Grimms Fairy Tales
Сказки братьев Гримм
The Elves and the Shoemaker
Based on the story by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm
Retold by Lorna Read
Late one night a shoemaker sat cutting his leather
with a snip, snip, snap, watched by his wife and watched by his cat.
"I'll sew them tomorrow," the shoemaker said.
He went to bed hungry. There was no bread. The cupboard was bare. Nothing there…
In the morning when he opened his eyes, there on the bench was a big surprise.
Someone had stitched the shoes. But who?
The shoemaker blinked and scratched his head. "What teeny, tiny stitches!" he said.
"Who could do a thing like that?"
"Not me," miaowed the cat. He sold the shoes for a
very good price, and bought mire leather, and meat and rice. They had
good supper that night. Then he cut the leather with a snip, snip, snap.
"I'm ever so tired," he said to the cat. "I can't
stop yawning. I'll stitch these in the morning." In the morning when he
opened his eyes, there on the bench was a bigger surprise. Four pairs of
shoes had been stitched in the night!
The shoemaker blinked and scratched his head. "What teeny, tiny stitches!" he said.
"Who could do a thing like that?"
"Not me," miaowed the cat. Customers came to the shop in queues when they heard about the beautiful shoes. They tried them on…
Soon they were all gone! And now with all the money
he'd made, the shoemaker went to the market and paid for leather in
blue and green and red. He cut the leather with a snip, snip, snap,
watched by his wife and watched by his cat. His wife said, "Now we'll
see what happens to that!" Next morning when they got of bed, they found
shoes in blue and green and red. "Such teeny, tiny stitches!" the
shoemaker said. From far away, when they heard the news, people came to
the shop in queues.
"What beautiful shoes!" they cried.
"It's hard to choose!"
The shoemaker sat and counted his money. He
thought, "Isn't funny! I'm suddenly rich, and I haven't even sewn a
stitch!" The shoemaker's wife said, "We have to find whoever it is who's
being so kind. Let's watch in your workshop tonight."
So they left a candle burning bright and there they
hid in the dead of night. Midnight chimed the door went creak…and three
little elves came skippy- skip in, with silver tools in a teeny, tiny
tin, but their clothes were threadbare and thin.
Their silver hammers went tip, tip, tap, and they
cut and sewed with a snip, snip, snap, and the shoes were made in a
flash. When the elves had left, shoemaker's wife said, "I've never seen,
in all my life, three little elves, so threadbare- I'll sew them all
new clothes to wear!" She sewed a tiny dress and tiny jackets and tiny
tartan trousers with pockets- and the shoemaker made tiny, beautiful
boots. The very next night, they left the clothes there on the bench in
three neat rows. Then they hid themselves to watch for the elves. When
the elves found the suits and the tiny boots, they put them on and
danced through the door singing, "Shoes we'll make here no more!"
They've never seen another elf. The shoemaker
stitches his shoes himself. But every day he's grateful for the dinner
on his table. And every night to the window he creeps (for he made a
promise that still he keeps.)
"Thank you, elves," he whispers… and then he sleeps.