<h3><SPAN name="chap37"></SPAN>37 Thumbling</h3>
<p>There was once a poor peasant who sat in the evening by the hearth and poked
the fire, and his wife sat and span. Then said he, “How sad it is that we
have no children! With us all is so quiet, and in other houses it is noisy and
lively.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the wife, and sighed, “even if we had only
one, and it were quite small, and only as big as a thumb, I should be quite
satisfied, and we would still love it with all our hearts.” Now it so
happened that the woman fell ill, and after seven months gave birth to a child,
that was perfect in all its limbs, but no longer than a thumb. Then said they,
“It is as we wished it to be, and it shall be our dear child;” and
because of its size, they called it Thumbling. They did not let it want for
food, but the child did not grow taller, but remained as it had been at the
first, nevertheless it looked sensibly out of its eyes, and soon showed itself
to be a wise and nimble creature, for everything it did turned out well.</p>
<p>One day the peasant was getting ready to go into the forest to cut wood, when
he said as if to himself, “How I wish that there was any one who would
bring the cart to me!” “Oh father,” cried Thumbling, “I
will soon bring the cart, rely on that; it shall be in the forest at the
appointed time.” The man smiled and said, “How can that be done,
thou art far too small to lead the horse by the reins?”
“That’s of no consequence, father, if my mother will only harness
it, I shall sit in the horse’s ear and call out to him how he is to
go.” “Well,” answered the man, “for once we will try
it.”</p>
<p>When the time came, the mother harnessed the horse, and placed Thumbling in its
ear, and then the little creature cried, “Gee up, gee up!”</p>
<p>Then it went quite properly as if with its master, and the cart went the right
way into the forest. It so happened that just as he was turning a corner, and
the little one was crying, “Gee up,” two strange men came towards
him. “My word!” said one of them, “What is this? There is a
cart coming, and a driver is calling to the horse and still he is not to be
seen!” “That can’t be right,” said the other, “we
will follow the cart and see where it stops.” The cart, however, drove
right into the forest, and exactly to the place where the wood had been cut.
When Thumbling saw his father, he cried to him, “Seest thou, father, here
I am with the cart; now take me down.” The father got hold of the horse
with his left hand and with the right took his little son out of the ear.
Thumbling sat down quite merrily on a straw, but when the two strange men saw
him, they did not know what to say for astonishment. Then one of them took the
other aside and said, “Hark, the little fellow would make our fortune if
we exhibited him in a large town, for money. We will buy him.” They went
to the peasant and said, “Sell us the little man. He shall be well
treated with us.” “No,” replied the father, “he is the
apple of my eye, and all the money in the world cannot buy him from me.”
Thumbling, however, when he heard of the bargain, had crept up the folds of his
father’s coat, placed himself on his shoulder, and whispered in his ear,
“Father do give me away, I will soon come back again.” Then the
father parted with him to the two men for a handsome bit of money. “Where
wilt thou sit?” they said to him. “Oh just set me on the rim of
your hat, and then I can walk backwards and forwards and look at the country,
and still not fall down.” They did as he wished, and when Thumbling had
taken leave of his father, they went away with him. They walked until it was
dusk, and then the little fellow said, “Do take me down, I want to come
down.” The man took his hat off, and put the little fellow on the ground
by the wayside, and he leapt and crept about a little between the sods, and
then he suddenly slipped into a mouse-hole which he had sought out. “Good
evening, gentlemen, just go home without me,” he cried to them, and
mocked them. They ran thither and stuck their sticks into the mouse-hole, but
it was all lost labour. Thumbling crept still farther in, and as it soon became
quite dark, they were forced to go home with their vexation and their empty
purses.</p>
<p>When Thumbling saw that they were gone, he crept back out of the subterranean
passage. “It is so dangerous to walk on the ground in the dark,”
said he; “how easily a neck or a leg is broken!” Fortunately he
knocked against an empty snail-shell. “Thank God!” said he.
“In that I can pass the night in safety,” and got into it. Not long
afterwards, when he was just going to sleep, he heard two men go by, and one of
them was saying, “How shall we contrive to get hold of the rich
pastor’s silver and gold?” “I could tell thee that,”
cried Thumbling, interrupting them. “What was that?” said one of
the thieves in fright, “I heard some one speaking.” They stood
still listening, and Thumbling spoke again, and said, “Take me with you,
and I’ll help you.”</p>
<p>“But where art thou?” “Just look on the ground, and observe
from whence my voice comes,” he replied. There the thieves at length
found him, and lifted him up. “Thou little imp, how wilt thou help
us?” they said. “A great deal,” said he, “I will creep
into the pastor’s room through the iron bars, and will reach out to you
whatever you want to have.” “Come then,” they said,
“and we will see what thou canst do.” When they got to the
pastor’s house, Thumbling crept into the room, but instantly cried out
with all his might, “Do you want to have everything that is here?”
The thieves were alarmed, and said, “But do speak softly, so as not to
waken any one!” Thumbling however, behaved as if he had not understood
this, and cried again, “What do you want? Do you want to have everything
that is here?” The cook, who slept in the next room, heard this and sat
up in bed, and listened. The thieves, however, had in their fright run some
distance away, but at last they took courage, and thought, “The little
rascal wants to mock us.” They came back and whispered to him,
“Come, be serious, and reach something out to us.” Then Thumbling
again cried as loudly as he could, “I really will give you everything,
just put your hands in.” The maid who was listening, heard this quite
distinctly, and jumped out of bed and rushed to the door. The thieves took
flight, and ran as if the Wild Huntsman were behind them, but as the maid could
not see anything, she went to strike a light. When she came to the place with
it, Thumbling, unperceived, betook himself to the granary, and the maid, after
she had examined every corner and found nothing, lay down in her bed again, and
believed that, after all, she had only been dreaming with open eyes and ears.</p>
<p>Thumbling had climbed up among the hay and found a beautiful place to sleep in;
there he intended to rest until day, and then go home again to his parents. But
he had other things to go through. Truly, there is much affliction and misery
in this world! When day dawned, the maid arose from her bed to feed the cows.
Her first walk was into the barn, where she laid hold of an armful of hay, and
precisely that very one in which poor Thumbling was lying asleep. He, however,
was sleeping so soundly that he was aware of nothing, and did not awake until
he was in the mouth of the cow, who had picked him up with the hay. “Ah,
heavens!” cried he, “how have I got into the fulling mill?”
but he soon discovered where he was. Then it was necessary to be careful not to
let himself go between the teeth and be dismembered, but he was nevertheless
forced to slip down into the stomach with the hay. “In this little room
the windows are forgotten,” said he, “and no sun shines in, neither
will a candle be brought.” His quarters were especially unpleasing to
him, and the worst was, more and more hay was always coming in by the door, and
the space grew less and less. Then at length in his anguish, he cried as loud
as he could, “Bring me no more fodder, bring me no more fodder.”
The maid was just milking the cow, and when she heard some one speaking, and
saw no one, and perceived that it was the same voice that she had heard in the
night, she was so terrified that she slipped off her stool, and spilt the milk.
She ran in great haste to her master, and said, “Oh heavens, pastor, the
cow has been speaking!” “Thou art mad,” replied the pastor;
but he went himself to the byre to see what was there. Hardly, however had he
set his foot inside when Thumbling again cried, “Bring me no more fodder,
bring me no more fodder.” Then the pastor himself was alarmed, and
thought that an evil spirit had gone into the cow, and ordered her to be
killed. She was killed, but the stomach, in which Thumbling was, was thrown on
the midden. Thumbling had great difficulty in working his way; however, he
succeeded so far as to get some room, but just as he was going to thrust his
head out, a new misfortune occurred. A hungry wolf ran thither, and swallowed
the whole stomach at one gulp. Thumbling did not lose courage.
“Perhaps,” thought he, “the wolf will listen to what I have
got to say,” and he called to him from out of his stomach, “Dear
wolf, I know of a magnificent feast for you.”</p>
<p>“Where is it to be had?” said the wolf.</p>
<p>“In such and such a house; thou must creep into it through the
kitchen-sink, and wilt find cakes, and bacon, and sausages, and as much of them
as thou canst eat,” and he described to him exactly his father’s
house. The wolf did not require to be told this twice, squeezed himself in at
night through the sink, and ate to his heart’s content in the larder.
When he had eaten his fill, he wanted to go out again, but he had become so big
that he could not go out by the same way. Thumbling had reckoned on this, and
now began to make a violent noise in the wolf’s body, and raged and
screamed as loudly as he could. “Wilt thou be quiet,” said the
wolf, “thou wilt waken up the people!” “Eh, what,”
replied the little fellow, “thou hast eaten thy fill, and I will make
merry likewise,” and began once more to scream with all his strength. At
last his father and mother were aroused by it, and ran to the room and looked
in through the opening in the door. When they saw that a wolf was inside, they
ran away, and the husband fetched his axe, and the wife the scythe. “Stay
behind,” said the man, when they entered the room. “When I have
given him a blow, if he is not killed by it, thou must cut him down and hew his
body to pieces.” Then Thumbling heard his parents, voices and cried,
“Dear father, I am here; I am in the wolf’s body.” Said the
father, full of joy, “Thank God, our dear child has found us
again,” and bade the woman take away her scythe, that Thumbling might not
be hurt with it. After that he raised his arm, and struck the wolf such a blow
on his head that he fell down dead, and then they got knives and scissors and
cut his body open and drew the little fellow forth. “Ah,” said the
father, “what sorrow we have gone through for thy sake.” “Yes
father, I have gone about the world a great deal. Thank heaven, I breathe fresh
air again!” “Where hast thou been, then?” “Ah, father,
I have been in a mouse’s hole, in a cow’s stomach, and then in a
wolf’s; now I will stay with you.” “And we will not sell thee
again, no, not for all the riches in the world,” said his parents, and
they embraced and kissed their dear Thumbling. They gave him to eat and to
drink, and had some new clothes made for him, for his own had been spoiled on
his journey.</p>
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