One summer's morning a little tailor
was sitting on his table by the window; he was in good spirits, and
sewed with all his might. Then came a peasant woman down the street
crying: 'Good jams, cheap! Good jams, cheap!' This rang pleasantly in
the tailor's ears; he stretched his delicate head out of the window, and
called: 'Come up here, dear woman; here you will get rid of your goods.'
The woman came up the three steps to the tailor with her heavy basket,
and he made her unpack all the pots for him. He inspected each one,
lifted it up, put his nose to it, and at length said: 'The jam seems to
me to be good, so weigh me out four ounces, dear woman, and if it is a
quarter of a pound that is of no consequence.' The woman who had hoped
to find a good sale, gave him what he desired, but went away quite angry
and grumbling. 'Now, this jam shall be blessed by God,' cried the little
tailor, 'and give me health and strength'; so he brought the bread out
of the cupboard, cut himself a piece right across the loaf and spread
the jam over it. 'This won't taste bitter,' said he, 'but I will just
finish the jacket before I take a bite.' He laid the bread near him,
sewed on, and in his joy, made bigger and bigger stitches. In the
meantime the smell of the sweet jam rose to where the flies were sitting
in great numbers, and they were attracted and descended on it in hosts.
'Hi! who invited you?' said the little tailor, and drove the unbidden
guests away. The flies, however, who understood no German, would not be
turned away, but came back again in ever-increasing companies. The
little tailor at last lost all patience, and drew a piece of cloth from
the hole under his work-table, and saying: 'Wait, and I will give it to
you,' struck it mercilessly on them. When he drew it away and counted,
there lay before him no fewer than seven, dead and with legs stretched
out. 'Are you a fellow of that sort? ' said he, and could not help
admiring his own bravery. 'The whole town shall know of this!' And the
little tailor hastened to cut himself a girdle, stitched it, and
embroidered on it in large letters: 'Seven at one stroke!' 'What, the
town!' he continued, 'the whole world shall hear of it!' and his heart
wagged with joy like a lamb's tail. The tailor put on the girdle, and
resolved to go forth into the world, because he thought his workshop was
too small for his valour. Before he went away, he sought about in the
house to see if there was anything which he could take with him;
however, he found nothing but an old cheese, and that he put in his
pocket. In front of the door he observed a bird which had caught itself
in the thicket. It had to go into his pocket with the cheese. Now he
took to the road boldly, and as he was light and nimble, he felt no
fatigue. The road led him up a mountain, and when he had reached the
highest point of it, there sat a powerful giant looking peacefully about
him. The little tailor went bravely up, spoke to him, and said: 'Good
day, comrade, so you are sitting there overlooking the wide-spread
world! I am just on my way thither, and want to try my luck. Have you
any inclination to go with me?' The giant looked contemptuously at the
tailor, and said: 'You ragamuffin! You miserable creature!'
'Oh, indeed?' answered the little tailor, and unbuttoned his coat, and
showed the giant the girdle, 'there may you read what kind of a man I
am!' The giant read: 'Seven at one stroke,' and thought that they had
been men whom the tailor had killed, and began to feel a little respect
for the tiny fellow. Nevertheless, he wished to try him first, and took
a stone in his hand and squeezed it together so that water dropped out
of it. 'Do that likewise,' said the giant, 'if you have strength.' 'Is
that all?' said the tailor, 'that is child's play with us!' and put his
hand into his pocket, brought out the soft cheese, and pressed it until
the liquid ran out of it. 'Faith,' said he, 'that was a little better,
wasn't it?' The giant did not know what to say, and could not believe it
of the little man. Then the giant picked up a stone and threw it so high
that the eye could scarcely follow it. 'Now, little mite of a man, do
that likewise,' 'Well thrown,' said the tailor, 'but after all the stone
came down to earth again; I will throw you one which shall never come
back at all,' and he put his hand into his pocket, took out the bird,
and threw it into the air. The bird, delighted with its liberty, rose,
flew away and did not come back. 'How does that shot please you,
comrade?' asked the tailor. 'You can certainly throw,' said the giant,
'but now we will see if you are able to carry anything properly.' He
took the little tailor to a mighty oak tree which lay there felled on
the ground, and said: 'If you are strong enough, help me to carry the
tree out of the forest.' 'Readily,' answered the little man; 'take you
the trunk on your shoulders, and I will raise up the branches and twigs;
after all, they are the heaviest.' The giant took the trunk on his
shoulder, but the tailor seated himself on a branch, and the giant, who
could not look round, had to carry away the whole tree, and the little
tailor into the bargain: he behind, was quite merry and happy, and
whistled the song: 'Three tailors rode forth from the gate,' as if
carrying the tree were child's play. The giant, after he had dragged the
heavy burden part of the way, could go no further, and cried: 'Hark you,
I shall have to let the tree fall!' The tailor sprang nimbly down,
seized the tree with both arms as if he had been carrying it, and said
to the giant: 'You are such a great fellow, and yet cannot even carry
the tree!'
They went on together, and as they passed a cherry-tree, the giant laid
hold of the top of the tree where the ripest fruit was hanging, bent it
down, gave it into the tailor's hand, and bade him eat. But the little
tailor was much too weak to hold the tree, and when the giant let it go,
it sprang back again, and the tailor was tossed into the air with it.
When he had fallen down again without injury, the giant said: 'What is
this? Have you not strength enough to hold the weak twig?' 'There is no
lack of strength,' answered the little tailor. 'Do you think that could
be anything to a man who has struck down seven at one blow? I leapt over
the tree because the huntsmen are shooting down there in the thicket.
Jump as I did, if you can do it.' The giant made the attempt but he
could not get over the tree, and remained hanging in the branches, so
that in this also the tailor kept the upper hand.