d her in his mouth, and
swallowed her.
This happens every day in the world.
* * * * *
THE SWEET SOUP
Once on a time there was a poor but very good little girl, who lived
alone with her mother, and when my story begins, they had nothing in
the house to eat. So the child went out into the forest, and there she
met an old woman, who already knew her distress, and who presented her
with a pot which had the following power. If one said to it, "Boil,
little pot!" it would cook sweet soup; and when one said: "Stop,
little pot!" it would immediately cease to boil. The little girl took
the pot home to her mother, and now their poverty and distresses were
at an end, for they could have sweet broth as often as they pleased.
One day, however, the little girl went out, and in her absence the
mother said: "Boil, little pot!" So it began to cook, and she soon ate
all she wished; but when the poor woman wanted to have the pot stop,
she found she did not know the word. Away, therefore, the pot boiled,
and very quickly was over the edge; and as it boiled and boiled the
kitchen presently became full, then the house, and the next house, and
soon the whole street. It seemed likely to satisfy all the world, for,
though there was the greatest necessity to do so, nobody knew how to
stop it. At last, when only a very small cottage of all the village
was left unfilled with soup, the child returned and said at once:
"Stop, little pot!"
Immediately it ceased to boil; but whoever wishes to enter the village
now must eat his way through the soup!!!
* * * * *
THE STRAW THE COAL AND THE BEAN
All alone, in a quiet little village, lived a poor old woman. One day
she had a dish of beans which she wanted to cook for dinner, so she
made a fire on the hearth, and in order that it should burn up quickly
she lighted it with a handful of straw.
She hung the pot over the fire, and poured in the beans; but one fell
on to the floor without her noticing it, and rolled away beside a
piece of straw. Soon afterwards a live coal flew out of the fire and
joined their company. Then the straw began to speak.
"Dear friends," said he, "whence come you?"
"I was fortunate enough to spring out of the fire," answered the
coal. "Had I not exerted myself to get out when I did, I should most
certainly have been burnt to ashes."
"I have also just managed to save my skin," sa
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