| JACK THE GIANT
KILLER
 N the reign of the
famous King Arthur, there lived near the Land’s End of England, in the county
of Cornwall, a worthy farmer, who had an only son named Jack. Jack was a boy of
a bold temper; he took pleasure in hearing or reading stories of wizards,
conjurers, giants, and fairies, and used to listen eagerly while his father
talked of the great deeds of the brave knights of King Arthur’s Round Table.
When Jack was sent to take care of the sheep and oxen in the fields, he used to
amuse himself with planning battles, sieges, and the means to conquer or
surprise a foe. He was above the common sports of children; but hardly any one
could equal him at wrestling; or, if he met with a match for himself in
strength, his skill and address always made hint the victor. In those days
there lived on St. Michael’s Mount of Cornwall, which rises out of the sea at
some distance from the mainland, a huge giant. He was eighteen feet high, and
three yards round; and his fierce and savage looks were the terror of all his
neighbours. He dwelt in a gloomy cavern on the very top of the mountain, and
used to wade over to the main land in search of his prey. When he came near,
the people left their houses; and after he had glutted his appetite upon their
cattle, he would throw half-a-dozen oxen upon his back, and tie three times as
many sheep and hogs round his waist, and so march back to his own abode. The
giant had done this for many years, and the coast of Cornwall was greatly hurt
by his thefts, when Jack boldly resolved to destroy him. He therefore took a horn,
a shovel, pickaxe, and a dark lantern, and early in a long winter’s evening, he
swam to the mount. There he fell to work at once, and before morning he had dug
a pit twenty-two feet deep, and almost as many broad. He covered it over with
sticks and straw, and strewed some of the earth over them, to make it look just
like solid ground. He then put his horn to his mouth, and blew such a loud and
long tantivy, that the giant awoke and came towards Jack, roaring like thunder:
— ‘You saucy villain, you shall pay dearly for breaking my rest; I will broil
you for my breakfast.’ He had scarcely spoken these words, when he came
advancing one step farther; but then he tumbled head-long into the pit, and his
fall shook the very mountain. ‘O ho, Mr. Giant!’ said Jack, looking into the
pit, ‘have you found your way so soon to the bottom? How is your appetite now?
Will nothing serve you for breakfast this cold morning but broiling poor Jack?’
The giant now tried
to rise, but Jack struck him a blow on the crown of the head with his pickaxe,
which killed him at once. Jack then made haste back to rejoice his friends with
the news of the giant’s death. When the justices of Cornwall heard of this
valiant action, they sent for Jack, and declared that he should always be called
Jack the Giant Killer; and they also gave him a sword and belt, upon which was
written in letters of gold: —
‘This is the valiant
Cornishman
Who slew the Giant
Cormoran.’
The news of Jack’s
exploits soon spread over the western parts of England; and another giant,
called Old Blunderbore, vowed to have revenge on Jack, if it should ever be his
fortune to get him into his power. This giant kept an enchanted castle in the
midst of a lonely wood. About four months after the death of Cormoran, as Jack
was taking a journey into Wales, he passed through this wood; and as he was
very weary, he sat down to rest by the side of a pleasant fountain, and there
he fell into a deep sleep. The giant came to the fountain for water just at
this time, and found Jack there; and as the lines on Jack’s belt showed who he
was, the giant lifted him up and laid him gently upon his shoulder to carry him
to his castle: but as he passed through the thicket, the rustling of the leaves
waked Jack; and he was sadly afraid when he found himself in the clutches of
Blunderbore. Yet this was nothing to his fright soon after; for when they
reached the castle, he beheld the floor covered all over with the skulls and
bones of men and women. The giant took him into a large room where lay the hearts
and limbs of persons who had been lately killed; and he told Jack, with a
horrid grin, that men’s hearts, eaten with pepper and vinegar, were his nicest
food; and also, that he thought he should make a dainty meal on his heart. When
he had said this, he locked Jack up in that room, while he went to fetch
another giant who lived in the same wood, to enjoy a dinner off Jack’s flesh
with him. While he was away, Jack heard dreadful shrieks, groans, and cries,
from many parts of the castle; and soon after he heard a mournful voice repeat
these lines: —
‘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.
Oh valiant
stranger! haste away,
Or you’ll become
these giants’ prey.’
This warning was so
shocking to poor Jack, that he was ready to go mad. He ran to the window, and
saw the two giants coming along arm in arm. This window was right over the gates
of the castle. — ‘Now,’ thought Jack, ‘either my death or freedom is at hand.’
There were two strong cords in the room: Jack made a large noose with a
slip-knot at the ends of both these, and as the giants were coming through the
gates, he threw the ropes over their heads. He then made the other ends fast to
a beam in the ceiling, and pulled with all his might till he had almost
strangled them. When he saw that they were both quite black in the face, and
had not the least strength left, he drew his sword, and slid down the ropes; he
then killed the giants, and thus saved himself from the cruel death they meant
to put him to. Jack next took a great bunch of keys from the pocket of
Blunderbore, and went into the castle again. He made a strict search through all
the rooms; and in them found three ladies tied up by the hair of their heads,
and almost starved to death. They told him that their husbands had been killed
by the giants, who had then condemned them to be starved to death, because they
would not eat the flesh of their own dead husbands. ‘Ladies,’ said Jack, ‘I
have put an end to the monster and his wicked brother; and I give you this
castle and all the riches it contains, to make you some amends for the dreadful
pains you have felt.’ He then very politely gave them the keys of the castle,
and went further on his journey to Wales. As Jack had not taken any of the
giant’s riches for himself, and so had very little money of his own, he thought
it best to travel as fast as he could. At length he lost his way, and when
night came on he was in a lonely valley between two lofty mountains, where he
walked about for some hours without seeing any dwelling place, so he thought
himself very lucky at last, in finding a large and handsome house.
He went up to it
boldly, and knocked loudly at the gate, when, to his great terror and surprise,
there came forth a monstrous giant with two heads. He spoke to Jack very
civilly, for he was a Welsh giant, and all the mischief he did was by private
and secret malice, under the show of friendship and kindness. Jack told him
that he was a traveller who had lost his way, on which the huge monster made
him welcome, and led him into a room, where there was a good bed to pass the
night in. — Jack took off his clothes quickly; but though he was so weary he
could not go to sleep. Soon after this he heard the giant walking backward and
forward in the next room, and 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.’
‘Say you so?’
thought Jack; ‘are these your tricks upon travellers? But I hope to prove as
cunning as you.’ Then getting out of bed, he groped about the room, and at last
found a large thick billet of wood; he laid it in his own place in the bed, and
then hid himself in a dark corner of the room. In the middle of the night the
giant came with his great club, and struck many heavy blows on the bed, in the
very place where Jack had laid the billet, and then he went back to his own
room, thinking he had broken all his bones. Early in the morning, Jack put a
bold face upon the matter, and walked into the giant’s room to thank him for
his lodgings. The giant started when he saw him, and he began to stammer out —
‘Oh, dear me! Is it you? Pray, how did you sleep last night?
‘Did you hear or
see any thing in the dead of the night?’ — ‘Nothing worth speaking of,’ said
Jack carelessly; ‘a rat, I believe, gave me three or four slaps with his tail,
and disturbed me a little; but I soon went to sleep again.’ — The giant
wondered more and more at this; yet he did not answer a word, but went to bring
two great bowls of hasty-pudding for their breakfast. Jack wished to make the
giant believe that he could eat as much as himself: so he contrived to button a
leathern bag inside his coat, and slipped the hasty-pudding into this bag,
while he seemed to put it into his mouth. When breakfast was over, he said to
the giant: ‘Now I will show you a fine trick; I can cure all wounds with a
touch; I could cut off my head one minute, and the next, put it sound again on
my shoulders: you shall see an example.’ He then took hold of the knife, ripped
up the leathern bag, and all the hasty-pudding tumbled out upon the floor. ‘Ods
splutter hur nails,’ cried the Welsh giant, who was ashamed to be outdone by
such a little fellow as Jack, ‘hur can do that hurself.’ So he snatched up the
knife, plunged it into his stomach, and in a moment dropped down dead.
As
soon as Jack had
thus tricked the Welsh monster, he went farther on his journey; and a
few days
after he met with King Arthur’s only son, who had got his
father’s leave to
travel into Wales, to deliver a beautiful lady from the power of a
wicked
magician, who held her in his enchantments. When Jack found that the
young prince
had no servants with him, he begged leave to attend him; and the prince
at once
agreed to this, and gave Jack many thanks for his kindness. The prince
was a
handsome, polite, and brave knight, and so good-natured that he gave
money to
every body he met. At length he gave his last penny to an old woman,
and then
turned to Jack, and said: ‘How shall we be able to get food
for ourselves the
rest of our journey?’ — ‘Leave that to me
sir,’ said Jack; ‘I will provide for
my prince.’ — Night now came on, and the prince
began to grow uneasy at
thinking where they should lodge. —
‘Sir,’ said Jack, ‘be of good heart; two
miles farther there lives a large giant, whom I know well: he has three
heads,
and will fight five hundred men, and make them fly before
him.’ — ‘Alas!
‘replied the king’s son, ‘we had better
never have been born than meet with
such a monster.’ — ‘My lord, leave me to
manage him, and wait here in quiet
till I return.’ — The prince now staid behind,
while Jack rode on full speed:
and when he came to the gates of the castle, he gave a loud knock. The
giant,
with a voice like thunder, roared out: ‘Who is
there?’ — And Jack made answer,
and said: ‘No one but your poor cousin Jack.’
— ‘Well’ said the giant, ‘what
news, cousin Jack?’ — ‘Dear
uncle,’ said Jack, ‘I have some heavy
news.’ —
‘Pooh!’ said the giant, ‘what heavy news
can come to me? I am a giant with
three heads; and can fight five hundred men, and make them fly before
me.’ —
‘Alas!’ said Jack, ‘Here is the
king’s son, coming with two thousand men, to
kill you, and to destroy the castle and all that you have.’
— ‘Oh, cousin
Jack,’ said the giant, ‘This is heavy news indeed!
But I have a large cellar
under ground, where I will hide myself, and you shall lock, and bar me
in, and
keep the keys till the king’s son is gone.’
Now when Jack bad
made the giant fast in the vault, he went back and fetched the prince to the
castle; they both made themselves merry with the wine and other dainties that
were in the house. So that night they rested very pleasantly, while the poor
giant lay trembling and shaking with fear in the cellar under ground. Early in
the morning, Jack gave the king’s son gold and silver out of the giant’s
treasure, and set him three miles forward on his journey. He then went to let
his uncle out of the hole, who asked Jack what he should give him as a reward
for saving his castle. ‘Why, good uncle,’ said Jack, ‘I desire nothing but the
old coat and cap, with the old rusty sword and slippers, which are hanging at
your bed’s head.’ — Then said the giant: ‘You shall have them; and pray keep
them for my sake, for they are things of great use: the coat will keep you
invisible, the cap will give you knowledge, the sword cut through any thing,
and the shoes are of vast swiftness; these may be useful to you in all times of
danger, so take them with all my heart.’ Jack gave many thanks to the giant,
and then set off to the prince. When he had come up with the king’s son, they
soon arrived at the dwelling of the beautiful lady, who was under the power of
a wicked magician. She received the prince very politely, and made a noble
feast for him; and when it was ended, she rose, and wiping her mouth with a
fine handkerchief, said: ‘My lord, you must submit to the custom of my palace;
to-morrow morning I command you to tell me on whom I bestow this handkerchief
or lose your head.’ She then went out of the room. The young prince went to bed
very mournful: but Jack put on his 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 middle of the forest. Jack now 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, at one
blow, cut off his head; the enchantment was then ended in a moment, and the
lady was restored to her former virtue and goodness.
She was married to
the prince on the next day, and soon after went back with her royal husband,
and a great company, to the court of King Arthur, where they were received with
loud and joyful welcomes; and the valiant hero Jack, for the many great
exploits he had done for the good of his country, was made one of the Knights
of the Round Table. As Jack had been so lucky in all his adventures, he
resolved not to be idle for the future, but still to do what services he could
for the honour of the king and the nation. He therefore humbly begged his
majesty to furnish him with a horse and money, that he might travel in search
of new and strange exploits. ‘For,’ said he to the king ‘there are many giants
yet living in the remote parts of Wales, to the great terror and distress of
your majesty’s subjects; therefore if it please you, sire, to favour me in my
design, I will soon rid your kingdom of these giants and monsters in human
shape.’ Now when the king heard this offer, and began to think of the cruel
deeds of these blood-thirsty giants and savage monsters, he gave Jack every
thing proper for such a journey. After this Jack took leave of the king, the
prince, and all the knights, and set off; taking with him his cap of knowledge,
his sword of sharpness, his shoes of swiftness, and his invisible coat, the
better to perform the great exploits that might fall in his way. He went along
over high hills and lofty mountains, and on the third day he came to a large
wide forest, through which his road led. He had hardly entered the forest, when
on a sudden he heard very dreadful shrieks and cries. He forced his way through
the trees, and saw a monstrous giant dragging along by the hair of their heads
a handsome knight and his beautiful lady. Their tears and cries melted the
heart of honest Jack to pity and compassion; he alighted from his horse, and
tying him to an oak tree he put on his invisible coat, under which he carried
his sword of sharpness.
When he came up to
the giant, he made several strokes at him, but could not reach his body, on
account of the enormous height of the terrible creature: but he wounded his
thighs in several places; and at length, putting both hands to his sword, and
aiming with all his might, he cut off both the giant’s legs just below the
garter; and the trunk of his body tumbling to the ground, made not only the
trees shake, but the earth itself tremble with the force of his fall. Then
Jack, setting his foot upon his neck, exclaimed, ‘Thou barbarous and savage
wretch, behold I come to execute upon thee the just reward for all thy crimes;
‘and instantly plunged his sword into the giant’s body. The huge monster gave a
hideous groan, and yielded up his life into the hands of the victorious Jack
the Giant Killer, whilst the noble knight and the virtuous lady were both
joyful spectators of his sudden death and their deliverance. The courteous
knight and his fair lady, not only returned Jack hearty thanks for their
deliverance, but also invited him to their house, to refresh himself after his
dreadful encounter, as likewise to receive a reward for his good services.
‘No,’ said Jack, ‘I cannot be a tease till I find out the den that was the
monster’s habitation.’ The knight on hearing this grew very sorrowful, and
replied, ‘Noble stranger, it is too much to run a second hazard; this monster
lived in a den under yonder mountain, with a brother of his, more fierce and cruel
than himself; therefore, if you should go thither, and perish in the attempt,
it would be a heart-breaking thing to me and my lady; so let me persuade you to
go with us, and desist from any farther pursuit.’ — ‘Nay,’ answered Jack, ‘if
there be another, even if there were twenty, I would shed the last drop of
blood in my body before one of them should escape my fury. When I have finished
this task, I will come and pay my respects to you.’ So when they had told him
where to find them again, he got on his horse and went after the dead Giant’s
brother.
Jack had not rode a
mile and a half, before he came in sight of the mouth of the cavern; and nigh
the entrance of it, he saw the other giant sitting on a huge block of fine
timber, with a knotted iron club lying by his side, waiting for his brother.
His eyes looked like flames of fire, his face was grim and ugly, and his cheeks
seemed like two flitches of bacon; the bristles of his beard seemed to be thick
rods of iron wire; and his long locks of hair hung down upon his broad
shoulders like curling snakes, Jack got down from his horse, and turned him
into a thicket; then he put on his coat of darkness, and drew a little nears to
behold this figure, and said softly: ‘Oh monster! are you there? It will not be
long before I shall take you fast by the beard.’ The giant all this while,
could not see him, by reason of his invisible coat: so Jack came quite close to
him, and struck a blow at his head with his sword of sharpness, but he missed
his aim, and only cut off his nose, which made him roar like loud claps of
thunder. And though he rolled his glaring eyes round on every side, he could
not see who had given him the blow; yet he took up his iron club, and began to
lay about him like one that was mad with pain and fury.
‘Nay,’ said Jack, ‘if this be the case I will
kill you at once.’ — So saying, he slipped nimbly behind him, and jumping upon
the block of timber, as the giant rose from it, he stabbed him in the back;
when, after a few howls, he dropped down dead. Jack cut off his head, and sent
it with the head of his brother, whom he had killed before in the forest, to
king Arthur, by a wagon which he hired for that purpose, with an account of all
his exploits. When Jack had thus killed these two monsters, he went into their
cave in search of their treasure: he passed through many turnings and windings,
which led him to a room paved with freestone; at the end of it was a boiling
caldron, and on the right hand stood a large table where the giants used to
dine. He then came to a window that was secured with iron bars, through which
he saw a number of wretched captives, who cried out when they saw Jack — ‘Alas!
alas! young man, you are come to be one among us in this horrid den.’ — ‘I
hope,’ said Jack, ‘you will not stay here long; but pray tell me what is the
meaning of your being here at all?’ — ‘Alas!’ said one poor old man, ‘I will
tell you, sir. We are persons that have been taken by the giants who hold this
cave, and are kept till they choose to have a feast, then one of us is to be
killed, and cooked to please their taste. It is not long since they took three
for the same purpose.’ — ‘Well,’ said Jack, ‘I have given them such a dinner,
that it will be long enough before they have any more. The captives were amazed
at his words. ‘You may believe me,’ said Jack; ‘for I have killed them both
with the edge of the sword, and have sent their large heads to the court of
King Arthur, as marks of my great success.’ — To show them that what he said
was true, he unlocked the gate, and set them all free. Then he led them to the
great room, placed them round the table, and set before them two quarters of
beef, with bread and wine; upon which they feasted to their fill. When supper
was over, they searched the giants’ coffers: and Jack shared the store in them
among the captives, who thanked him for their escape. The next morning they set
off to their homes, and Jack to the knight’s house, whom he had left with his
lady not long before. It was just at the time of sunrise that Jack mounted his
horse to proceed on his journey.
He arrived at the
knight’s house, where he was received with the greatest joy by the thankful
knight and his lady, who, in honour of Jack’s exploits, gave a grand feast, to
which all the nobles and gentry were invited. When the company were assembled,
the knight declared to them the great actions of Jack, and gave him, as a mark
of respect, a fine 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.
Among the guests
then present were five aged gentlemen, who were fathers to some of those captives
who had been freed by Jack from the dungeon of the giants. As soon as they
heard that he was the person who had done such wonders, they pressed round him
with tears of joy, to return him thanks for the happiness he had caused to
them. After this the bowl went round, and every one drank to the health and
long life of the gallant hero. Mirth increased, and the hall was filled with
peals of laughter and joyful cries. But, on a sudden, a herald, pale and
breathless with haste and terror, rushed into the midst of the company, and
told them 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; and that he was
now within a mile of the house; the people flying before him like chaff before
the wind. At this news the very boldest of the guests trembled; but Jack drew
his sword, and said: ‘Let him come, I have a rod for him also. Pray, ladies and
gentlemen, do me the favour to walk into the garden, and you shall soon behold
the giant’s defeat and death.’ To this they all agreed, and heartily wished him
success in his dangerous attempt. The knight’s house stood in the middle of a
moat, thirty feet deep and twenty wide, over which lay a drawbridge. Jack set
men to work, to cut the bridge on both sides, almost to the middle; and then
dressed himself in his coat of darkness, and went against the giant with his
sword of sharpness. As he came close to him, though the giant could not see
him, for his invisible coat, yet he found some danger was near, which made him
cry out: —
‘Fa, fe, fi, fo,
fum,
I smell the blood
of an Englishman;
Let him be alive,
or let him be dead,
I’ll grind his
bones to make me bread.’
‘Say
you so my
friend?’ said Jack, ‘you are a monstrous miller
indeed.’ — ‘Art thou,’ cried
the giant, the villain that killed my kinsmen? Then I will tear thee
with my
teeth, and grind thy bones to powder.’ —
‘You must catch me first,’ said Jack;
and throwing off his’ coat of darkness, and putting on his
shoes of swiftness,
he began to run; the giant following him like a walking castle, making
the
earth shake at every step.
Jack
led him round
and round the walls of the house, that the company might see the
monster; and
to finish the work Jack ran over the drawbridge, the giant going after
him with
his club. But when the giant came to the middle, where the bridge had
been cut
on both sides, the great weight of his body made it break, and he
tumbled into
the water, and rolled about like a large whale. Jack now stood by the
side of
the moat, and laughed and jeered at him saying: ‘I think you
told me, you would
grind my bones to powder: when will you begin?’ The giant
foamed at both his
horrid mouths with fury, and plunged from side to side of the moat; but
he
could not get out to have revenge on his little foe. At last Jack
ordered a
cart rope to be brought to him. He then drew it over his two heads, and
by the
help of a team of horses, dragged him to the edge of the moat, where he
cut off
the monster’s heads; and before he either eat ‘or
drank, he sent them both to
the court of king Arthur. He then went back to the table with the
company, and
the rest of the day was spent in mirth and good cheer. After staying
with the
knight for some time, Jack grew weary of such an idle life, and set out
again in
search of new adventures. He went over hills and dales without meeting
any,
till he came to the foot of a very high mountain. Here he knocked at
the door
of a small and lonely house; and an old man, with a head as white as
snow, let
him in. ‘Good father,’ said Jack, ‘can
you lodge a traveller who has lost his
way?’ — ‘Yes,’ said the hermit,
‘I can, if you will accept such fare as my poor
house affords.’ Jack entered, and the old man set before him
some bread and
fruit for his supper. When Jack had eaten as much as he chose, the
hermit said,
‘My son, I know you are the famous conqueror of giants; now,
on the top of this
mountain is an enchanted castle, kept by a giant named Galligantus,
who, by the
help of a vile magician, gets many knights into his castle, where he
changes
them into the shape of beasts. Above all I lament the hard fate of a
duke’s
daughter, whom they seized as she was walking in her father’s
garden, and
brought hither through the air in a chariot drawn by two fiery dragons,
and
turned her into the shape of a deer. Many knights have tried to destroy
the
enchantment, and deliver her; yet none have been able to do it, by
reason of
two fiery griffins who guard the gate of the castle, and destroy all
who come
nigh. But as you, my son, have an invisible coat, you may pass by them
without
being seen; and on the gates of the castle, you will find engraved, by
what
means the enchantment may be broken.’
Jack promised, that
in the morning, at the risk of his life he would break the enchantment: and after
a sound sleep he arose early, put on his invisible coat, and got ready for the
attempt. When he had climbed to the top of the mountain, he saw the two fiery
griffins; but he passed between them 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, under which were written these lines:
‘Whoever can this
trumpet blow,
Shall cause the
giant’s overthrow.’
As soon as Jack had
read this, he seized the trumpet, and blew a shrill blast; which made the gates
fly open, and the very castle itself tremble. The giant and the conjurer now
knew that their wicked course was at an end, and they stood biting their thumbs
and shaking with fear. Jack, with his sword of sharpness, soon killed the
giant: and the magician was then carried away by a whirlwind; and every knight
and beautiful lady, who had been changed into birds and beasts, returned to
their proper shapes. The castle vanished away like smoke; and the head of the
giant Galligantus was sent to king Arthur. The knights and ladies rested that
night at the old man’s hermitage, and next day they set out for the court.
Jack then went up
to the king, and gave his majesty an account of all his fierce battles. Jack’s
fame had spread through the whole country; and at the king’s desire, the duke
gave him his daughter in marriage, to the joy of all the kingdom. After this
the king gave him a large estate; on which he and his lady lived the rest of
their days, in joy and content.
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