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The Gold-Giving Serpent
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The Gold-Giving Serpent
Now
in a certain place there lived a Brahman named Haridatta. He was a farmer, but poor was the
return his labour brought him. One day, at the end of the hot hours, the Brahman, overcome by the
heat, lay down under the shadow of a tree to have a doze. Suddenly he saw a great hooded snake
creeping out of an ant-hill near at hand. So he thought to himself, "Sure this is the guardian deity
of the field, and I have not ever worshipped it. That's why my farming is in vain. I will at once go
and pay my respects to it."
When he had made up his mind, he got some milk, poured it into a bowl, and went to the ant-hill, and
said aloud: "O Guardian of this Field! all this while I did not know that you dwelt here. That is
why I have not yet paid my respects to you; pray forgive me." And he laid the milk down and went to
his house. Next morning he came and looked, and he saw a gold denar in the bowl, and from that time
onward every day the same thing occurred he gave milk to the serpent and found a gold denar.
One day the Brahman had to go to the village, and so he ordered his son to take the milk to the
ant-hill. The son brought the milk, put it down, and went back home. Next day he went again and
found a denar, so he thought to himself: "This ant-hill is surely full of golden denars; I'll kill
the serpent, and take them all for myself." So next day, while he was giving the milk to the
serpent, the Brahman's son struck it on the head with a cudgel. But the serpent escaped death by the
will of fate, and in a rage bit the Brahman's son with its sharp fangs, and he fell down dead at
once. His people raised him a funeral pyre not far from the field and burnt him to ashes.
Two days afterwards his father came back, and when he learnt his son's fate he grieved and mourned.
But after a time, he took the bowl of milk, went to the ant-hill, and praised the serpent
with a loud voice. After a long, long time the serpent appeared, but only with its head out of the
opening of the ant-hill, and spoke to the Brahman: "'Tis greed that brings you here, and makes you
even forget the loss of your son. From this time forward friendship between us is impossible. Your
son struck me in youthful ignorance, and I have bitten him to death. How can I forget the blow with
the cudgel? And how can you forget the pain and grief at the loss of your son?" So speaking, it gave
the Brahman a costly pearl and disappeared. But before it went away it said: "Come back no more."
The Brahman took the pearl, and went back home, cursing the folly of his son.
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