<h3><SPAN name="chap105"></SPAN>105 Stories about Snakes</h3>
<p>First Story.</p>
<p>There was once a little child whose mother gave her every afternoon a small
bowl of milk and bread, and the child seated herself in the yard with it. When
she began to eat however, a snake came creeping out of a crevice in the wall,
dipped its little head in the dish, and ate with her. The child had pleasure in
this, and when she was sitting there with her little dish and the snake did not
come at once, she cried,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Snake, snake, come swiftly<br/>
Hither come, thou tiny thing,<br/>
Thou shalt have thy crumbs of bread,<br/>
Thou shalt refresh thyself with milk.”</p>
<p>Then the snake came in haste, and enjoyed its food. Moreover it showed
gratitude, for it brought the child all kinds of pretty things from its hidden
treasures, bright stones, pearls, and golden playthings. The snake, however,
only drank the milk, and left the bread-crumbs alone. Then one day the child
took its little spoon and struck the snake gently on its head with it, and
said, “Eat the bread-crumbs as well, little thing.” The mother, who
was standing in the kitchen, heard the child talking to someone, and when she
saw that she was striking a snake with her spoon, ran out with a log of wood,
and killed the good little creature.</p>
<p>From that time forth, a change came over the child. As long as the snake had
eaten with her, she had grown tall and strong, but now she lost her pretty rosy
cheeks and wasted away. It was not long before the funeral bird began to cry in
the night, and the redbreast to collect little branches and leaves for a
funeral garland, and soon afterwards the child lay on her bier.</p>
<h5>Second Story.</h5>
<p>An orphan child was sitting on the town walls spinning, when she saw a snake
coming out of a hole low down in the wall. Swiftly she spread out beside this
one of the blue silk handkerchiefs which snakes have such a strong liking for,
and which are the only things they will creep on. As soon as the snake saw it,
it went back, then returned, bringing with it a small golden crown, laid it on
the handkerchief, and then went away again. The girl took up the crown, it
glittered and was of delicate golden filagree work. It was not long before the
snake came back for the second time, but when it no longer saw the crown, it
crept up to the wall, and in its grief smote its little head against it as long
as it had strength to do so, until at last it lay there dead. If the girl had
but left the crown where it was, the snake would certainly have brought still
more of its treasures out of the hole.</p>
<h5>Third Story.</h5>
<p>A snake cries, “Huhu, huhu.” A child says, “Come out.”
The snake comes out, then the child inquires about her little sister:
“Hast thou not seen little Red-stockings?” The snake says,
“No.” “Neither have I.” “Then I am like you.
Huhu, huhu, huhu.”</p>
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