Jack and the Beanstalk



The story of "Jack and the Beanstalk" seems to be an amalgamation of many of the giant killing stories such as "Jack the Giant Killer" (which has its links in Arthurian lore), and the Tale of The Brave Little Tailor.

Jack and his widowed mother are a poor family with nothing to their name but the family cow. When the last of their money finally runs out Jack's mother sends him into town to sell their cow at the local village. On the way, however, Jack meets a mysterious stranger who offers him five magic beans in exchange for the cow. Jack accepts the offer and brings the beans home to his mother. Needless to say she is furious and throws the beans out the window. Overnight the beans grow into a massive beanstalk that stretches onwards up into the clouds. Jack decides to climb the beanstalk and when he reaches the top finds a massive castle. He sneaks into the castle to find that it is the home to a Giant, who says:

"Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman. Be he 'live, or be he dead, I'll grind his bones to make my bread."

Jack is about to run but he sees a bag of the giant's gold, which he quickly nicks before fleeing back down the beanstalk.

The next day Jack, remembering all the other treasures up the top of the beanstalk, decides to give it another crack. He climbs back up and into the giant's castle. Once again the Giant's nose gives him the tip-off that there is a human around, but the Giant's wife hides Jack in the oven until her husband falls asleep. Jack sneaks out, but on his way grabs the goose that lays the golden eggs and takes it with him.

On the third day Jack decides to head up the beanstalk again. His mother pleads with him not to go, but Jack chooses to give it one more time. When he reaches the castle the Giant pulls out a little golden harp that plays music by itself. The soft music lulls the Giant to sleep, then Jack sneaks out and snatches the Harp. But the Harp doesn't like the idea of being stolen and cries out to the Giant, waking him up. The Giant chases Jack down the beanstalk, but Jack reaches the bottom first, grabs an ax and chops down the beanstalk, killing the giant.

Full text here -- not the oldest variant, but the oldest one of the commonly known tale, as collected by Joseph Jacobs.

Many critics of this story like to point out Jack is a petty thief, who also kills the Giant he robbed. Some versions justify his actions by various means, such as adding a bit about how the giant killed Jack's father and/or that the Giant stole most of his treasure in the first place. The latter, such as in Fun and Fancy Free, the Harp is explicitly eager to be liberated from the Giant and helps Jack (or his stand-in) in any way she can. At other times this story gets the Fractured Fairy Tale treatment, showing Jack as a jerk of a robber.

Not to be confused with "Jack the Giant Killer" which is (oddly enough) usually a completely unrelated tale.


 * Into the Woods, a Stephen Sondheim musical that combines it with several other fairy stories
 * Fun and Fancy Free: The Walt Disney version, with a certain mouse playing the part of Jack.


 * Anti-Hero: However you look at it, the protagonist goes from gullible fool to thief to murderer over the course of the story.
 * Deconstruction: Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods, Brian Henson's Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story and Terry Pratchett's Hogfather all have a go at Jack.
 * Floating Continent: The Giant's cloud castle.
 * I'm a Humanitarian: Perhaps the giant and the witch from "Hansel and Gretel" swap recipes.
 * Space Elevator: The magic beanstalk.
 * Mysterious Benefactor: The man with the beans.
 * Our Giants Are Bigger
 * Rule of Three: Gold, Goose and Harp.
 * The Seven Basic Plots: Overcoming the Monster. Booker uses this story as the quintessential example of the three forms of the Monster: Predator (fee fi fo fum), Holdfast (sleeping / guarding the treasure) and Avenger (coming after Jack to get his treasure back).
 * Wealthy Ever After
 * Giant Food