

"You can, can you? We’ll see about that!" said they, and they too threw down their spades, and ran after him. He said, "I’ve outrun an old man, an old woman, a little boy, and two well diggers, and I can outrun you too-o-o!" "Where ye going, gingerbread man?" said they. On ran the gingerbread man, and by-and-by he came to two men digging a ditch. "You can, can you? We’ll see about that?" Said they, and so they threw down their picks and ran after him, but couldn’t catch up with him, and soon they had to sit down by the roadside to rest.

He said, "I’ve outrun an old man, an old woman, and a little boy - and I can outrun you too-o-o!" On went the gingerbread man, and by-and-by he came to two men digging a well who looked up from their work and called out, "Where ye going, gingerbread man?" The gingerbread man outran all three a long way, and was soon out of sight, while they had to sit down, all out of breath, on a bank to rest. The little boy ran after him as fast as he could manage, crying out to his grandfather and grandmother, who heard the noise, and threw down their spades in the garden to give chase too. The little boy ran to shut the door, but the gingerbread man was too quick for him and rolled through the door, down the steps, and out into the road long before the little boy could catch him. All of a sudden he heard a noise, and he looked up and the oven door popped open, and out of the oven jumped a gingerbread man, and went rolling along end over end towards the open door of the house. But he started to day dream, and didn’t watch it all of the time. So the old man and the old woman went out and began to dig potatoes, and left the little boy to tend the oven. When she put him in the oven to bake, she said to the little boy, "You watch the gingerbread man while your grandfather and I go out to work in the garden." She added icing for his hair and clothes, and little blobs of dough for his nose and eyes. One morning the old woman made some gingerbread in the shape of a man. Once upon a time there was an old man, an old woman, and a little boy.

In the 1890 version by Joseph Jacobs, the hero was Johnny-Cake, but we have changed him to the more familiar Gingerbread Man. This is the fast paced tale of the Gingerbread Man who leapt out of the oven and ran away.
