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The Pied Piper
Once upon a time... on the banks of a
great river in the north of Germany lay a town called Hamelin.
The citizens of Hamelin were honest folk who lived contentedly
in their grey stone houses.
The years went by, and the town grew very
rich.
Then one day, an extraordinary thing happened
to disturb the peace.
Hamelin had always had rats, and a lot
too. But they had never been a danger, for the cats had always
solved the rat problem in the usual way - by killing them. All
at once, however, the rats began to multiply.
In the end, a black sea of rats swarmed
over the whole town.
First, they attacked the barns and storehouses,
then, for lack of anything better, they gnawed the wood, cloth
or anything at all. The one thing they didn't eat was metal.
The terrified citizens flocked to plead
with the town councillors to free them from the plague of rats.
But the council had, for a long time,
been sitting in the Mayor's room, trying to think of a plan.
"What we need is an army of cats!"
But all the cats were dead.
"We'll put down poisoned food then..."
But most of the food was already gone and even poison did not
stop the rats.
"It just can't be done without help!"
said the Mayor sadly.
Just then, while the citizens milled around
outside, there was a loud knock at the door.
"Who can that be?" the city
fathers wondered uneasily, mindful of the angry crowds.
They gingerly opened the door. And to
their surprise, there stood a tall thin man dressed in brightly
coloured clothes, with a long feather in his hat, and waving
a gold pipe at them.
"I've freed other towns of beetles
and bats," the stranger announced, "and for a thousand
florins, I'll rid you of your rats!"
"A thousand florins!" exclaimed
the Mayor. "We'll give you fifty thousand if you succeed!"
At once the stranger hurried away, saying:
"It's late now, but at dawn tomorrow, there won't be a rat
left in Hamelin!"
The sun was still below the horizon, when
the sound of a pipe wafted through the streets of Hamelin. The
pied piper slowly made his way through the houses and behind
him flocked the rats.
Out they scampered from doors, windows
and gutters, rats of every size, all after the piper. And as
he played, the stranger marched down to the river and straight
into the water, up to his middle. Behind him swarmed the rats
and every one was drowned and swept away by the current.
By the time the sun was high in the sky,
there was not a single rat in the town. There was even greater
delight at the town hall, until the piper tried to claim his
payment.
"Fifty thousand florins?" exclaimed
the councillors, "Never..."
"A thousand florins at least!"
cried the pied piper angrily.
But the Mayor broke in. "The rats
are all dead now and they can never come back. So be grateful
for fifty florins, or you'll not get even that..."
His eyes flashing with rage, the pied
piper pointed a threatening finger at the Mayor.
"You'll bitterly regret ever breaking
your promise," he said, and vanished.
A shiver of fear ran through the councillors,
but the Mayor shrugged and said excitedly: "We've saved
fifty thousand florins!"
That night, freed from the nightmare of
the rats, the citizens of Hamelin slept more soundly than ever.
And when the strange sound of piping wafted through the streets
at dawn, only the children heard it.
Drawn as by magic, they hurried out of
their homes. Again, the pied piper paced through the town, this
time, it was children of all sizes that flocked at his heels
to the sound of his strange piping.
The long procession soon left the town
and made its way through the wood and across the forest till
it reached the foot of a huge mountain. When the piper came to
the dark rock, he played his pipe even louder still and a great
door creaked open.
Beyond lay a cave. In trooped the children
behind the pied piper, and when the last child had gone into
the darkness, the door reaked shut.
A great landslide came down the mountain
blocking the entrance to the cave forever.
Only one little lame boy escaped this
fate. It was he who told the anxious citizens, searching for
their children, what had happened. And no matter what people
did, the mountain never gave up its victims.
Many years were to pass before the merry
voices of other children would ring through the streets of Hamelin
but the memory of the harsh lesson lingered in everyone's heart
and was passed down from father to son through the centuries.
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