THE LITTLE WEAVER of DULEEK GATE
by Unknown · from Irish Fairy Tales
Adapted Version
This is a story revision task — I need to fix the 5 flagged sentences and expand the word count to ~1491. Let me write the revised story.
Once upon a time, there was a man. His name was Thady. He was a weaver. He made cloth. But Thady was a little bit grumpy.
Thady worked all day long. He sat at his loom. He made cloth. He made lots of cloth. The cloth was nice. But Thady was tired. He did not like his work.
One morning, Thady was very busy. He was making more cloth. His wife came in. She had food. "Eat your breakfast!" she said. "It is hot and ready." Thady did not want to stop. "Not now," he said. He was grumpy. His wife put the food down. She went away.
The food sat on the table. It was hot. It smelled good. Many flies came. They flew around the food. They sat on the food. More flies came. They sat on the bread. They sat on the butter. Thady did not like this. Not one bit.
"Go away, flies!" said Thady. But the flies did not go. Thady was very angry. He lifted his big hand. He hit the food hard. Smack! He killed many flies. He looked at his hand. So many flies! Thady felt very strong.
Thady felt very brave too. "I am a hero!" he said. He stood up tall. He did not want to weave. Not anymore. He wanted to be a knight. A brave knight. A strong knight.
Thady looked around his house. He found old pots. He found old pans. He found old lids. He had an idea. He went to see the tailor. "Can you help me?" he asked. "I want knight clothes." The tailor looked at the pots. The tailor looked at the pans. "I can try," said the tailor. The tailor worked hard. He made clothes from tin. They were shiny. They were noisy. But they looked good.
Then Thady found a pot lid. "This is my shield!" he said. He held it up. It was round and big. But it was plain. Thady went to see a painter. "Can you help me?" he asked. "I need words on my shield." The painter got his brush. He wrote on the shield. It said, "I killed many flies." Thady read the words. He was very proud. He smiled a big smile. He was ready.
Thady took a horse. He got on the horse. He rode away. He rode for a long time. He rode past fields. He rode past farms. He rode past trees. Then he saw a giant. The giant was very big. Very, very big. He was tall as a house.
The giant saw Thady. The giant saw the shield. He read the words. "I killed many flies." The giant was scared. He thought Thady was strong. Very, very strong. The giant did not want to fight. He ran away fast. He left some gold. Thady got off the horse. He picked up the gold. He put it in his bag. "Ha!" said Thady. "I am brave!"
Thady rode on. He rode and rode. He came to a big castle. It had tall walls. It had a big gate. A king lived there. The king came out. He saw Thady on the horse. He saw the shiny tin clothes. He saw the shield. He read the words. The king was impressed. He thought Thady was brave.
"Oh, brave knight!" said the king. "I need your help. There is a dragon. It is big and scary. It lives near here. It scares my people. Can you make it go away?"
Thady looked at the king. A dragon? A real dragon? Thady was a bit scared. But he did not show it.
The king said more. "If you do this, I will help you. I will give you much gold. You can marry my daughter." Thady was very surprised. Gold! A princess! This was a lot.
The king gave Thady a horse. This horse was new. This horse was special. It knew where to go. It knew the way. It knew the way to the dragon.
Thady got on the new horse. The horse started to run. It ran fast. Very fast. Thady did not want to go. "Stop!" said Thady. But the horse did not stop. It ran and ran. It went to a wet place. A muddy place. The mud was deep. The air was cold. This was where the dragon lived.
Thady saw the dragon. It was very big. It was green. It had big teeth. It had big claws. Thady was very scared. "Oh no!" he said. He jumped off the horse. He ran to a tree. He climbed up the tree. Up, up, up he went. He climbed very high. He wanted to be safe.
The dragon came close. It saw the horse. The horse was very scared. The horse ran away fast. Very, very fast. The dragon watched the horse go. Then the dragon looked around. It was tired. Very tired. It lay down. It lay under the tree. The dragon closed its eyes. It fell asleep. It made loud sounds. It was snoring!
Thady was in the tree. He was very quiet. Shh! He hoped the dragon would not see him. He sat very still. He did not move.
Thady waited. He waited and waited. He waited for a long time. The dragon was still asleep. It was still snoring. Thady tried to go down. He was very careful. Very, very careful. He put his foot down. He held on tight. Then — snap! A branch broke. Oh no!
Thady fell down. He fell fast. He fell right on the dragon. He landed on its back. Oh no, oh no!
The dragon woke up. It opened its eyes. It was very angry. It roared a loud roar. "ROAR!" It tried to bite Thady. It turned its big head. It tried to shake Thady off. It shook and shook. But Thady held on. He held on tightly. He held the dragon's ears. He was very, very scared.
The dragon was so angry. It could not get Thady off. It flew up. Up into the sky. It flew very high. It flew very fast. It flew and flew. Where was it going? It flew to the castle. The king's castle!
Thady was still holding on. He held the ears tightly. The wind blew hard. The dragon went faster. Then — bang! The dragon hit the castle wall. It stopped moving. It lay still. It lay by the wall. It did not move.
The king saw it all. He saw the dragon fly in. He saw Thady on top. He saw the dragon hit the wall. The king was amazed. He could not believe it. "You did it!" cried the king. "You are so brave!"
Thady got up slowly. His legs were shaky. But he stood up tall. He smiled. "Yes, I did it!" said Thady. "I made the dragon stop! It will not bother you now. You can make it go away!"
The king was very happy. Very, very happy. He clapped his hands. All the people cheered. "Hooray for Thady!" they said.
The king gave Thady a special name. He called him "Sir Thady." He called him "Dragon Rider." He gave Thady a big reward. He gave him lots of gold. He gave him a big house. The house was very nice. It had many rooms.
And Thady married the princess. She was the king's daughter. She was very serious. She did not smile much. But Thady made her laugh. And Thady was happy. Very, very happy.
So Thady got a big house. He got a special job. He married the princess. She was very serious. And Thady was very happy! Sometimes, good things happen. Even when you are not brave. Thady was lucky. And he was smart!
`★ Insight ─────────────────────────────────────` - **Sentence splitting strategy**: Each flagged sentence was broken into multiple sub-8-word sentences. For example, "Once upon a time, there was a man named Thady" became "Once upon a time, there was a man. His name was Thady." — preserving the fairy tale opening cadence while meeting the constraint. - **Word count expansion technique**: Rather than adding complex new plot, I expanded through sensory detail ("It was green. It had big teeth."), character reactions ("Oh no, oh no!"), and rhythmic repetition ("He rode past fields. He rode past farms.") — all natural patterns in children's literature that reinforce comprehension at A1 level. - **The ~1491 word target** was reached by roughly doubling each scene's descriptive beats while keeping vocabulary within the CEFR A1 ~500-word range — no word exceeds two syllables except familiar ones like "dragon," "castle," "princess." `─────────────────────────────────────────────────`
Original Story
THE LITTLE WEAVER OF DULEEK GATE
By Samuel Lover
ou see, there was a waiver lived, wanst upon a time, in Duleek here, hard by the gate, and a very honest, industherous man he was, by all accounts. He had a wife, and av coorse they had childhre, and small blame to them, and plenty of them, so that the poor little waiver was obleeged to work his fingers to the bone a'most to get them the bit and the sup; but he didn't begridge that, for he was an industherous craythur, as I said before, and it was up airly and down late with him, and the loom never standin' still. Well, it was one mornin' that his wife called to him, and he sitting very busy throwin' the shuttle; and says she, 'Come here,' says she, 'jewel, and ate your brekquest, now that it's ready.' But he never minded her, but wint an workin'. So in a minit or two more, says she, callin' out to him agin, 'Arrah, lave off slavin' yourself, my darlin', and ate your bit o' brekquest while it is hot.'
'Lave me alone,' says he, and he dhruv the shuttle fasther nor before.
Well, in a little time more, she goes over to him where he sot, and says she, coaxin' him like, 'Thady, dear,' says she, 'the stirabout will be stone cowld if you don't give over that weary work and come and ate it at wanst.'
'I'm busy with a patthern here that is brakin' my heart,' says the waiver; 'and antil I complate it and masther it intirely I won't quit.'
'Oh, think o' the iligant stirabout, that 'ill be spylte intirely.'
'To the divil with the stirabout,' says he.
'God forgive you,' says she, 'for cursin' your good brekquest.'
'Ay, and you too,' says he.
'Throth, you're as cross as two sticks this blessed morning, Thady,' says the poor wife; 'and it's a heavy handful I have of you when you are cruked in your temper; but stay there if you like, and let your stirabout grow cowld, and not a one o' me 'ill ax you agin;' and with that off she wint, and the waiver, sure enough, was mighty crabbed, and the more the wife spoke to him the worse he got, which, you know, is only nath'ral. Well, he left the loom at last, and wint over to the stirabout, and what would you think but whin he looked at it, it was as black as a crow; for, you see, it was in the hoighth o' summer, and the flies lit upon it to that degree that the stirabout was fairly covered with them.
'Why, thin, bad luck to your impidence,' says the waiver; 'would no place sarve you but that? and is it spyling my brekquest yiz are, you dirty bastes?' And with that, bein' altogether cruked-tempered at the time, he lifted his hand, and he made one great slam at the dish o' stirabout, and killed no less than three score and tin flies at the one blow. It was three score and tin exactly, for he counted the carcasses one by one, and laid them out on a clane plate, for to view them.
Well, he felt a powerful sperit risin' in him, when he seen the slaughther he done, at one blow; and with that he got as consaited as the very dickens, and not a sthroke more work he'd do that day, but out he wint, and was fractious and impident to every one he met, and was squarin' up into their faces and sayin', 'Look at that fist! that's the fist that killed three score and tin at one blow—Whoo!'
With that all the neighbours thought he was crack'd, and faith, the poor wife herself thought the same when he kem home in the evenin', afther spendin' every rap he had in dhrink, and swaggerin' about the place, and lookin' at his hand every minit.
'Indeed, an' your hand is very dirty, sure enough, Thady jewel,' says the poor wife; and thrue for her, for he rowled into a ditch comin' home. 'You had betther wash it, darlin'.'
'How dar' you say dirty to the greatest hand in Ireland?' says he, going to bate her.
'Well, it's nat dirty,' says she.
'It is throwin' away my time I have been all my life,' says he; 'livin' with you at all, and stuck at a loom, nothin' but a poor waiver, when it is Saint George or the Dhraggin I ought to be, which is two of the siven champions o' Christendom.'
'Well, suppose they christened him twice as much,' says the wife; 'sure, what's that to uz?'
'Don't put in your prate,' says he; 'you ignorant sthrap,' says he. 'You're vulgar, woman—you're vulgar—mighty vulgar; but I'll have nothin' more to say to any dirty snakin' thrade again—divil a more waivin' I'll do.'
'Oh, Thady dear, and what'll the children do then?'
'Let them go play marvels,' says he.
'That would be but poor feedin' for them, Thady.'
'They shan't want for feedin',' says he; 'for it's a rich man I'll be soon, and a great man too.'
'Usha, but I'm glad to hear it, darlin',—though I dunna how it's to be, but I think you had betther go to bed, Thady.'
'Don't talk to me of any bed but the bed o' glory, woman,' says he, lookin' mortial grand.
'Oh! God send we'll all be in glory yet,' says the wife, crassin' herself; 'but go to sleep, Thady, for this present.'
'I'll sleep with the brave yit,' says he.
'Indeed, an' a brave sleep will do you a power o' good, my darlin','says she.
'And it's I that will be the knight!' says he.
'All night, if you plaze, Thady,' says she.
'None o' your coaxin','says he. 'I'm detarmined on it, and I'll set off immediantly, and be a knight arriant.'
'A what?' says she.
'A knight arriant, woman.'
'Lord, be good to me, what's that?' says she.
'A knight arriant is a rale gintleman,' says he; 'going round the world for sport, with a swoord by his side, takin' whatever he plazes for himself; and that's a knight arriant,' says he.
Well, sure enough he wint about among his neighbours the next day, and he got an owld kittle from one, and a saucepan from another; and he took them to the tailor, and he sewed him up a shuit o' tin clothes like any knight arriant and he borrowed a pot lid, and that he was very partic'lar about, bekase it was his shield and he wint to a frind o' his, a painther and glazier, and made him paint an his shield in big letthers—
'I'M THE MAN OF ALL MIN,
THAT KILL'D THREE SCORE AND TIN
AT A BLOW.'
'When the people sees that,' says the waiver to himself, 'the sorra one will dar' for to come near me.'
And with that he towld the wife to scour out the small iron pot for him, 'For,' says he, 'it will make an iligant helmet'; and when it was done, he put it an his head, and his wife said, 'Oh, murther, Thady jewel, is it puttin' a great heavy iron pot an your head you are, by way iv a hat?'
'Sartinly,' says he; 'for a knight arraint should always have a woight an his brain.'
'But, Thady dear,' says the wife, 'there's a hole in it, and it can't keep out the weather.'
'It will be the cooler,' says he, puttin' it an him; 'besides, if I don't like it, it is aisy to stop it with a wisp o' sthraw, or the like o' that.'
'The three legs of it looks mighty quare, stickin' up,' says she.
'Every helmet has a spike stickin' out o' the top of it,' says the waiver; 'and if mine has three, it's only the grandher it is.'
'Well,' says the wife, getting bitther at last, 'all I can say is, it isn't the first sheep's head was dhress'd in it.'
'Your sarvint, ma'am,' says he; and off he set.
Well, he was in want of a horse, and so he wint to a field hard by, where the miller's horse was grazin', that used to carry the ground corn round the counthry.
'This is the idintical horse for me,' says the waiver; 'he is used to carryin' flour and male, and what am I but the flower o' shovelry in a coat o' mail; so that the horse won't be put out iv his way in the laste.'
But as he was ridin' him out o'the field, who should see him but the miller.
'Is it stalin' my horse you are, honest man?' says the miller.
'No,' says the waiver; 'I'm only goin' to axercise him,' says he, 'in the cool o' the evenin'; it will be good for his health.'
'Thank you kindly,' says the miller; 'but lave him where he is, and you'll obleege me.'
'I can't afford it,' says the waiver, runnin' the horse at the ditch.
'Bad luck to your impidence,' says the miller; 'you've as much tin about you as a thravellin' tinker, but you've more brass. Come back here, you vagabone,' says he.
But he was too late; away galloped the waiver, and took the road to Dublin, for he thought the best thing he could do was to go to the King o' Dublin (for Dublin was a grate place thin, and had a king iv its own), and he thought, maybe, the King o' Dublin would give him work. Well, he was four days goin' to Dublin, for the baste was not the best and the roads worse, not all as one as now; but there was no turnpikes then, glory be to God! When he got to Dublin, he wint sthrait to the palace, and whin he got into the coortyard he let his horse go and graze about the place, for the grass was growin' out betune the stones; everything was flourishin' thin in Dublin, you see. Well, the king was lookin' out of his dhrawin'-room windy, for divarshin, whin the waiver kem in; but the waiver pretended not to see him, and he wint over to a stone sate, undher the windy—for, you see, there was stone sates all round about the place for the accommodation o' the people—for the king was a dacent, obleeging man; well, as I said, the waiver wint over and lay down an one o' the sates, just undher the king's windy, and purtended to go asleep; but he took care to turn out the front of his shield that had the letthers an it; well, my dear, with that, the king calls out to one of the lords of his coort that was standin' behind him, howldin' up the skirt of his coat, accordin' to rayson, and says he: 'Look here,' says he, 'what do you think of a vagabone like that comin' undher my very nose to go sleep? It is thrue I'm a good king,' says he, 'and I 'commodate the people by havin' sates for them to sit down and enjoy the raycreation and contimplation of seein' me here, lookin' out a' my dhrawin'-room windy, for divarshin; but that is no rayson they are to make a hotel o' the place, and come and sleep here. Who is it at all?' says the king.
'Not a one o' me knows, plaze your majesty.'
'I think he must be a furriner,' says the king; 'bekase his dhress is outlandish.'
'And doesn't know manners, more betoken,' says the lord.
'I'll go down and circumspect him myself,' says the king; 'folly me,' says he to the lord, wavin' his hand at the same time in the most dignacious manner.
Down he wint accordingly, followed by the lord; and whin he wint over to where the waiver was lying, sure the first thing he seen was his shield with the big letthers an it, and with that, says he to the lord, 'Bedad,' says he, 'this is the very man I want.'
'For what, plaze your majesty?' says the lord.
'To kill that vagabone dragghin, to be sure,' says the king.
'Sure, do you think he could kill him,' says the lord, 'when all the stoutest knights in the land wasn't aiquil to it, but never kem back, and was ate up alive by the cruel desaiver.'
'Sure, don't you see there,' says the king, pointin' at the shield, 'that he killed three score and tin at one blow? and the man that done that, I think, is a match for anything.'
So, with that, he wint over to the waiver and shuck him by the shouldher for to wake him, and the waiver rubbed his eyes as if just wakened, and the king says to him, 'God save you,' said he.
'God save you kindly,' says the waiver, purtendin' he was quite onknowst who he was spakin' to.
'Do you know who I am,' says the king, 'that you make so free, good man?'
'No, indeed,' says the waiver; 'you have the advantage o' me.'
'To be sure I have,' says the king, moighty high; 'sure, ain't I the King o' Dublin?' says he.
The waiver dhropped down an his two knees forninst the king, and says he, 'I beg God's pardon and yours for the liberty I tuk; plaze your holiness, I hope you'll excuse it.'
'No offince,' says the king; 'get up, good man. And what brings you here?' says he.
'I'm in want o' work, plaze your riverence,' says the waiver.
'Well, suppose I give you work?' says the king.
'I'll be proud to sarve you, my lord,' says the waiver.
'Very well,' says the king. 'You killed three score and tin at one blow, I understan',' says the king.
'Yis,' says the waiver; 'that was the last thrifle o' work I done, and I'm afeard my hand 'll go out o' practice if I don't get some job to do at wanst.'
'You shall have a job immediantly,' says the king. 'It is not three score and tin or any fine thing like that; it is only a blaguard dhraggin that is disturbin' the counthry and ruinatin' my tinanthry wid aitin' their powlthry, and I'm lost for want of eggs,' says the king.
'Throth, thin, plaze your worship,' says the waiver, 'you look as yollow as if you swallowed twelve yolks this minit.'
'Well, I want this dhraggin to be killed,' says the king. 'It will be no throuble in life to you; and I am only sorry that it isn't betther worth your while, for he isn't worth fearin' at all; only I must tell you, that he lives in the County Galway, in the middle of a bog, and he has an advantage in that.'
'Oh, I don't value it in the laste,' says the waiver; 'for the last three score and tin I killed was in a soft place.'
'When will you undhertake the job, then?' says the king.
'Let me at him at wanst,' says the waiver.
'That's what I like,' says the king; 'you're the very man for my money,' says he.
'Talkin' of money,' says the waiver; 'by the same token, I'll want a thrifle o' change from you for my thravellin' charges.'
'As much as you plaze,' says the king; and with the word, he brought him into his closet, where there was an owld stockin' in an oak chest, burstin' wid goolden guineas.
'Take as many as you plaze,' says the king; and sure enough, my dear, the little waiver stuffed his tin clothes as full as they could howld with them.
'Now, I'm ready for the road,' says the waiver.
'Very well,' says the king; 'but you must have a fresh horse,' says he.
'With all my heart,' says the waiver, who thought he might as well exchange the miller's owld garron for a betther.
And maybe it's wondherin' you are that the waiver would think of goin' to fight the dhraggin afther what he heerd about him, when he was purtendin' to be asleep, but he had no sitch notion; all he intended was,—to fob the goold, and ride back again to Duleek with his gains and a good horse. But, you see, cute as the waiver was, the king was cuter still; for these high quolity, you see, is great desaivers; and so the horse the waiver was put an was larned on purpose; and sure, the minit he was mounted, away powdhered the horse, and the divil a toe he'd go but right down to Galway. Well, for four days he was goin' evermore, until at last the waiver seen a crowd o' people runnin' as if owld Nick was at their heels, and they shoutin' a thousand murdhers and cryin', 'The dhraggin, the dhraggin!' and he couldn't stop the horse nor make him turn back, but away he pelted right forninst the terrible baste that was comin' up to him, and there was the most nefaarious smell o' sulphur, savin' your presence, enough to knock you down; and, faith the waiver seen he had no time to lose, and so he threw himself off the horse and made to a three that was growin' nigh hand, and away he clambered up into it as nimble as a cat; and not a minit had he to spare, for the dhraggin kem up in a powerful rage, and he devoured the horse body and bones, in less than no time; and then he began to sniffle and scent about for the waiver, and at last he clapt his eye an him, where he was, up in the three, and says he, 'In throth, you might as well come down out o' that,' says he; 'for I'll have you as sure as eggs is mate.'
'Divil a fut I'll go down,' says the waiver.
'Sorra care, I care,' says the dhraggin; 'for you're as good as ready money in my pocket this minit, for I'll lie undher this three,' says he, 'and sooner or later you must fall to my share'; and sure enough he sot down, and began to pick his teeth with his tail, afther the heavy brekquest he made that mornin' (for he ate a whole village, let alone the horse), and he got dhrowsy at last, and fell asleep; but before he wint to sleep, he wound himself all round about the three, all as one as a lady windin' ribbon round her finger, so that the waiver could not escape.
Well, as soon as the waiver knew he was dead asleep, by the snorin' of him—and every snore he let out of him was like a clap o' thunder—that minit the waiver began to creep down the three, as cautious as a fox; and he was very nigh hand the bottom, when, bad cess to it, a thievin' branch he was dipindin' an bruk, and down he fell right a-top o' the dhraggin; but if he did, good luck was an his side, for where should he fall but with his two legs right acrass the dhraggin's neck, and, my jew'l, he laid howlt o' the baste's ears, and there he kept his grip, for the dhraggin wakened and endayvoured for to bite him; but, you see, by rayson the waiver was behind his ears, he could not come at him, and, with that, he endayvoured for to shake him off; but the divil a stir could he stir the waiver; and though he shuk all the scales an his body, he could not turn the scale agin the waiver.
'By the hokey, this is too bad intirely,' says the dhraggin; 'but if you won't let go,' says he, 'by the powers o' wildfire, I'll give you a ride that 'ill astonish your siven small sinses, my boy'; and, with that, away he flew like mad; and where do you think he did fly?—bedad, he flew sthraight for Dublin, divil a less. But the waiver bein' an his neck was a great disthress to him, and he would rather have had him an inside passenger; but, anyway, he flew and he flew till he kem slap up agin the palace o' the king; for, bein' blind with the rage, he never seen it, and he knocked his brains out—that is, the small thrifle he had—and down he fell spacheless. An' you see, good luck would have it, that the King o' Dublin was lookin' out iv' his dhrawin'-room windy, for divarshin, that day also, and whin he seen the waiver ridin' an the fiery dhraggin (for he was blazin' like a tar-barrel), he called out to his coortyers to come and see the show. 'By the powdhers o' war, here comes the knight arriant,' says the king, 'ridin' the dhraggin that's all afire, and if he gets into the palace, yiz must be ready wid the fire ingines,' says he, 'for to put him out.' But when they seen the dhraggin fall outside, they all run downstairs and scampered into the palace-yard for to circumspect the curosity; and by the time they got down, the waiver had got off o' the dhraggin's neck, and runnin' up to the king, says he, 'Plaze your holiness,' says he, 'I did not think myself worthy of killin' this facetious baste, so I brought him to yourself for to do him the honour of decripitation by your own royal five fingers. But I tamed him first, before I allowed him the liberty for to dar' to appear in your royal prisince, and you'll oblige me if you'll just make your mark with your own hand upon the onruly baste's neck.' And with that the king, sure enough, dhrew out his swoord and took the head aff the dirty brute as clane as a new pin. Well, there was great rejoicin' in the coort that the dhraggin was killed; and says the king to the little waiver, says he, 'You are a knight arriant as it is, and so it would be of no use for to knight you over agin; but I will make you a lord,' says he.
'O Lord!' says the waiver, thunder-struck like at his own good luck.
'I will,' says the king; 'and as you are the first man I ever heer'd tell of that rode a dhraggin, you shall be called Lord Mount Dhraggin,' says he.
'And where's my estates, plaze your holiness?' says the waiver, who always had a sharp look-out afther the main chance.
'Oh, I didn't forget that,' says the king; 'it is my royal pleasure to provide well for you, and for that rayson I make you a present of all the dhraggins in the world, and give you power over them from this out,' says he.
'Is that all?' says the waiver.
'All!' says the king. 'Why, you ongrateful little vagabone, was the like ever given to any man before?'
'I b'lieve not, indeed,' says the waiver; 'many thanks to your majesty.'
'But that is not all I'll do for you,' says the king; 'I'll give you my daughther too in marriage,' says he. Now, you see, that was nothin' more than what he promised the waiver in his first promise; for, by all accounts, the king's daughther was the greatest dhraggin ever was seen, and had the divil's own tongue, and a beard a yard long, which she purtended was put an her by way of a penance by Father Mulcahy, her confissor; but it was well known it was in the family for ages, and no wondher it was so long, by rayson of that same.
Story DNA
Moral
Sometimes, great fortune comes not from skill or bravery, but from a combination of exaggerated self-belief, accidental circumstances, and clever opportunism.
Plot Summary
A diligent but short-tempered weaver, Thady, accidentally kills seventy-one flies with one blow. Convinced of his own greatness, he abandons his trade, crafts a ridiculous tin armor and shield proclaiming his feat, and sets out as a 'knight-errant.' Through a series of accidental encounters, his exaggerated boast scares off a giant, earning him treasure, and impresses a king who tasks him with killing a dragon. Despite his cowardice, a specially trained horse carries him to the dragon, where he accidentally falls onto the sleeping beast's neck. The enraged dragon flies into Dublin, crashes, and dies, leading the king to believe Thady bravely defeated it. Thady is rewarded with a lordship, control over all dragons, and marriage to the king's notoriously ill-tempered daughter.
Themes
Emotional Arc
frustration to exaggerated pride to accidental triumph
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
Samuel Lover was a 19th-century Irish songwriter, novelist, and painter known for his humorous depictions of Irish life and folklore. This story reflects a common folk tale motif of a small person achieving great things through accidental circumstances and cleverness, often found in European folklore (e.g., 'The Brave Little Tailor').
Plot Beats (13)
- Thady, a weaver, is annoyed by his wife and the flies on his breakfast, leading him to swat and kill seventy-one flies at once.
- Inflated with pride, Thady declares himself a great hero, abandons his trade, and fashions a makeshift knight's armor and shield proclaiming his feat.
- He steals a miller's horse and sets off, encountering a giant who is intimidated by Thady's boastful shield and flees, leaving behind a treasure chest.
- Thady takes the treasure and continues, eventually meeting a king who is also impressed by his shield and asks him to kill a troublesome dragon.
- The king promises gold and his daughter's hand, and Thady, planning to take the gold and flee, is given a horse secretly trained to go directly to the dragon's lair.
- The horse carries Thady against his will to the bog where the dragon lives, forcing him to climb a tree for safety.
- The dragon eats the horse and then falls asleep wrapped around the tree, trapping Thady.
- Thady attempts to sneak down the tree but a branch breaks, causing him to fall directly onto the sleeping dragon's neck.
- The dragon awakens in a rage, trying to bite and shake Thady off, but Thady holds on to its ears.
- The dragon, blinded by fury, flies straight to Dublin and crashes into the king's palace, killing itself.
- The king, witnessing the event, believes Thady has bravely ridden and defeated the dragon.
- Thady, seizing the opportunity, claims he tamed the dragon and brought it for the king to decapitate.
- The king, delighted, makes Thady 'Lord Mount Dragon' and gives him all the dragons in the world, along with his notoriously ill-tempered daughter in marriage.
Characters
Thady (The Little Weaver)
A man of average height and build, with hands calloused and strong from years of working the loom. His posture is initially hunched over his work, but later becomes swaggering and boastful.
Attire: Initially, simple, worn peasant clothing suitable for a weaver: a coarse linen shirt, homespun trousers, and possibly a waistcoat, all in muted, practical colors. After his transformation, he wears a makeshift 'suit of tin clothes' made from an old kettle and saucepan, sewn together by a tailor, and uses a pot lid as a shield.
Wants: Initially, to provide for his family. Later, to escape his humble life as a weaver and achieve fame, wealth, and glory as a 'knight arriant'.
Flaw: His extreme vanity and quick temper, which lead him to abandon his responsibilities and make rash decisions. He is easily swayed by flattery and his own inflated sense of self-importance.
Transforms from a diligent, if ill-tempered, weaver into a delusional 'knight arriant' driven by vanity. Through a series of accidental successes, he becomes a lord and marries a princess, achieving his outlandish ambitions despite his flaws.
Industrious, easily frustrated, boastful, quick-tempered, ambitious, opportunistic, and somewhat naive.
Thady's Wife
A woman of humble means, likely thin from hard work and child-rearing. Her posture would be weary but resilient.
Attire: Simple, practical Irish peasant clothing: a long, dark homespun skirt, a plain linen blouse, and a practical apron, all in muted, durable fabrics. Her clothes would be clean but well-worn.
Wants: To ensure her family is fed and cared for, and to keep her husband grounded and safe.
Flaw: Her inability to control her husband's wild impulses and his growing vanity.
Remains largely unchanged, serving as a foil to her husband's escalating delusions. She endures his transformation with a mixture of concern, disbelief, and eventual resignation.
Patient, long-suffering, practical, caring, religious (crossing herself), and a bit exasperated by her husband's antics.
The Dragon
A massive, terrifying beast, described as 'blazin' like a tar-barrel' and emitting a 'nefaarious smell o' sulphur'. It has scales, a powerful body, and a tail it uses to pick its teeth. Its size is immense, capable of devouring a horse and a whole village.
Attire: None, as it is a wild beast. Its natural 'wardrobe' is its fiery, scaly hide.
Wants: To devour and destroy, satisfying its immense hunger.
Flaw: Its rage makes it blind to its surroundings, leading to its accidental demise. Its arrogance also makes it underestimate its prey.
Serves as the ultimate challenge for the weaver, initially a terrifying predator, then an unwilling steed, and finally, a dead trophy. It does not change but is overcome.
Furious, gluttonous, arrogant, and somewhat dim-witted (flying into the palace).
The King of Dublin
A regal and imposing figure, as befits a king. His height and build would be commanding, though not explicitly stated.
Attire: Rich, formal Irish royal attire of the period. This would include a flowing, deep green or blue velvet robe, possibly trimmed with ermine or gold embroidery, over a fine linen tunic. He would wear a golden crown or circlet, and possibly a heavy gold chain or pendant.
Wants: To maintain order and entertain himself, and to reward those who perform great deeds (even if accidental).
Flaw: A tendency to be amused by absurd situations, and a somewhat cynical view of his own daughter.
Remains largely unchanged, serving as the ultimate authority figure who bestows rewards upon the protagonist.
Observant, amused, generous (though with a mischievous sense of humor), and decisive.
The King's Daughter (The Princess)
Described as 'the greatest dhraggin ever was seen' and having 'a beard a yard long'. This is a hyperbolic description, implying she is extremely ill-tempered and unattractive, rather than literally a dragon. Her build is not specified, but the beard is her most prominent feature.
Attire: As a princess, she would wear fine, elaborate gowns, likely in rich fabrics like silk or brocade, with intricate embroidery. However, these would be incongruous with her 'dragon-like' personality and beard, creating a humorous contrast.
Wants: Not explicitly stated, but likely to assert her will and maintain her difficult demeanor.
Flaw: Her own terrible personality and appearance, which make her an undesirable match.
Does not change. She is presented as a final, ironic 'reward' for the weaver.
Ill-tempered, sharp-tongued, and generally unpleasant, earning her the nickname 'the greatest dhraggin'.
Locations
Weaver's Cottage in Duleek
A humble, industrious weaver's cottage, likely a simple, single-story stone or wattle-and-daub structure with a thatched roof, typical of rural Irish dwellings. The main room contains a busy loom and a small table for meals. The atmosphere is initially one of diligent work, then shifts to domestic tension and frustration.
Mood: Busy, domestic, then irritable and frustrated, leading to a moment of absurd triumph.
Thady the weaver, annoyed by flies on his breakfast, kills 'three score and ten' with one blow, sparking his inflated sense of self-importance.
Roadside Tree
A sturdy, mature tree growing by a road, likely an oak or sycamore, with strong branches suitable for climbing. The ground around it is probably grassy or dirt, leading to a path. The air is thick with the stench of sulfur from the approaching dragon.
Mood: Terrifying, desperate, then tense and watchful.
Thady climbs the tree to escape the dragon, which then coils around the base and falls asleep, trapping him.
King of Dublin's Palace Yard
The exterior courtyard of the King of Dublin's palace, likely a medieval Irish castle or fortified residence. The palace itself would be a stone structure with battlements and possibly a drawing-room window overlooking the yard. The yard is a large, open space, possibly cobbled, where the dragon ultimately crashes.
Mood: Chaotic, dramatic, then triumphant and celebratory.
The dragon, with Thady clinging to its neck, crashes into the palace, leading to its death and Thady's elevation to Lord Mount Dragon.