The King O’ The Cats -The Toast

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I used to read this book when I was a kid, then forgot it, then thought I’d dreamed it, then found it last night. “The King O’ The Cats” pretty well sums up my whole deal, but I recommend the Hobyahs too if you want to crawl inside my past.

“ONE winter’s evening the sexton’s wife was sitting by the fireside with her big black cat, Old Tom, on the other side, both half-asleep and waiting for the master to come home. They waited and they waited, but still he didn’t come, till at last he came rushing in, calling out, “Who’s Tommy Tildrum?” in such a wild way that both his wife and his cat stared at him to know what was the matter.

“Why, what’s the matter?” said his wife, “and why do you want to know who Tommy Tildrum is?”

“Oh, I’ve had such an adventure. I was digging away at old Mr. Fordyce’s grave when I suppose I must have dropped asleep, and only woke up by hearing a cat’s Miaou.”

“Miaou!” said Old Tom in answer.

“Yes, just like that! So I looked over the edge of the grave, and what do you think I saw?”

“Now, how can I tell?” said the sexton’s wife.

“Why, nine black cats all like our friend Tom here, all with a white spot on their chestesses. And what do you think they were carrying? Why, a small coffin covered with a black velvet pall, and on the pall was a small coronet all of gold, and at every third step they took they cried all together, Miaou——”

“Miaou!” said Old Tom again.

“Yes, just like that!” said the Sexton; “and as they came nearer and nearer to me I could see them more distinctly, because their eyes shone out with a sort of green light. Well, they all came towards me, eight of them carrying the coffin, and the biggest cat of all walking in front for all the world like—but look at our Tom, how he’s looking at me. You’d think he knew all I was saying.”

“Go on, go on,” said his wife; “never mind Old Tom.”

“Well, as I was a-saying, they came towards me slowly and solemnly, and at every third step crying all together, Miaou——”

“Miaou!” said Old Tom again.

“Yes, just like that, till they came and stood right opposite Mr. Fordyce’s grave, where I was, when they all stood still and looked straight at me. I did feel queer, that I did! But look at Old Tom; he’s looking at me just like they did.”

“Go on, go on,” said his wife; “never mind Old Tom.”

“Where was I? Oh, they all stood still looking at me, when the one that wasn’t carrying the coffin came forward and, staring straight at me, said to me—yes, I tell ‘ee, said to me—with a squeaky voice, ‘Tell Tom Tildrum that Tim Toldrum’s dead,’ and that’s why I asked you if you knew who Tom Tildrum was, for how can I tell Tom Tildrum Tim Toldrum’s dead if I don’t know who Tom Tildrum is?”

“Look at Old Tom, look at Old Tom!” screamed his wife.

And well he might look, for Tom was swelling and Tom was staring, and at last Tom shrieked out, “What — old Tim dead! then I’m the King o’ the Cats!” and rushed up the chimney and was never more seen.”

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Woah.
I have a book of Cornish fairy tales and there's a terrifying one with witches turning into cats and dancing with the devil, who was either the biggest cat, or else a huge dog, not sure which. But there were illustrations, and it was scary. I'd look it up, but I'm away from home all week.

EDIT: the reason this is relevant is that this story is also in that book, but also the Devil is the king of cats. As is Tybalt. Hmmm.
2 replies · active 461 weeks ago
I remember that one. I think it was included in one of the standard elementary-school readers that were kicking around. And Diane Duane riffs on it at the end of A Wizard Abroad.

I was thinking this was going to be made Comforting and Anodyne – perhaps with a Valuable Moral Lesson on the importance of spaying and neutering? – but it's neat to see it again anyway.
1 reply · active 461 weeks ago
A Google search for Tildrum brought me to Cat Sìth, of Celtic origin, who may be able to steal your souls.

Miaou, indeed.
1 reply · active 461 weeks ago
I have this conversation with my cat, Princess Puffernuffer Puddumtat, all the time.
Who's a Princess?
Meow.
Who's a Princess then?
Meow.
Who's a puffy little Princess, who?
Me! Me! Meow.
3 replies · active 461 weeks ago
I remember reading this story! I didn't much like this rather plotless sort of fairy tale when I was a kid, but now I find them comforting. Sort of Slice of Life Fairy Tales where nothing major happens except one assumes the Sexton's wife has to find a new cat but it sounds like they were good pet-owners and surely Tom would have sent someone quality as a replacement.

ETA: If a certain website wasn't shuttering soon, I'd request a series of day-in-the-life episodes based on fairy tale characters. But perhaps that's a little too similar to the "Horrifying Children’s Stories Made Comforting and Anodyne" series...
3 replies · active 461 weeks ago
King O'the Cats is right up there with the Tailypo for my favorite shiver-inducing Halloween readalouds.
4 replies · active 461 weeks ago
Not sure why Old Tom was so excited. King O'the Cats must be the most frustrating administrative position imaginable.
9 replies · active 461 weeks ago
Thulcandran's avatar

Thulcandran · 461 weeks ago

My dad did this in the best voice. Though somehow in memory I forgot the "Tim Toldrum/Tom Tildrum" thing and was sure it was that they were burying the king in effigy and Tom had to run for his life, because they were "mourning" the King o' the Cats and it was a message that he had to flee.
I have a superficially different version of this story memorized and when a particularly fey mood takes me I tell it as though it was a normal joke to any person nearby.
I first started reading Mallory's pieces when her story about Leprechauns included a reference to the Last Unicorn and, as the Toast begins to leave us, I am comforted to know that our shared canon is still bizarrely spot on.
A huge, an enormous, procession of cats carrying a cat sized coffin.
That explains a lot about your whole deal, I'm glad you found this in time to tell us about it!
this is more frightening than it has any right to be you are a frightening person Mallory Ortberg even when you're just quoting someone else I have a scare now
I lived for these types of stories as a child. Random folktale weirdness, original Grimm stories in German, Greek and Norse myths... Why my parents never got concerned is something I'm confused by, yet grateful for.
Can anyone scared by this tell me what makes it scary to them? Because I genuinely read this as a very charming little tale about a cat getting a good promotion.
5 replies · active 461 weeks ago
I know "that was a wild ride from start to finish" is sort of overused nowadays, but it REALLY fits here. Loved it!
Romancing the Loan's avatar

Romancing the Loan · 461 weeks ago

I read this story as part of compendium in first grade along with the one about the girl whose neck-ribbon held her head on and it scared the absolute crap out of me. Not sure why now; all congratulations to their cat.
1 reply · active 461 weeks ago
I have definitely read this is a book of short stories before, although I can't remember where. i though maybe it was "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark" but it doesn't seem like it...
1 reply · active 461 weeks ago
Michelle's avatar

Michelle · 461 weeks ago

The Hobyahs is actually terrifying.
"Tear down the hempenstalks, eat up the old man and woman, and carry off the little girl!"
Poor little dog Turpey :(
"More English Fairy Tales" by Joseph Jacobs, eh? Sounds like a good read! Well now... let's see, the first story is "The Pied Piper... of Francheville."

FRANCHEVILLE!?

Jacobs, you magnificent bastard. I stand in awe of your transcendent chutzpah.
1 reply · active 461 weeks ago
Crustacean's avatar

Crustacean · 461 weeks ago

I love this story! There's a version of it in Aegypt by John Crowley, which is a pretty excellent book.


Great illustrations in this book!
so is "chestesses" the old english "breasteses"
I'll tell you guys one of my favorite creepy folktales, since I can't find the exact match on the internet.

Once upon a time, long ago, a young man was travelling a lonely road. He was tired and he was hungry. At last he came to a cottage; since it was abandoned, he went right in and made himself at home.

It was cold and uninhabited, but there was wood for a fire and a table and chair for him to sit at. He got the fireplace started right away and warmed himself for a time. Feeling more comfortable, he took out a fine link of sausage from his pack and put it on the fire to roast.

The smell filled the whole room, delicious. The young man's mouth watered.

At last the sausage was ready to eat. He took his food back to the table, sliced it up, and sat down to enjoy his meal. Alas, it was not to be.

For the young man was rudely interrupted! From the chimney, high up, came a great clanging and groaning. To his astonishment, a leg dropped down into the ashes of the fireplace.

Which would have been strange enough. But soon came another, and an arm, and yet another arm - all the parts of the body, cut up. Last was a dismembered head.

The ghost - for that is what it was - reassembled himself, bit by bit. He crawled from the fireplace, covered in soot, and came to stand beside the man. He didn't say a word.

Well, the young man was awfully hungry. And he wasn't about to let some ghost put him off his food. He reached for a piece of sausage and lifted it to his mouth.

The ghost reached out too, and smeared the sausage with soot. The man threw it away. He tried again. The ghost did the same thing.

Three times the ghost ruined the man's food. Finally, in a fit of frustration, our traveller struck the ghost hard on the sides of his head. So hard that he knocked him down.

"Thank god," said the ghost, hoarsely. "You have released me." He confessed that years ago he had boxed his father's ears so badly during an argument that he accidently killed him, and had been condemned to haunt the cottage until someone did the same to him.

He returned to the chimney, disappeared and bothered the young man no more.
5 replies · active 460 weeks ago
My sister and I were just talking about this story this weekend! It's been at least 30 years since our Grandma read it to us at her daycare. We were terrified then and we still are today.
So you guys. I love you. I understand about why you're closing it blah blah and I'm working through my stages of grief and that's all cool we can still be friends, especially if occasionally Dear Prudence ventures into all that's wrong of possums e.g. (or how about ferrets, which hasn't been done).

But OMG with the content right now, it's like when the one you thought was "the one" breaks it off because they don't see a future but then wants to come over because you're such a great friend and so easy to talk to and they miss you and maybe they'd like to mess around a bit but still you've gotta remember that July 1 is around the corner and IT'S OVER.

:-(
These stories always remind me of The Thief of Always by Clive Barker. It's a childhood favorite of mine and it's a fable that I still enjoy reading. It's a good creepy story, but honestly, the illustrations in the book alone freak me the fuck out: https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/53/42/a...
It all makes sense now; three years at The Toast was just a buildup for an explosive escape up the chimney.
I either read, or mis-remember, a version of the story in which the cats' line was, "Tell the heir that the King of the Cats is dead," and the man to whom they speak re-tells this story as, "So here's this super weird thing that happened to me..."

Stephen Vincent Benét also did a very interesting rendition of this story; in that, the heir apparent is not just a kitty, but a conductor with a cat's tail, who is wooing the main character's fiancée. The main character tells this story to convince his competition to go elsewhere... but there's an implication at the end that his fiancée may have gone off to become Queen of the Cats anyway.
Once I related this very same story out loud to my parents, because I thought it was great, and the second that I finished, our cat -- also named Tom -- leapt up from where he was sitting by the fireplace and ran out of the room.

He came, eventually, I don't know if there'd just been a misunderstanding or he'd come to reject monarchy as a viable system of governance, he didn't talk much about it.
KreenWarrior's avatar

KreenWarrior · 461 weeks ago

I first heard this story as part of The Godmother's Apprentice, where the heir's owner decided to follow the cats and became part of the plot. Never occurred to me that it would be creepy.
1 reply · active 435 weeks ago

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