A Dozen At A Blow [Europa's Fairy Book]
A little tailor was sitting cross-legged at his bench and was stitching away as busy as could be when a woman came up the street calling out: "Home-made jam, home-made jam!"
So the tailor called out to her:
"Come here, my good woman, and give me a quarter of a pound."
And when she had poured it out for him he
spread it on some bread and butter and laid it aside for his lunch. But, in the
summer-time, the flies commenced to collect around the bread and jam.
When the tailor noticed this, he raised
his leather strap and brought it down upon the crowd of
flies and killed twelve of them straightway. He was mighty proud of that. So he
made himself a shoulder-sash, on which he stitched the letters: A Dozen at One
Blow.
When he looked down upon this he thought
to himself: "A man who could do such things ought not to stay at home; he
ought to go out to conquer the world."
So he put into his wallet the cream
cheese that he had bought that day and a favourite blackbird that used to hop
about his shop, and went out to seek his fortune.
He hadn't gone far when he met a giant,
and went up to him and said: "Well, comrade, how goes it with you?"
"Comrade," sneered the giant,
"a pretty comrade you would make for me."
"Look at this," said the tailor
pointing to his sash.
And when the giant read, "A Dozen at
a Blow," he thought to himself: "This little fellow is no fool of a
fighter if what he says is true. But let's test him."
So the giant said to the tailor: "If
what you've got there is true, we may well be comrades. But let's see if you
can do what I can do."
And he bent down in the road and took up
a large stone and pressed it with his hand till it all crushed up and water
commenced to pour out from it.
"Can you do that?" said the
giant.
The tailor also bent down in the road,
but took out from his wallet the piece of cheese and pretended to pick it up.
When he took it in his hand he pressed
and pressed till the cream poured forth from it.
The giant said: "Well, you can do
that fairly well. Let's see if you can throw."
He took another stone and threw it till
it went right across the river by which they were standing.
So the little tailor took his blackbird
in his hand and pretended to throw it, and of course when it felt itself in the
air it flew away and disappeared.
The giant said: "That wasn't a bad
throw. You may as well come home and stop with us giants, and we'll do great
things together."
As they went along the giant said:
"We want some twigs for our night fires. You may as well help me carry
some home." And he pointed to a tree that had fallen by the wayside and
said: "Help me carry that, will you?"
So the tailor said, "Why
certainly," and went to the top of the tree, and said: "I'll carry
these branches which are the heavier; you carry the trunk which has no
branches."
And when the giant got the trunk on his
shoulders the tailor seated himself on one of the branches and let the giant
carry him along.
After a time the giant got tired and
said: "Ho there, wait a minute, I'm going to drop
the tree and rest awhile."
So the tailor jumped down and caught the
tree around the branches again and said: "Well, you are easily
tired."
At last they got to the giant's castle
and there the giant spoke to his brothers and told them what a brave and
powerful fellow this little tailor was. They spoke together and determined to
get rid of him lest he might do them some harm. But they determined to kill him
in the night because he was so strong and might kill twelve of them at a blow.
But the tailor saw them whispering
together, and guessing that something was wrong went out into the yard and got
a big bladder which he filled with blood and put it in the bed which the giants
pointed out to him.
Then he crept under it, and during the
night they brought their big clubs and hit the bed over and over again till the
blood spurted out onto their faces.
Then they thought the tailor was dead and
went back to sleep.
But in the morning there was the tailor
as large as life. And they were so surprised to see him that they asked him if
he had not felt anything during the night.
"Oh, I don't know, there seemed to
be plenty of fleas in that bed," said the tailor. "I do not think I
would care to sleep there again." And with that he
took his leave of the giants and went on his way.
After a time he came to the King's court
and fell asleep under a tree. And some of the courtiers passing by saw written
upon his sash, "A Dozen at One Blow."
They went and told the King who said:
"Why, he's just the man for us; he will be able to destroy the wild boar
and the unicorn that are ravaging our kingdom. Bring him to us."
So they woke up the little tailor and
brought him to the King, who said to him: "There is a wild boar ravaging
our kingdom. You are so powerful that you will easily be able to capture
it."
"What shall I get if I do?"
asked the little tailor.
"Well, I have promised to give my
daughter's hand and half the kingdom to the man who can do it, and other
things."
"What other things?" said the
little tailor.
"Oh, it will be time to learn that
when you have caught the boar."
Then the little tailor went out to the
wood where the boar was last seen, and when he came near him he ran away, and
ran away, and ran away, till at last he came to a little chapel in the wood
into which he ran, and the boar at his heels. He climbed up to a high window
and got outside the chapel, and then rushed around to the door and closed and
locked it.
Then he went back to the King and said to
him: "I have your wild boar for you in the chapel in the woods. Send some
of your men to kill him, or do what you like with him."
"How did you manage to get him
there?" said the King.
"Oh, I caught him by the bristles
and threw him in there as I thought you wanted to have him safe and sound.
What's the next thing I must do?"
"Well," said the King,
"there's a unicorn in this country killing everyone that he meets. I do
not want him slain; I want him caught and brought to me."
So the little tailor said, "Give me
a rope and a hatchet and I will see what I can do."
So he went with the rope and hatchet to
the wood, where the unicorn had been seen. And when he came towards it he dodged
it, and he dodged it, till at last he dodged behind a big tree, till the
unicorn, in trying to pierce, ran his horn into the tree where it stuck fast.
Then the little tailor came forth and
tied the rope around the unicorn's neck, and dug out the horn with his hatchet,
and dragged the unicorn to the King.
"What's the next thing?" said
the little tailor.
"Well, there is only one thing more.
There are two giants who are destroying everybody they meet. Get rid of them,
and my daughter and the half of my kingdom shall be yours."
Then the little tailor went to seek the
giants and found them sleeping under some trees in the woods. He filled his box
with stones, climbed up a tree overlooking the giants, and when he had hidden
himself in the branches he threw a stone at the chest of one of the giants who
woke up and said to his brother giant, "What are you doing there?"
And the other giant woke up and said,
"I have done nothing."
"Well, don't do it again," said
the other giant, and laid down to sleep again.
Then the tailor threw a stone at the
other giant and hit him a whack on the chin. That giant rose up and said to his
fellow giant, "What do you do that for?"
"Do what?"
"Hit me on the chin."
"I didn't."
"You did."
"I didn't."
"You did."
"Well, take that for not doing
it."
And with that the other giant hit him a
rousing blow on the head. With that they commenced fighting and tore up the
trees and hit one another till at last one of them was killed, and the other
one was so badly injured that the tailor had no difficulty in killing him with
his hatchet.
Then he went back to the King and said:
"I have got rid of your giants for you; send your
men and bury them in the forest. They tore up the trees and tried to kill me
with them but I was too much for them. Now for the Princess."
Well, the King had nothing more to say,
and gave him his daughter in marriage and half the kingdom to rule.
But shortly after they were married the
Princess heard the tailor saying in his sleep: "Fix that button better;
baste that side gore; don't drop your stitches like that."
And then she knew she had married a
tailor. And she went to her father weeping bitterly and complained.
"Well, my dear," he said,
"I promised, and he certainly showed himself a great hero. But I will try
and get rid of him for you. To-night I will send into your bedroom a number of
soldiers that shall slay him even if he can kill a dozen at a blow."
So that night the little tailor noticed
there was something wrong and heard the soldiers moving about near the bedroom.
So he pretended to fall asleep and called out in his sleep: "I have killed
a dozen at a blow; I have slain two giants; I have caught a wild boar by his
bristles, and captured a unicorn alive. Show me the man that I need fear."
And when the soldiers heard that they
said to the Princess that the job was too much for them,
and went away.
And the Princess thought better of it,
and was proud of her little hero, and they lived happily ever afterwards.
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