The Giant and the Tailor
A certain
tailor who was great at boasting but ill at doing, took it into
his head to go abroad for a while, and look about the world. As soon
as he could manage it, he left his workshop, and wandered on his way,
over hill and dale, sometimes hither, sometimes thither, but ever on and
on. Once when he was out he perceived in the blue distance a steep hill,
and behind it a tower reaching to the clouds, which rose up out of a
wild dark forest. "Thunder and lightning," cried the tailor, "what is
that?" and as he was strongly goaded by curiosity, he went boldly towards
it. But what made the tailor open his eyes and mouth when he came near it,
was to see that the tower had legs, and leapt in one bound over the steep
hill, and was now standing as an all powerful giant before him. "What
dost thou want here, thou tiny fly's leg?" cried the giant, with a voice
as if it were thundering on every side. The tailor whimpered, "I want
just to look about and see if I can earn a bit of bread for myself,
in this forest." "If that is what thou art after," said the giant, "thou
mayst have a place with me." "If it must be, why not? What wages shall I
receive?" "Thou shalt hear what wages thou shalt have. Every year three
hundred and sixty-five days, and when it is leap-year, one more into
the bargain. Does that suit thee?"
"All right," replied the tailor, and
thought, in his own mind, "a man must cut his coat according to his cloth;
I will try to get away as fast as I can." On this the giant said to him,
"Go, little ragamuffin, and fetch me a jug of water." "Had I not better
bring the well itself at once, and the spring too?" asked the boaster,
and went with the pitcher to the water. "What! the well and the spring
too," growled the giant in his beard, for he was rather clownish and
stupid, and began to be afraid. "That knave is not a fool, he has a
wizard in his body. Be on thy guard, old Hans, this is no serving-man for
thee." When the tailor had brought the water, the giant bade him go into
the forest, and cut a couple of blocks of wood and bring them back. "Why
not the whole forest, at once, with one stroke. The whole forest,
young and old, with all that is there, both rough and smooth?" asked
the little tailor, and went to cut the wood. "What! the whole forest,
young and old, with all that is there, both rough and smooth, and the
well and its spring too," growled the credulous giant in his beard,
and was still more terrified. "The knave can do much more than bake
apples, and has a wizard in his body. Be on thy guard, old Hans, this
is no serving-man for thee!" When the tailor had brought the wood, the
giant commanded him to shoot two or three wild boars for supper. "Why
not rather a thousand at one shot, and bring them all here?" inquired
the ostentatious tailor. "What!" cried the timid giant in great terror;
"Let well alone to-night, and lie down to rest."
The giant was so terribly alarmed that he could not close an eye all
night long for thinking what would be the best way to get rid of this
accursed sorcerer of a servant. Time brings counsel. Next morning the
giant and the tailor went to a marsh, round which stood a number of
willow-trees. Then said the giant, "Hark thee, tailor, seat thyself
on one of the willow-branches, I long of all things to see if thou art
big enough to bend it down." All at once the tailor was sitting on it,
holding his breath, and making himself so heavy that the bough bent
down. When, however, he was compelled to draw breath, it hurried him
(for unfortunately he had not put
his goose in his pocket) so high into
the air that he never was seen again, and this to the great delight of
the giant. If the tailor has not fallen down again, he must be hovering
about in the air.
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