| TOM THUMB
 N the days of king
Arthur, Merlin, the most learned enchanter of his time, was on a journey; and,
being very weary, stopped one day at the cottage of an honest ploughman to ask
for refreshment. The ploughman’s wife, with great civility, immediately brought
him some milk in a wooden bowl, and some brown bread on a wooden platter.
Merlin could not help observing, that, although every thing within the cottage
was particularly neat and clean, and in good order, the ploughman and his wife
had the most sorrowful air imaginable: so he questioned them on the cause of
their melancholy, and learned that they were very miserable because they had no
children. The poor woman declared, with tears in her eyes, that she should be
the happiest creature in the world, if she had a son, although he were no
bigger than his father’s thumb. Merlin was much amused with the thoughts of a
boy no bigger than a man’s thumb, and, as soon as he returned home, he sent for
the queen of the fairies (with whom he was very intimate,) and related to her
the desire of the ploughman and his wife to have a son the size of his father’s
thumb. The queen of the fairies liked the plan exceedingly, and declared their
wish should speedily be granted. Accordingly the ploughman’s wife had a son,
who in a few minutes, grew as tall as his father’s thumb. The queen of the
fairies came in at the window as the mother was sitting up in bed admiring the
child. The queen kissed the infant, and giving it the name of Tom Thumb,
immediately summoned several fairies from Fairy Land to clothe her little new
favourite: —
An oak leaf hat he
had for his crown,
His shirt it was by
spiders spun;
With doublet wove
of thistle’s down,
His trousers up
with points were done.
His stockings, of
apple rind, they tie
With eye-lash
plucked from his mother’s eye,
His shoes were made
of a mouse’s skin,
Nicely tanned with
the hair within.
 Tom never was any
bigger than his father’s thumb, which was not a large thumb either; but, as he
grew older, he became very cunning and sly, for which his mother did not
sufficiently correct him: so that when he was able to play with the boys for
cherry stones, and had lost all his own, he used to creep into the boys’ bags,
fill his pockets, and come out again to play. But one day as he was getting out
of a bag of cherry-stones, the boy to whom it belonged chanced to see him. ‘Ah
ha, my little Tom Thumb!’ said the boy, ‘have I caught you at your bad tricks
at last? Now I will reward you for thieving.’ Then drawing the string tight
round his neck, and shaking the bag heartily, the cherry stones bruised Tom’s
legs, thighs, and body sadly; which made him beg to be let out, and promise
never to be guilty of such things any more. Shortly afterwards, Tom’s mother
was making a batter pudding, and, that he might see how she mixed it, he
climbed on the edge of the bowl; but his foot happening to slip, he fell over
head and ears into the batter, and his mother not observing him, stirred him
into the pudding, and popped him into the pot to boil. The hot water made Tom
kick and struggle; and his mother, seeing the pudding jump up and down in such
a furious manner, thought it was bewitched; and a tinker coming by just at the
time, she quickly gave him the pudding, who put it into his budget and walked
on.
 As soon as Tom
could get the batter out of his mouth, he began to cry aloud; which so
frightened the poor tinker, that he flung the pudding over the hedge, and ran
away from it as fast as he could run. The pudding being broken to pieces by the
fall, Tom was released, and walked home to his mother, who gave him a kiss and
put him to bed. Tom Thumb’s mother once took him with her when she went to milk
the cow; and it being a very windy day, she tied him with a needleful of thread
to a thistle, that he might not be blown away. The cow liking his oak leaf hat
took him and the thistle up at one mouthful. While the cow chewed the thistle, Tom,
terrified at her great teeth, which seemed ready to crush him to pieces,
roared, ‘Mother, Mother!’ as loud as he could bawl. ‘Where are you, Tommy, my
dear Tommy?’ said the mother. ‘Here, mother, here in the red cow’s mouth.’ The
mother began to cry and wring her hands; but the cow surprised at such odd
noises in her throat, opened her mouth and let him drop out. His mother clapped
him into her apron, and ran home with him. Tom’s father made him a whip of a
barley straw to drive the cattle with, and being one day in the field, he
slipped into a deep furrow. A raven flying over, picked him up with a grain of
corn, and flew with him to the top of a giant’s castle, by the seaside, where
he left him; and old Grumbo the giant, coming soon after to walk upon his
terrace, swallowed Tom like a pill, clothes and all. Tom presently made the
giant very uncomfortable, and he threw him up into the sea. A great fish then
swallowed him. This fish was soon after caught, and sent as a present to king
Arthur. When it was cut open, every body was delighted with little Tom Thumb.
The king made him his dwarf; he was the favourite of the whole court; and, by
his merry pranks, often amused the queen and the knights of the Round Table.
The king, when he rode on horseback, frequently took Tom in his hand; and, if a
shower of rain came on, he used to creep into the king’s waistcoat pocket, and
sleep till the rain was over. The king also, sometimes questioned Tom
concerning his parents; and when Tom informed his majesty they were very poor
people, the king led him into his treasury, and told him he should pay his
friends a visit, and take with him as much money as he could carry. Tom
procured a little purse, and putting a three penny piece into it, with much
labour and difficulty got it upon his back; and, after travelling two days and
nights, arrived at his father’s house.
 His mother met him
at the door, almost tired to death, having in forty-eight hours travelled
almost half a mile with a huge silver threepence upon his back. His parents
were glad to see him, especially when he had brought such an amazing sum of
money with him. They placed him in a walnut shell by the fire side, and feasted
him for three days upon a hazelnut, which made him sick, for a whole nut
usually served him a month. Tom got well, but could not travel because it had
rained; therefore his mother took him in her hand, and with one puff blew him
into king Arthur’s court; where Tom entertained the king, queen, and nobility
at tilts and tournaments, at which he exerted himself so much that he brought
on a fit of sickness, and his life was despaired of. At this juncture the queen
of the fairies came in a chariot drawn by flying mice, placed Tom by her side,
and drove through the air, without stopping till they arrived at her palace;
when, after restoring him to health, and permitting him to enjoy all the gay
diversions of Fairy Land, the queen commanded a fair wind, and, placing Tom
before it, blew him straight to the court of king Arthur. But just as Tom
should have alighted in the courtyard of the palace, the cook happened to pass
along with the king’s great bowl of firmity, (king Arthur loved firmity) and
poor Tom Thumb fell plump into the middle of it and splashed the hot firmity
into the cook’s eyes. Down went the bowl. ‘Oh dear; oh dear!’ cried Tom;
‘Murder! murder!’ bellowed the cook! and away ran the king’s nice firmity into
the kennel. The cook was a red-faced, cross fellow, and swore to the king, that
Tom had done it out of mere mischief; so he Was taken up, tried, and sentenced
to be beheaded. Tom hearing this dreadful sentence, and seeing a miller stand
by with his mouth Wide open, he took a good spring, and jumped down the
miller’s throat, unperceived by all, even by the miller himself.
 Tom being lost, the
court broke up, and away went the miller to his mill. But Tom did not leave him
long at rest, he began to roll and tumble about, so that the miller thought
himself bewitched, and sent for a doctor. When the doctor came, Tom began to
dance and sing; the doctor was as much frightened as the miller, and sent in
great haste for five more doctors, and twenty learned men. While all these were
debating upon the affair, the miller, (for they were very tedious) happened to
yawn, and Tom, taking the opportunity, made another jump, and alighted on his
feet in the middle of the table. The miller, provoked to be thus tormented by
such a little creature, fell into a great passion, caught hold of Tom, and
threw him out of the window, into the river. A large salmon swimming by,
snapped him up in a minute. The salmon was soon caught and sold in the market
to the steward of a lord. The lord, thinking it an uncommon fine fish, made a
present of it to the king, who ordered it to be dressed immediately. When the
cook cut open the salmon, he found poor Tom, and ran with him directly to the
king; but the king being busy with state affairs, desired that he might be
brought another day. The cook resolving to keep him safely this time, as he had
so lately given him the slip, clapped him into a mouse-trap, and left him to
amuse himself by peeping through the wires for a whole week; when the king sent
for him, he forgave him for throwing down the firmity, ordered him new clothes
and knighted him.
His shirt was made
of butterflies’ wings;
His boots were made
of chicken skins;
His coat and
breeches were made with pride;
A tailor’s needle
hung by his side;
A mouse for a horse
he used to ride.
Thus dressed and
mounted, he rode a hunting with the king and nobility, who all laughed heartily
at Tom and his fine prancing steed. As they rode by a farm house one day, a cat
jumped from behind the door, seized the mouse and little Tom, and began to
devour the mouse: however, Tom boldly drew his sword and attacked the cat, who
then let him fall. The king and his nobles seeing Tom falling, went to his
assistance, and one of the lords caught him in his hat; but poor Tom was sadly
scratched, and his clothes were torn by the claws of the cat. In this condition
he was carried home, when a bed of down was made for him in a little ivory
cabinet. The queen of the fairies came, and took him again to Fairy Land, where
she kept him for some years; and then, dressing him in bright green, sent him
flying once more through the air to the earth, in the days of king Thunstone.
The people flocked far and near to look at him; and the king, before whom he
was carried, asked him who he was, whence he came, and where he lived? Tom
answered: —
‘My name is Tom
Thumb,
From the Fairies I
come;
When king Arthur
shone,
This court was my
home.
In me he delighted,
By him I was
knighted,
Did you never hear
of Sir Thomas Thumb?’
The king was so
charmed with this address, that he ordered a little chair to be made, in order
that Tom might sit on his table, and also a palace of gold a span high, with a
door an inch wide, for little Tom to live in. He also gave him a coach drawn by
six small mice. This made the queen angry, because she had not a new coach too:
therefore, resolving to ruin Tom, she complained to the king that he had
behaved very insolently to her. The king sent for him in a rage. Tom, to escape
his fury, crept into an empty snail-shell, and there lay till he was almost
starved; when peeping out of the shell, he saw a fine butterfly settled on the
ground: he now ventured out, and getting astride, the butterfly took wing, and
mounted into the air with little Tom on his back. Away he flew from field to
field, from tree to tree, till at last he flew to the king’s court. The king,
queen, and nobles, all strove to catch the butterfly, but could not. At length
poor Tom, having neither bridle nor saddle, slipped from his seat, and fell
into a white pot, where he was found almost drowned. The queen vowed he should
be guillotined: but while the guillotine was getting ready, he was secured once
more in a mouse-trap; when the cat seeing something stir, and supposing it to
be a mouse, patted the trap about till she broke it, and set Tom at liberty.
Soon afterwards a spider, taking him for a fly, made at him. Tom drew his sword
and fought valiantly, but the spider’s poisonous breath overcame him: —
He fell dead on the
ground where late he had stood,
And the spider
sucked up the last drop of his blood.
King Thunstone and
his whole court went into mourning for little Tom Thumb. They buried him under
a rosebush, and raised a nice white marble monument over his grave, with the
following epitaph: —
Here lies Tom
Thumb, king Arthur’s knight,
Who died by
spider’s cruel bite.
He was well known
in Arthur’s court,
Where he afforded
gallant sport;
He rode at tilt and
tournament,
And on a mouse a
hunting went;
Alive he filled the
court with mirth,
His death to sorrow
soon gave birth.
Wipe, wipe your
eyes, and shake your head
And cry, ‘Alas! Tom
Thumb is dead.’
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