88 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
88 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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THE PEASANT, THE SNAKE AND THE FOX
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Once upon a time, a peasant on his way home heard a feeble voice calling
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"Help! Help!" He looked round, took a careful step or two then realised that
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the sound was coming from beneath a large boulder. He asked in amazement:
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"Who's that calling?" And a voice replied,
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"It's me. The rock rolled down over my hole and I'm shut in. I can't get
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out, I'm going to die. Please help me. Move the boulder." The peasant then
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asked:
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"But who are you?"
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"I'm a poor snake," came the reply.
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"A snake? But if I let you out you will bite me."
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"No, no, I promise I won't. Get me out, please!" The peasant allowed
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himself to be persuaded and he shifted the boulder . . . and out of a hole in
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the ground slid a snake which darted towards the peasant and tried to bite
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him. The man jumped back and cried,
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"Why did you do that?" The snake replied, "Because every good deed is
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rewarded by an evil one, didn't you know that?"
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"No, I didn't. I don't think that's so," said the peasant.
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"Very well," said the snake. "Let's go and ask someone. If we come across
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someone who thinks as you do, well, that's it, but if people say I'm right,
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then I shall bite you. Agreed?"
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"Agreed," said the peasant, and off they went.
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A little later, they met an old mangy lame horse, thin and covered in
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scratches, with an uncombed mane and dirty tail. The peasant spoke to him.
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"Listen, friend. If someone does a good deed, what does he get as his
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reward?" Without a moment's hesitation, the horse replied.
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"A bad deed. Look at me! I served my master faithfully for years and now
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that I'm old, he has left me to die of starvation!" At these words, the snake
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turned to the peasant and hissed, "Did you hear that? I shall bite you now!"
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But the man exclaimed: "Wait! One question isn't enough! We have to ask
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someone else."
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"Bother!" exclaimed the snake. "Very well, let's look for someone else, but
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wait and see, I'm right and I'll get my bite!" So, leaving the horse behind,
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the pair went on their way.
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They met a sheep which, at the peasant's question, said: "A good deed is
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always repaid with a bad deed. Look at me, I always follow my master and never
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complain. I obey him all the time and what does he do? He shears my fleece in
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winter, so I feel the cold, and makes me keep it in summer, so I melt with the
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heat!"
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"Get ready," said the snake, "I'm about to bite!" But the peasant said,
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"Please! We've had the first round, and the second one as well, now let's
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play the deciding round. If I'm wrong at the third question, then I'll let you
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bite me."
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On they went, and in the wood, the peasant caught sight of a fox. Suddenly
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he had an idea. With an excuse, he left the snake on the road and ran into the
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wood to speak to the fox.
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"Listen, fox, do you too think that a good deed is always rewarded by a bad
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one?"
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"Of course!" replied the fox. Then the man went on.
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"Well, listen, I'm going to ask you the same question in front of a snake.
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If you say that one good deed is rewarded by another good deed, I'll give you
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a present of a piglet, a lamb or a goose. How's that?"
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"Good," said the fox. The peasant went back to the snake.
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"I saw a fox over there," he said. "As you know, foxes are wise. Let's go
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and hear what he thinks about it." A little later they asked the fox the same
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question and the fox replied as had been agreed.
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"A good deed is always rewarded with another good deed, but," he went on,
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"why ask me that question?"
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"Because this snake, that I helped to escape from his hole blocked by a
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boulder, wants to bite me," replied the peasant. The fox looked at the snake
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and said, "Hmm! I think a snake can manage to slither under a boulder."
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"But it was a big boulder," the snake protested, "and, it was blocking the
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entrance to my den."
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"I don't believe you!"
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"Oh, don't you? Well come and see then," said the snake, setting off for
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his den with the fox and the peasant. Pointing to the boulder, he said, "See?
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That boulder fell just there," and he pointed to the entrance.
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But the fox shook his head. "A big snake like you couldn't get into such a
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little hole," he said. Annoyed, the snake retorted,
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"Don't you think so?" and slid swiftly into the hole. Then the fox shouted,
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"Quick, peasant man! Shut him in!" and the peasant rolled the boulder back
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across the mouth of the den, imprisoning the snake (and I think he's in there
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yet!).
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"Ah, fox," said the peasant happily, "now that was a good deed! You got rid
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of that wicked snake for me! Thanks a million!"
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"Oh, it was nothing," replied the fox, "but don't forget that piglet, the
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lamb and the goose you promised me."
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"No, I won't. Come to the farm this evening and you shall have them," said
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the man.
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That same evening, the fox went to the farm, but the peasant appeared with
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two snarling dogs and a gun, shouting, "Get out of here, you horrible beast,
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if you don't want to get into trouble!"
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The fox trotted away, sad and disappointed, muttering, "and they say I'm
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cunning! The cunning one is that peasant. Oh, well, that poor snake was
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probably right, good deeds are repaid with bad deeds," and off he went, his
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tail between his legs, into the wood.
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