Jack and the Beanstalk
English Traditional
There was once a boy called Jack who was brave and
quick-witted. He lived with his mother in a small cottage and their most
valuable possession was their cow, Milky-White. But the day came when
Milky-White gave them no milk and Jack's mother said she must be sold.
"Take her to market," she told Jack, "and
mind you get a good price for her."
So Jack set out to market leading Milky-White by her halter.
After a while he sat down to rest by the side of the road. An old man came by
and Jack told him where he was going.
"Don't bother to go to the market," the old man said. "Sell your cow to me. I will pay you well. Look at these beans. Only plant them, and overnight you will find you have the finest bean plants in all the world. You'll be better off with these beans than with an old cow or money. Now, how many is five, Jack?"
"Two in each hand and one in your mouth," replied
Jack, as sharp as a needle.
"Right you are, here are five beans," said the old
man and he handed the beans to Jack and took Milky-White's halter.
When he reached home, his mother said, "Back so soon,
Jack? Did you get a good price for Milky-White?"
Jack told her how he had exchanged the cow for five beans
and before he could finish his account, his mother started to shout and box his
ears. "You lazy good-for-nothing boy!" she screamed, "How could
you hand over our cow for five old beans? What will we live on now? We shall
starve to death, you stupid boy."
She flung the beans through the open window and sent Jack to
bed without his supper.
When Jack woke the next morning there was a strange green
light in his room. All he could see from, the window was green leaves. A huge
beanstalk had shot up overnight. It grew higher than he could see. Quickly Jack
got dressed and stepped out of the window right onto the beanstalk and started
to climb.
"The old man said the beans would grow overnight,"
he thought. "They must indeed be very special beans."
Higher and higher Jack climbed until at last he reached the
top and found himself on a strange road. Jack followed it until he came to a
great castle where he could smell the most delicious breakfast. Jack was
hungry. It had been a long climb and he had had nothing to eat since midday the
day before. Just as he reached the door of the castle he nearly tripped over
the feet of an enormous woman.
"Here, boy," she called. "What are you doing?
Don't you know my husband likes to eat boys for breakfast? It's lucky I have
already fried up some bacon and mushrooms for him today, or I'd pop you in the
frying pan. He can eat you tomorrow, though."
"Oh, please don't let him eat me," pleaded Jack.
"I only came to ask you for a bite to eat. It smells so delicious."
Now the giant's wife had a kind heart and did not really
enjoy cooking boys for breakfast, so she gave Jack a bacon sandwich. He was
still eating it when the ground began to shake with heavy footsteps, and a loud
voice boomed: "Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum."
"Quick, hide!" cried the giant's wife and she
pushed Jack into the oven. "After breakfast, he'll fall asleep," she
whispered. "That is when you must creep away." She left the oven door
open a crack so that jack could see into the room. Again the terrible rumbling
voice came:
"Fee, 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."
A huge giant came into the room. "Boys, boys, I smell
boys," he shouted. "Wife, have I got a boy for breakfast today?"
"No, dear," she said soothingly. "You have
got bacon and mushrooms. You must still be smelling the boy you ate last
week." The giant sniffed the air suspiciously but at last sat down. He
wolfed his breakfast of bacon and mushrooms, drank a great bucketful of steaming
tea and crunched up a massive slice of toast. Then he fetched a couple of bags
of gold from a cupboard and started counting gold coins. Before long he dropped
off to sleep.
Carefully he picked up two gold coins and ran as fast as he
could to the top of the beanstalk. He threw the gold clown to his mother's
garden and climbed after it. At the bottom he found his mother looking in
amazement at the gold coins and the beanstalk. Jack told her of his adventures
in the giant's castle and when she examined the gold she realized he must be
speaking the truth.
Jack and his mother used the gold to buy food. But the day
came when the money ran out, and Jack decided to climb the beanstalk again.
It was all the same as before, the long climb, the road to
the castle, the smell of breakfast and the giant's wife. But she was not so
friendly this time.
"Aren't you the boy who was here before," she
asked, "on the day that some gold was stolen from under my husband's
nose?"
But Jack convinced her she was wrong and in time her heart
softened again and she gave him some breakfast. Once more as Jack was eating
the ground shuddered and the great voice boomed: "Tee, Fi, Fo, Fum."
Quickly, Jack jumped into the oven.
As he entered, the giant bellowed:
"Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum,
I smell the blood of cm Englishman,
Be he alive or be he dead,
I'll grind his bones to make my bread."
The giant's wife put a plate of sizzling sausages before
him, telling him he must be mistaken. After breakfast the giant fetched a hen
from a back room. Every time he said "Lay!" the hen laid an egg of
solid gold.
"I must steal that hen, if I can," thought Jack,
and he waited until the giant fell asleep. Then he slipped out of the oven, snatched
up the hen and ran for the top of the beanstalk. Keeping the hen under one arm,
he scrambled Jack and the Beanstalk clown as fast as he could until he reached
the bottom. Jack's mother was waiting but she was not pleased when she saw the
hen.
"Another of your silly ideas, is it, bringing an old
hen when you might have brought us some gold? I don't know, what is to be done
with you?"
Then jack set the hen down carefully, and commanded "Lay!"
just as the giant had done. To his mother's surprise the hen laid an egg of
solid gold.
Jack and his mother now lived in great luxury. But in time
Jack became a little bored and decided to climb the beanstalk again.
This time he did not risk talking to the giant's wife in
case she recognized him. He slipped into the kitchen when she was not looking,
and hid himself in the log basket. He watched the giant's wife prepare
breakfast and then he heard the giant's roar:
"Fee, 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."
"If it's that cheeky boy who stole your gold and our
magic hen, then help you catch him," said the giant's wife. "Why
don't we look in the oven? It's my guess he'll be hiding there."
You may be sure that jack was glad he was not in the oven.
The giant and his wife hunted high and low but never thought to look in the log
basket. At last they gave up and the giant sat down to breakfast.
After he had eaten, the giant fetched a harp. When he
commanded "Play!" the harp played the most beautiful music. Soon the
giant fell asleep, and jack crept out of the log basket. Quickly he snatched up
the harp and ran. But the harp called out loudly, "Master, save me! Save
me!" and the giant woke. With a roar of rage he chased after Jack.
Jack raced down the road towards the
beanstalk with the giant's footsteps thundering behind him. When he reached the
top of the beanstalk he threw down the harp and started to slither down after
it. The giant followed, and now the whole beanstalk shook and shuddered with
his weight, and Jack feared for his life. At last he reached the ground, and
seizing an axe he chopped at the beanstalk with all his might. Snap!
"Look out, mother!" he called as the giant came
tumbling clown, head first. He lay dead at their feet with the beanstalk on the
ground beside them. The harp was broken, but the hen continued to lay golden
eggs for Jack and his mother and they lived happily and in great comfort for a
long, long time.
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