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<h1 class='c001'>RUMPTY-DUDGET’S TOWER</h1>
<h2><i>A FAIRY TALE</i></h2>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h3>JULIAN HAWTHORNE</h3>
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<h2>PREFACE</h2>
<p class='drop-capa0_15_0_6 c018'>IN 1877, when I was living in Twickenham, near London, my sister Una
happened to be describing a queer character she had met that day: she
had a gift for making swift and vivid portraits in words. “He was a
little Rumpty-Dudget of a man,” she said, concluding her description.
She may have meant to say, “Rumpelstiltskin,” the name of a dwarf
immortalised in the Grimm fairy-tales, with which we had been familiar
in our childhood. But her variation struck me soundly, and I said to
myself, I’ll write a story about him!</p>
<p>But, in truth, the story, upon that inspiration, wrote itself. I
had a fine time with it, and my own children, to whom it was read
in manuscript, heartily approved it. Then Alexander Strahan, the
publisher, and the first editor of the famous <i>Contemporary Review</i>,
saw it and
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_x'>x</span>proclaimed, with many a Scottish burr, that it was “a varra fine piece
of worrk, my boy, and does ye credit,” and he carried it off and
published it in his new magazine for children. Afterward, the eminent
firm of Longmans, Green and Longmans, of Paternoster Row, hard by Saint
Paul’s, in London, considered it and said, “If you can collect half
a dozen others of the same sort, we would be glad to issue them in a
volume.” It was easy for me, in the late ’70’s, to do that, though now
that I am in the late seventies myself, I should beg off.</p>
<p>So a little green-and-gold book was printed. It was called “Yellow-Cap,
and Other Fairy Tales,” and bore the great Longmans’ imprint. And
they sold, I believe, a great many of them; but the only story
in the collection about which readers afterward wrote to me, was
“Rumpty-Dudget’s Tower”; and <SPAN name='TNtoday'></SPAN>today, after nearly five
and forty years, I still receive occasional kind words on the subject.
My mischievous little dwarf manifested vitality.</p>
<p>Of course, the Longmans volume has long
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_xi'>xi</span>been out of print. But in the latter part of 1878, I came back to
America, after a twelve-year stay abroad, and found my friend Richard
Watson Gilder riding high as editor of <i>The Century</i>, and subordinate
to him a delightful young fellow named Clark, who was conducting a
magazine for young people. They had seen Rumpty-Dudget and wanted to
republish it in the latter periodical. So I sold them the American
copyright, and thought I was doing well. Could I not write a dozen
as good or better tales whenever I had a mind to? Such is the
self-confidence of an author whose years are but thirty-six!</p>
<p>Soon, letters began to come from children and from their mothers,
saying pleasant things about the story, and asking for more like it.
But things which I thought of more importance occupied me, and I
postponed complying with their requests: besides, my sister Una had
gone to Heaven, and could no longer inspire me with her word. Letters
continued to come, however, and presently they were from mothers who had
<span class="pagenum" id='Page_xii'>xii</span>been children when the story first appeared, and now wanted the
old story for children of their own, and asked me to publish it in
book form. I began to regret not having kept my American copyright,
because when I suggested its return to me by the Century people, they
would reply that they intended, when they could get down to it, to
reprint the story themselves. So I was fain to wait, and to bid my
correspondents to do likewise.</p>
<p>But editors die in the course of time, and properties change hands,
and I myself lost track of the matter, though those letters still kept
on arriving from time to time. I wish I had kept them; there must have
been hundreds. The children who had become mothers were grandmothers
now and wanted the story for their grandchildren: but nothing could
be done. Poor Rumpty-Dudget was buried beyond digging-up again—so
it seemed. Would a tribe of great-grandchildren arise, once more
miraculously knowing about the story, and demanding its resurrection?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>At all events, about the first of the New Year, I got a letter from
Frederick A. Stokes Company of New York, in consequence of which
negotiations took place, leading up to the publication of the present
little volume. Rumpty-Dudget Redivivus! He bears a bad character in the
tale, but there must really be something good in him. And now he makes
his bow to little persons who were not born into this world until
nearly half a century after he left it. When I look at the list of
the year’s books, it strikes me that he appears in strange and alien
company. But that is not my affair: I choose to feel complimented on
his account, and I hope he will make new friends.</p>
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<div class='line'>JULIAN HAWTHORNE.</div>
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