Rumpty-Dudget's Tower: A Fairy Tale

Rumpty-Dudget's Tower: A Fairy Tale

Written by Julian Hawthorne, son of novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, this book is a fairytale collection that has its origins from a misspoken word uttered by Julian's sister - for instead of Rumpelstilskin, she chose to say Rumpty Dudget. We are later introduced to this character, who Julian described as "an ugly little dwarf, about as high as your knee, and all gray from head to foot. He had a gray beard and wore a broad-brimmed gray hat, and a gray cloak, that it was so much too long for him that it dragged on the ground as he walked; and on his back was a small gray hump, that made him look even shorter than he was. He lived in a gray tower, whose battlements could be seen from the palace windows. In this tower was a room with a thousand and one corners in it. In each of these corners stood a little child, with its face to the wall, and its hands behind its back."
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