Danny  Ch. 2  
Page 8-14 


5. Read Story


The Big Friendly Giant


Page 8


 
My father,
without the slightest doubt,


was the most marvelous
and exciting father

any boy ever had.

Here is a picture of him.




Page 9
 


You might think,

if you didn’t know him well,

that he was
a stern and serious man.


He wasn’t.

 

He was actually
a wildly funny person.



What made him
appear so serious


was the fact
that he never smiled

with his mouth.

He did it all with his eyes.

 

He had brilliant blue eyes

and when he thought

of something funny,


his eyes would flash


and if you looked carefully,

you could actually see

a tiny little golden spark

dancing in the middle

of each eye.


 

But the mouth never moved.


I was glad my father
was an eye-smiler.



It meant he never gave me
a fake smile,


because it’s impossible
to make your eyes twinkle


if you aren’t feeling
twinkly yourself.


 

A mouth-smile is different.

You can fake a mouth-smile
any time you want,


simply by moving your lips.

 

I’ve also learned

that a real mouth-smile

always has an eye-smile

to go with it,

so watch out,

I say,

when someone

smiles at you with his mouth

but the eyes stay the same.

It’s sure to be phony (bogus).

 

 

My father was not

what you would call

an educated man

and I doubt if

he had read twenty books

in his life.

 

 

But he was a marvelous
story-teller.


He used to make up

a bedtime story for me

every single night,

and the best ones

were turned into serials

and went on

for many nights running.

 

 

One of them,

which must have gone on

for at least fifty nights,

was about an enormous fellow

called The Big Friendly Giant,

or The BFG for short.

 

The BFG was three times

as tall as an ordinary man

and his hands were

as big as wheelbarrows.

 

 

He lived in a vast underground cavern

not far from our filling-station

and he only came out
into the open


when it was dark.



Page 10


 

Inside the cavern

he had a powder-factory

where he made

more than a hundred

different kinds of magic powder.

 

 

Occasionally,
as he told his stories,


my father would stride

up and down
waving his arms


and waggling his fingers.

 

 

But mostly

he would sit close to me

on the edge of my bunk

and speak very softly.

 

 

‘The Big Friendly Giant

makes his magic powders

out of the dreams

that children dream

when they are asleep,’ he said.

 

 

‘How?’ I asked.

‘Tell me how, Dad.’

 

 

‘Dreams, my love,

are very mysterious things.

They float around

in the night air like little clouds,

searching for sleeping people.’

 

 

‘Can you see them?’ I asked.

‘Nobody can see them.’

‘Then how does

The Big Friendly Giant
catch them?


 

 

‘Ah,’ my father said.

‘That is the interesting part.

A dream, you see,

as it goes drifting

through the night air,

makes a tiny little

buzzing-humming sound,

a sound so soft and low

it is impossible

for ordinary people

to hear it.

 

 

But The BFG
can hear it easily.


His sense of hearing

is absolutely fantastic’

 

 

I loved the far intent look

on my father’s face

when he was telling a story.

 

 

His face was pale

and still and distant,

unconscious of

everything around him.

 

 

‘The BFG’, he said,

‘can hear the tread

of a ladybird’s footsteps

as she walks across a leaf.

 

 

He can hear the whisperings

of ants as they scurry around

in the soil

talking to one another.

 

 

He can hear

the sudden shrill cry of pain

a tree gives out

when a woodman

cuts into it

with an axe.

 


Page 11


 
Ah yes, my darling,

there is a whole world of sound

around us that we cannot hear

because our ears are simply not

sensitive enough.’

 

‘What happens

when he catches the dreams?

I asked.

  

‘He imprisons them

in glass bottles

and screws the tops

down tight,’ my father said.

  

‘He has thousands

of these bottles

in his cave.’


 

‘Does he catch bad dreams

as well as good ones?

 

‘Yes,’ my father said.

‘He catches both.

But he only uses

the good ones

in his powders.’


 

‘What does he do

with the bad ones?

 

‘He explodes them.’


It is impossible to tell you


how much I loved my father.

 

When he was sitting

close to me on my bunk

I would reach out

and slide my hand into his,

and then

he would fold his long fingers

around my fist,

holding it tight.


Page 12

 
 


‘What does The BFG do

with his powders

after he has made them?

I asked.

 

‘In the dead of night,’

my father said,

‘he goes prowling

through the villages

searching for houses

where children are asleep.

 

Because of his great height

he can reach windows

that are one

and even two flights up,

and when he finds a room

with a sleeping child,

he opens his suitcase…’

 

‘His suitcase?’ I said.

‘The BFG always carries

a suitcase and a blowpipe,’

my father said.

 

‘The blowpipe

is as long

as a lamp-post.

 

The suitcase

is for the powders.



Page 13


 
So he opens the suitcase

and selects exactly

the right powder…
 
and he puts it

into the blowpipe…
 

and he slides the blowpipe in

through the open window…

 

and poof…

 

he blows in the powder…

 

and the powder

floats around the room…

 

and the child breathes it in…’

 

‘And then what?’ I asked.

‘And then, Danny,

the child begins to dream

a marvelous

and fantastic dream…

 

and when the dream

reaches its most marvelous

and fantastic moment…

 

then the magic powder

really takes over…

 

and suddenly

the dream

is not a dream any longer

but a real happening…

 

and the child

is not asleep in bed…

 

he is fully awake

and is actually in the place

of the dream

and is taking part…

 

in the whole thing…

 

I mean

really taking part…

 

in real life.

 

More about that tomorrow.

It’s getting late.

Good-night, Danny.

Go to sleep.’

  

My father kissed me

and then

he turned down

the wick of

the little paraffin lamp

until the flame

went out.

  

He seated himself

in front of the wood stove,

which now made

a lovely red glow

in the dark room.

 

‘Dad,’ I whispered.

‘What is it?

‘Have you ever actually seen

The Big Friendly Giant?

  

‘Once,’ my father said.

‘Only once.’

‘You did! Where?

 

‘I was out

behind the caravan,’

my father said,

‘and it was a clear

moonlit night,

and I happened to look up

and suddenly I saw

this tremendous

tall person running along

the crest of the hill.

 

He had a queer

long-striding
(lollop) lolloping gait


and his black cloak

was streaming out

behind him

like the wings of a bird.


Page 14


  

There was a big suitcase

in one hand

and a blowpipe

in the other,

and when he came

to the high

hawthorn hedge

at the end of the field,

he just strode over it

as though it wasn’t there.’

  

‘Were you frightened, Dad?

‘No,’ my father said.

‘It was thrilling to see him,

and a little eerie,

but I wasn’t frightened.

Go to sleep now.

Good-night. ’




Danny Ch. 2 Page 8-14 Summary