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☕️ Alice’s Mad Tea Party Presents: Storytime
Alice Spills the Tea: Jack and the Beanstalk
Alice tapped her spoon against the rim of her teacup, once, twice, sharp enough to hush the room.
“Now listen carefully, my curious mortals,” she said, eyes glinting. “This is not a clever little romp. It never was. This is an old English fairy tale, rough at the edges, told long before anyone decided children needed comforting.”
She smiled, thin and knowing.
“Let me tell it properly.”
Jack lived with his mother in deep poverty. Their home held more worry than warmth, and the cow was all they had left between them and starvation. One morning, Jack was sent to sell her at market. He did not.
On the road, Jack met a strange man who offered him a handful of beans in exchange for the cow. Magical beans, he claimed. Jack believed him. Whether from foolishness or hope, history never bothered to clarify.
Alice lifted a brow.
“Hope makes fools of mortals far more efficiently than lies.”
Jack returned home with nothing but beans. His mother, furious and afraid, threw them out the window. That night, while the household slept, the beans took root. By morning, a beanstalk had grown so tall it vanished into the clouds.
Jack climbed it.
Above the clouds stood a great house, and within it lived a giant and his wife. The giant was fearsome, his voice shaking the walls as he thundered his famous warning. Jack hid while the giant ate, drank, and fell asleep.
And then Jack stole.
First, a bag of gold.
Alice did not rush this part.
“Do not let anyone tell you otherwise,” she said softly. “This is theft. The tale does not pretend it is anything else.”
Jack escaped down the beanstalk and brought the gold home. His mother rejoiced. Their hunger eased. Comfort returned.
But Jack went back.
The second time, he stole a hen that laid golden eggs. Again, the giant chased him. Again, Jack escaped. Prosperity followed.
Alice sighed into her tea.
“Notice how quickly necessity becomes appetite.”
Jack climbed the beanstalk a third time. This time, he took the harp that sang when touched. The harp cried out, waking the giant, who chased Jack with thunderous fury. Jack fled down the beanstalk, the giant following close behind.
When Jack reached the ground, he seized an axe and struck the beanstalk again and again until it fell. The giant tumbled from the sky and was killed.
Silence followed.
“That,” Alice said, setting her cup down, “is where the story ends.”
Jack and his mother lived comfortably after that. The beanstalk never grew again. The giant never returned. No judgment is passed. No lesson is spelled out neatly.
Alice leaned forward.
“This is not a tale about bravery. Nor is it a tale about justice. It is a story about hunger, risk, and a boy who survives because the world lets him.”
She smiled faintly.
“Fairy tales are not moral instructors. They are records of what happens.”
Alice raised her teacup.
“Drink that in.”
Alice, Queen of Ink & Lore
Weaver of Stories, Witness to Truth
Editorial Note from Pip, Assistant to the Mad Tea Mistress
Jack and the Beanstalk is a traditional English fairy tale with roots in oral storytelling. The most widely known written version was published by Joseph Jacobs in 1890, though earlier variants existed across Britain.
In older tellings, Jack’s actions are not softened, and the giant is not reimagined for sympathy. The tale reflects the harsh realities of poverty and survival rather than modern moral comfort.
Alice has presented a faithful retelling, restoring the story’s original bluntness without altering its events or outcome.
Folklore does not explain itself. It simply remembers.
- Pip
Assistant to Alice, Queen of Ink & Lore
Editorial Desk, Alice’s Mad Tea Party
