they came to that part of
the wood where the Giant had met their father, they saw an immense
shoe. They spent a long time weeping and calling out for their
father, but met with no reply. Then the Old Lady thought that they
had better take shelter in the shoe until they could build a new
house. So Peter and Strong-arm put a roof to it, and cut a door, and
turned it into a dwelling. Here they all lived happily for many
years, but the Little Old Lady never forgot her husband and his sad
fate.
Strong-arm, who saw how wretched his mother often was about it,
proposed to the next eleven brothers that they should go with him
and set their father free from the Giant. Their mother knew the
Giant's strength, and would not hear of the attempt, as she feared
they would be killed. But Strong-arm was not afraid. He bought a
dozen sharp swords, and Peter made as many strong shields and
helmets, as well as cross-bows and iron-headed arrows. They were now
quite ready; Strong-arm gave the order to march, and they started
for the forest. The next day they came in sight of the Giant's
Castle. Strong-arm, leaving his brothers in a wood close by, strode
boldly up to the entrance, and seized the knocker. The door was
opened by a funny little boy with a large head, who kept grinning
and laughing.
Strong-arm then walked boldly across the court-yard, and presently
met a page, who took off his hat and asked him what he wanted.
Strong-arm said he had come to liberate his father, who was kept a
prisoner by the Giant; on this the little man said he was sorry for
him, because the part of the castle in which his father was kept was
guarded by a large dragon. Strong-arm, nothing daunted, soon found
the monster, who was fast asleep, so he made short work of him by
sending his sword right through his heart; at which he jumped up,
uttering a loud scream, and made as if he would spring forward and
seize Strong-arm; but the good sword had done its work, and the
monster fell heavily on the ground, dead.
Now the Giant, who had been drinking much wine, was fast asleep in a
remote part of the castle. Strong-arm had no sooner finished the
Dragon, than up started the funny little boy who had opened the
door. He led Strong-arm round to another part of the court-yard,
where he saw his poor father, who at once sprung to his feet, and
embraced him. Then Strong-arm called up his brothers, and when they
had embraced their father, they soon broke his chain and set him
free.
We must now return to the Little Old Woman. After her sons had
started she gave way to the most bitter grief. While she was in this
state, an old witch came up to her, and said she would help her, as
she hated the Giant, and wished to kill him. The Old Witch then took
the little Old Lady on her broom, and they sailed off through the
air, straight to the Giant's castle.
Now this old Witch had great power, and at once afflicted the Giant
with corns and tender feet. When he awoke from his sleep he was in
such pain that he could bear it no longer, so he thought he would go
in search of his missing shoe, which, like the other one he had in
his castle, was easy and large for his foot. When he came to the
spot where the Old Lady and her children lived, he saw his old shoe,
and with a laugh that shook the trees, he thrust his foot into it,
breaking through the roof that Strong-arm and Peter had put to it.
The children, in great alarm, rushed about inside the shoe, and
frightened and trembling, scrambled through the door and the slits
which the Giant had formerly made for his corns. By this time the
witch and the Little Old Lady, as also Strong-arm, his eleven
brother and his father, were come up to the spot. Strong-arm and his
brothers shot their arrows at him till at last he fell wounded, when
Strong-arm went up to him and cut off his head. Then the father and
the Little Old Woman and all their children built a new house, and
lived happily ever afterwards.