Once upon a time something happened.
If it had not happened it would not be told.
There was once a man who had a child.
This child was the youngest of seven which the Lord
had given him, so it was destined from its birth to
be lucky. It was christened John, because all
dunces and upstarts are named John. The father
loved little Jack like the very apple of his eye.
It could not have been otherwise, since the boy was
the youngest of seven children and the smallest, chubbiest,
and fattest of them all. But the father doesn’t
count for every thing. He comes and goes, appears
and vanishes, the house is only a sleeping-place for
him. The mother is the real soul of the household;
she bathes one, feeds another, and scrubs for a third.
Jack was his mother’s boy, his mother’s
pet, his mother’s darling, his mother’s
handsomest and brightest child.
They say it is not well for one person
to be every thing, the lowest to be highest, and the
child to govern the house. Jack grew larger every
day, and the larger he grew the more quarrelsome, obstinate,
and consequently self-willed he became. So there
was often, nay, to tell the whole truth, very
often, anger in the house on the boy’s account.
Jack daily heard some harsh word; but as it proved
that words made no impression, punishment frequently
followed. Ah! but Jack was the youngest of seven.
The one who punished suffered, not the one who was
chastised. If the father whipped Jack, the mother
wiped away his tears; if the mother slapped him, she
took care not to let her husband know it. It
is a bad example, when a child breaks a pot, for the
mother to set to work to pick up the pieces; things
are then in a bad way, and it is well not to waste
another word about them.
So it ended. Jack became a very
disobedient child, and disobedience avenges itself
on the disobedient. If his father wanted to teach
him anything, and said: “My dear Jack,
look, do it so, this is right; this is the way oxen
are harnessed in front of carts, this is the way the
nail is driven into the wheel, this is the way sacks
are carried,” and other useful lessons, Jack’s
mind was fixed on other things, and he replied, “Oh!
let me alone.” And so from one “Oh!
let me alone,” to another “Oh! let me
alone,” Jack grew into a big boy without having
even learned so much as that a plow has handles, a
mill is not a mortar, and a cow is not an ox.
And he couldn’t do much in this way.
One day his father was preparing to
go to the fair. Every thing was ready except
one pin, which had not yet been put through the yoke.
“Father,” said Jack, “I’m
coming with you.”
“It will be better for you to
stay at home, that you may not be lost in the market,”
replied his father.
“I want to go ”
“I won’t take you.”
“I will go.”
“I won’t take you.”
Every body knows what forward children
are. The instant they are told that a thing can’t
be had, they want to seize it by force. His father
could not help himself, so he set Jack in the wagon
and drove off with him to the fair.
“Mind,” he said, “you
must keep close to me.” “Yes, father,”
said Jack, obediently, for the first time in the memory
of the family. And until they reached the end
of the village, Jack sat as if he were nailed to the
back of the cart. At the end of the village he
put out one foot, then he raised his head and began
to look around him. Finally he stood up, leaned
on the side of the cart, and began to watch the wheels.
He could not understand how one wheel moved of its
own accord, how one spoke hurried after another, constantly
going forward without stirring from the spot, nay,
without moving from under his own nose.
They reached the woods. Jack
perked up his nose and stared with his mouth wide
open. The trees on the right and left set out
and ran with all their might, one after another.
There must be witchcraft in it. Jack jumped out
of the cart and again felt the solid ground under his
feet. But he once more stood with his mouth wide
open. The trees now stood still, but the cart
moved on further and further. “Stop, father,
stop, so I can see how the wheels turn,” the
boy called after a while.
But now his hair fairly bristled with
fear. He heard his shout repeated from ten different
directions, while his father drove on without noticing
his cry. “Father!” he called again,
and again he heard the word ten times. Jack was
terribly frightened, and seeing that no place was
as pleasant as home, began to run back there.
Nothing but a cloud of dust could be seen behind him.
He ran on and on toward home till he turned into the
wrong road.
Now you can see how unfortunate it
is for inexperienced people not to listen to the advice
of wiser ones! Jack had done wrong in trying to
run home when he did not know the way through the forest.
He ran for a long time, then gradually slackened his
pace and at last began to walk, but kept on through
forest after forest, across a meadow, and through
the woods again, then across another meadow, till he
was completely tired out, and weary of his life.
“Lord, have mercy on me, I will
always be obedient in future,” he cried, at
last and his heart must have been very heavy
when he uttered such words.
After that he did not walk much further.
A short distance off, on the edge of the woods, stood
a village. Jack jumped for joy when he saw it,
and did not stop till he was in the middle of it.
Then he went from house to house, and the further
he went the more he wondered that he found all kinds
of houses except his own home. He did not know
what to do, and began to cry.
“What are you crying about,
my son?” asked a man who was coming back from
the fields in front of a cart drawn by four oxen.
Jack told his story, and the man pitied
him. “What is your name?” asked the
kind-hearted peasant. “Jack,” replied
the boy.
“But your father, what is his name?”
“His name is father,” the lad answered.
“What is the village where you belong called?”
“Village!” he said.
So Jack could answer no questions,
and the man could do nothing to help him. He
therefore took him into his service as plow-boy, for
he needed just such a lad to guide the oxen while
he held the handles of the plow. Thus Jack became
the servant of a worthy man in the village on the
edge of the forest. But he was of little use,
because he had not paid attention when good instruction
was given him. And whoever does not know how
to do any thing well, must expect a great deal of
scolding.
One day Jack’s master was preparing
to go to market. “Listen, Jack,”
he said, “grease the cart thoroughly, for we’re
going to market to-morrow.”
Jack said “Yes,” took
the grease, and began to scratch his head. He
did not know how to grease a cart. He had never
listened when he had been told, nor looked when he
might have seen it; so now he did not know what to
do. Finally, from what he had hitherto learned,
he recollected that the beginning of a cart is at
the yoke, that is, the pole. So he thought he
must commence there if he wanted to do the business
thoroughly. He greased the thills, the pole, even
the rack of the cart. Here he stopped, for there
was no grease left. So he went to ask for some.
“Master,” he said, after
entering the room, “give me some more grease.”
“Why in the world do you want
more grease?” replied his master angrily, “I
gave you enough to grease the cart three times over.”
Jack said that there had only been
enough for the thills, pole, and rack. When his
master heard such words, he took Jack by the ear, led
him out, and gave him such a beating that never again
in his whole life did he forget that only the axles
of a cart are to be greased. Well, what was the
mother’s darling to do he was obliged
to bear it, and then pay attention, that he might
learn how to grease a cart.
After the cart was ready, the oxen
were put in and the master took his seat in front,
but Jack crouched in the back of the cart like a little
heap of misery, sobbing now and then from having wept
so much. “Silence,” said his master
sternly, “don’t let me hear another word
from you!” This was the last thing before they
drove off.
Jack sat as still as a mouse; he was
almost afraid to breathe. At last, this grew
tiresome. So he began to watch the wheels again.
But he was wiser now, and did not wonder at the wheels
or the trees. Yet he saw something he could not
understand. Often as he had seen a wheel go round,
he had never noticed the pin spring from it. The
cart passed over a big stone, and, “klirr,”
the pin bounced out of the axle and fell on the ground.
It was pretty to look at, but the lad didn’t
understand it. He would have liked to ask his
master, but the farmer had ordered him to be silent.
After some time the nut loosened. Jack thought
he understood why. Directly after bump
dropped the nut, too, and was left behind the cart.
Jack started and was going to say something, but looked
at his master and remembered that he had been ordered
to keep still. But one thing he did understand if
the nut had dropped on account of the nail, the wheel
would come off for want of the nut. He had scarcely
comprehended this, when crack! the wheel fell into
the dust and was left behind the cart.
The cart moved on awhile upon three
wheels, then it upset, breaking the pole in two.
Now they were in a bad fix.
“There it is,” cried Jack
in terror, “didn’t I say that would happen?”
We will waste no more words on this
subject! The farmer was in such a rage!
To be in the middle of the road with a broken pole
is no joke. The farmer seized Jack, gave him
another sound thrashing, and then told him to be off
that he might cause him no more trouble. He was
really in the wrong, for he had himself forbidden Jack
to speak. But Jack was to blame, too if
he had always obeyed, he would have learned long before
just how far such an order went. He had been too
obedient, obstinately obedient. And that isn’t
well either.
The farmer continued his journey as
best he could, but Jack was left on foot in the middle
of the road. Alas! Woe betide him, I really
don’t know what he is to do. He turned into
a path he did not know, and hoped to reach home.
Again he walked over meadows and through forests,
walked for a long, long time, till his feet would scarcely
carry him. This time he found a village in a beautiful
meadow, and outside the village was a man watching
a flock of sheep grazing.
“How do you do, good sir!”
“Thank you kindly, may you grow tall, my son.”
One word led to another, and Jack
briefly told the man his whole story, from beginning
to end, and the peasant was pleased, because, just
at that time, he needed a shepherd-boy to drive the
little flock to pasture, lead them to water, and watch
them that they might not mingle with others.
They were a particular breed of sheep, and he would
not have had them injured on any account. Such
sheep, it was reported, were owned only by one emperor,
from whom the peasant had obtained the single lamb.
So they were sheep, well we can imagine
how beautiful they were, since they had descended
from a lamb that belonged to an emperor!
Jack was glad, too, because he found
himself in luck again. So they made a bargain,
and Jack became a shepherd boy.
“You must watch the sheep the
whole livelong day, drive them down into the valley
to drink, and when it grows dark bring them back to
the fold. If it seems cold, make a fire at the
entrance of the pen, and that the sheep may not freeze,
drive them into the fold.” These were the
peasant’s orders, and Jack said he would do exactly
as he was told.
During the day Jack watched the sheep;
when he was thirsty he led them down to drink, and
as it grew dark drove them to the fold. This fold
was a strange contrivance. Jack had never seen
one before. It was inclosed by a fence of woven
willow branches, roofed with rushes that the rain
might not injure it, but in one place an opening had
been left, over which was a roof made of reeds, supported
by posts. “That’s the entrance to
the fold,” said Jack to himself, delighted with
his penetration.
As he was cold he made a fire in the
opening, just under the reed-roof. A fire is
a fine thing, and Jack warmed himself by it. Then
he remembered that his master had told him he must
drive the sheep into the fold, to keep them from freezing.
True, he did not understand why they should be any
warmer inside the fold than outside, but he did as
he was ordered. Seizing the finest ram, the one
which wore the big bell round its neck, he pushed
it through the opening into the fold. But lo
and behold! The fire was burning in the gap, and
the ram was so scorched that not a thread of wool
was left on its body.
“Oho, now I understand it,”
cried Jack, still more pleased. “The sheep
must go through the fire to keep them from freezing.”
And, as he felt that he was doing
right, he thrust all the sheep into the fold one after
the other.
Suddenly he noticed that the fence,
the thatching, and the roof above the opening had
all taken fire and were blazing merrily. Jack
stood perfectly still. He had never seen any
thing of the sort and rejoiced over carrying out his
orders so well, for he perceived that the sheep could
not possibly be cold in the midst of the fire.
So he contentedly watched the work he had accomplished.
One thing he did wish that his master was
there, so that he might have said, “See how well
I understand tending sheep.”
And the wish was fulfilled. His
master was just sitting at the table eating bread
and onions, because it was a fast day. He looked
out of the window and saw a great fire on the mountains,
and gazing more attentively at it, noticed that it
was in the direction of his fold. This seemed
queer. With his mouth full he left the house,
walked faster and faster, broke into a run, and went
higher and higher up the hill-side till at last, panting
for breath, he reached his fold.
Alas! Alas! What a sight!
The fold burned down, the sheep of the imperial breed
one and all roasted, so that one might have supposed
they were nothing but overripe melons. That was
a bad job, really a very bad job! Jack had done
a great deal of mischief, and might be thankful to
escape with a flogging. And so it happened.
The farmer, enraged, nay, fairly furious, seized the
cunning shepherd and beat him, beat him so that he
would have nearly killed him had not Jack luckily
escaped from his hands. But after he got away
Jack took to his heels and ran with all his might,
so that he did not look round until he was in the
woods.
What was to be done then? That’s
the way a person fares when he has no sense!
If he had behaved himself, he would have been sitting
quietly in the house eating barley-sugar and milk.
Jack walked on and on through the
forest, turning to the right and left, forward and
backward, hither and thither, on and on he went, poor
boy, trying to find some path that led home. He
was so hungry and thirsty that he sucked the dew from
the leaves and ate the oak-apples and acorns he found
on the ground; then he grew tired and cross and frightened.
Woe betide any one who loses the way in a forest!
Night came on, and darkness surprised
him in the terrible woods. His hair stood on
end and he was so terrified that a chill ran through
every vein when he heard the wolves, bears, and all
sorts of wild beasts howling and panting in the forest.
There was no escape now. Then he saw a large
tree with a hole in its trunk big enough to shelter
him. Nearing it he noticed that this hole had
been hollowed out. That was all right. He
would hide in it to keep from being devoured by the
wild beasts, and was so delighted to find himself safe
that he no longer felt sorrowful or hungry. When
we have escaped a great danger, we no longer think
of small annoyances. Jack fell asleep from fatigue,
and was just dreaming that he was at home eating millet
and milk, when suddenly, piff, paff, puff, he heard
a shot and started up in terror.
What had happened? Only a few
paces from him twelve big, horrible robbers, foot-pads,
had assembled with their captain, made a fire, roasted
an ox, and were just tapping a cask of good wine; they
were going to have a carouse. When Jack saw the
ox on the spit he began to feel almost famished.
Dear me! he was so hungry that he would gladly have
turned into a wood-worm and gnawed the tree. The
poor lad, in his inexperience, did not know what terrible
people robbers are, so he came out of the hole and
approached them. This was not wise. Robbers
are not to be trifled with.
Jack said he would like something
to eat too. The robbers all stared at him, then
drew their knives and swords and began to whet them
to cut him in pieces and kill him before you could
say Jack Robinson. That’s the way with
robbers. They don’t stand on much ceremony.
“Stop,” said one of them.
“Might not this boy be useful to us?”
“How?” asked another.
“Perhaps he’s the seventh
child, then he can find the iron-wort for us,”
said the first speaker.
“That’s true!” they all shouted.
So they questioned Jack, and were
wild with delight when they learned that he actually
was the seventh of seven children. The point in
question was this the robbers had learned
that the emperor had received an immense sum of money,
all in gold, from a merchant who had long been his
debtor; the wicked men wanted to steal this treasure.
But the emperor had put it in a room closed with seven
iron-barred doors, and on each door were seven locks
wrought with great skill, so that no one could open
them. So this was a real imperial business, which
required careful consideration. Therefore, the
robbers had gone to a witch, that she might give them
instruction and a powerful charm by means of which
they could force their way through the royal locks
and iron-barred doors. The witch had told them
that nothing except iron-wort would open the locks,
and that the plant could be found only by the seventh
of seven children while he was still an innocent child,
in the gray dawn of morning, when it gleamed in the
meadows among the other herbs. Moreover, whoever
had the plant must then make a gash in his finger,
lay it in the cut, and leave it there till the wound
had healed, so that it might remain in the finger.
After that any piece of iron, lock, bolt, or chain,
no matter how strong it might be, would open at his
bidding. Such a plant would be to the robbers
not merely a source of amusement, but a valuable possession.
So they entertained Jack and made him a soft bed where
he could sleep soundly; but they told him that they
would kill him if he didn’t find the plant.
All night long poor Jack dreamed of searching for
the stalk of the herb. At the first gray dawn
the robbers waked the boy and sent him to look for
it.
Jack crept along on all fours, and
while in this position, looking over the stalks of
the plants in the meadow, he instantly saw one that
glistened. That was the one he wanted! That
was iron-wort!
Among the robbers was a one-eyed man,
who had been locked up in the imperial dungeons and
escaped loaded with fetters. The chains had afterward
been filed off, but the handcuffs were made of a special
kind of iron which fire did not melt and the file did
not scratch. Jack touched the handcuff with the
plant, and “klirr!” it fell rattling to
the ground.
“Aha, may you be lucky, my son,
you have freed me from an annoyance,” said the
delighted robber.
But when the captain took the plant
from Jack’s hand to remove the second handcuff,
he labored in vain, the iron would not obey him.
The witch had not told them that the herb would obey
no one except the person appointed by fate to find
it.
So the robbers saw that the iron-wort
would do them no good, and perceiving this they became
very angry and sharpened their knives and swords to
kill Jack.
“Stop,” cried the one-eyed
brigand. “You have said that you would not
murder him if he could find the plant for us.
He has found it. As men of our word, we must
not kill him.”
And they did not, for robbers are
men of their word; whether it is good or evil, what
they have promised they perform. Yet, fearing
Jack might give them up to justice, they found another
way to get rid of him.
What did they do? They seized
Jack and put him in an open cask, then closed it,
drove iron bands around it, and went away. It
was an evil deed.
So Jack went from good to bad, and
from bad to worse, till at last we see him fastened
up in a wine-cask. What was to become of him!
just think, inside of a cask that’s
the end of every thing! Jack began to cry, howl,
and shriek till the hungry wolves heard him and came
running up, thinking they could devour him. But
they could do nothing but lick their chops. Jack
was shut up in the cask. As soon as he discovered
that the wolves were near, he looked through the bung-hole
and kept perfectly still.
The wolves then fell upon the remains
of the ox and fought greedily over the bones.
One, the largest and fiercest, seized a bone and crouched
down with it close by Jack’s cask Jack
hardly dared to breathe.
Suddenly he saw the wolf’s hairy
tail come through the bung-hole. Jack was terribly
frightened. The tail came further and further
in, and Jack grew more and more alarmed. At last
the wolf shook itself and leaned further back, so
that the whole tail entered and touched Jack’s
nose. This was a bad business! Jack trembled
with fear, and in his terror clutched the wolf’s
tail with both hands and held on with all his might.
The wolf was frightened, too, and took to flight, dragging
the cask after it. You ought to have seen the
wonder; helter-skelter went the brute, banging the
cask against the trees, up hill and down dale.
The wolf running, the cask following, Jack holding
tight to the tail that was worth seeing!
Suddenly, helter-skelter the cask struck against a
wall and burst open. The wolf ran on, but Jack
found himself at home again, holding fast in both
hands the wolf’s tail, which had been torn off.
So fared mother’s darling Jack.
Whoever knows any thing more may continue his story.