The Earl Of Cattenborough [Europa's Fairy Book]
Once upon a time there was a miller who had three sons, Charles, Sam, and John. And every night when the servant went to bed he used to call out:
"Good-night, Missus; good-night,
Master; Good-night, Charles, Sam, John."
Now after a time the miller's wife died,
and, soon after, the miller, leaving only the mill, the donkey, and the cat.
And Charles, as the eldest, took the mill, and Sam took
the donkey and went off with it, and John was left with only the cat.
Now how do you think the cat used to help
John to live? She used to take a bag with a string around the top and place it with
some cheese in the bushes, and when a hare or a partridge would come and try to
get the piece of cheese—snap! Miss Puss would draw the string and there was the
hare or partridge for Master Jack to eat. One day two hares happened to rush
into the bag at the same time. So the cat, after giving one to Jack, took the
other and went with it to the King's palace. And when she came outside the
palace gate she cried out, "Miaou."
The sentry at the gate came to see what
was the matter. Miss Puss gave him the hare with a bow and said: "Give
this to the King with the compliments of the Earl of Cattenborough."
The King liked jugged hare very much and
was glad to get such a fine present.
Shortly after this Miss Puss found a gold
coin rolling in the dirt. And she went up to the palace and asked the sentry if
he would lend her a corn measure.
The sentry asked who wanted it. And Puss
said: "My Master, the Earl of Cattenborough."
So the sentry gave her the corn measure.
And a little while afterwards she took it back with the gold coin, which she
had found, fixed in a crack in the corn measure.
So the King was told that the Earl of
Cattenborough measured his gold in a corn measure. When the King heard this he
told the sentry that if such a thing happened again he was to deliver a message
asking the Earl to come and stop at the palace.
Some time after the cat caught two
partridges, and took one of them to the palace. And when she called out,
"Miaou," and presented it to the sentry, in the name of the Earl of
Cattenborough, the sentry told her that the King wished to see the Earl at his
palace.
So Puss went back to Jack and said to
him: "The King desires to see the Earl of Cattenborough at his
palace."
"What is that to do with me?"
said Jack.
"Oh, you can be the Earl of Cattenborough
if you like. I'll help you."
"But I have no clothes, and they'll
soon find out what I am when I talk."
"As for that," said Miss Puss,
"I'll get you proper clothes if you do what I tell you; and when you come
to the palace I will see that you do not make any mistakes."
So next day she told Jack to take off his
clothes and hide them under a big stone and dip himself into the river. And
while he was doing this she went up to the palace gate and said: "Miaou,
miaou, miaou!"
And when the sentry came to the gate she
said: "My Master, the Earl of Cattenborough, has been
robbed of all he possessed, even of his clothes, and he is hiding in the
bramble bush by the side of the river. What is to be done? What is to be
done?"
The sentry went and told the King. And
the King gave orders that a suitable suit of clothes, worthy of an Earl, should
be sent to Master Jack, who soon put them on and went to the King's palace
accompanied by Puss. When they got there they were introduced into the chamber
of the King, who thanked Jack for his kind presents.
Miss Puss stood forward and said:
"My Master, the Earl of Cattenborough, desires to state to your Majesty
that there is no need of any thanks for such trifles."
The King thought it was very grand of
Jack not to speak directly to him, and summoned his lord chamberlain, and from
that time onward only spoke through him. Thus, when they sat down to dinner
with the Queen and the Princess, the King would say to his chamberlain,
"Will the Earl of Cattenborough take a potato?"
Whereupon Miss Puss would bow and say:
"The Earl of Cattenborough thanks his Majesty and would be glad to partake
of a potato."
The King was so much struck by Jack's
riches and grandeur, and the Princess was so pleased with his good looks and
fine dress that it was determined that he should marry the Princess.
But the King thought he would try and see
if he were really so nobly born and bred as he seemed. So
he told his servants to put a mean truckle bed in the room in which Jack was to
sleep, knowing that no noble would put up with such a thing.
When Miss Puss saw this bed she at once
guessed what was up. And when Jack began to undress to get into bed, she made
him stop, and called the attendants to say that he could not sleep in such a
bed.
So they took him into another bedroom,
where there was a fine four-poster with a dais, and everything worthy of a
noble to sleep upon. Then the King became sure that Jack was a real noble, and
married him soon to his daughter the Princess.
After the wedding feast was over the King
told Jack that he and the Queen and the Princess would come with him to his
castle of Cattenborough, and Jack did not know what to do. But Miss Puss told
him it would be all right if he only didn't speak much while on the journey.
And that suited Jack very well.
So they all set out in a carriage with
four horses, and with the King's life-guards riding around it. But Miss Puss
ran on in front of the carriage, and when she came to a field where men were
mowing down the hay she pointed to the life-guards riding along, and said:
"Men, if you do not say that this field belongs to the Earl of
Cattenborough those soldiers will cut you to pieces with their swords."
So when the carriage came along the King
called one of the men to the side of it and said, "Whose is this
field?"
And the man said, "It belongs to the
Earl of Cattenborough."
And the King turned to his son-in-law and
said, "I did not know that you had estates so near us."
And Jack said, "I had forgotten it
myself."
And this only confirmed the King in his
idea about Jack's great wealth.
A little farther on there was another
great field in which men were raking hay. And Miss Puss spoke to them as
before. So, when the carriage came up, they also declared that this field
belonged to the Earl of Cattenborough. And so it went on through the whole
drive. Then the King said, "Let us now go to your castle."
Then Jack looked at Miss Puss, and she
said: "If your Majesty will but wait an hour I will go on before and order
the castle to be made ready for you."
With that she jumped away and went to the
castle of a great ogre and asked to see him. When she came into his presence
she said:
"I have come to give you warning.
The King with all his army is coming to the castle and will batter its walls
down and kill you if he finds you here."
"What shall I do? What shall I
do?" said the ogre.
"Is there no place where you can
hide yourself?"
"I am too big to hide," said
the ogre, "but my mother gave me a powder, and when I take that I can make
myself as small as I like."
"Well, why not take it now?"
said the cat.
And with that he took the powder and
shrunk into a little body no bigger than a mouse. And thereupon Miss Puss
jumped upon him and ate him all up, and then went down into the great yard of
the castle and told the guards that it now belonged to her Master the Earl of
Cattenborough. Then she ordered them to open the gates and let in the King's
carriage, which came along just then.
The King was delighted to find what a
fine castle his son-in-law possessed, and left his daughter the Princess with
him at the castle while he drove back to his own palace.
And Jack and the Princess lived happily in the castle.
But one day Miss Puss felt very ill and
lay down as if dead, and the chamberlain of the castle went to Jack and said:
"My lord, your cat is dead."
And Jack said: "Well, throw her out
on the dunghill."
But Miss Puss, when she heard it, called
out: "Had you not better throw me into the mill stream?"
And Jack remembered where he had come
from and was frightened that the cat would say. So he ordered the physician of
the castle to attend to her, and ever after gave her whatever she wanted.
And when the King died he succeeded him,
and that was the end of the Earl of Cattenborough.