Pied Piper of Hamlin
By: Mike • Essay • 347 Words • April 27, 2010 • 801 Views
Pied Piper of Hamlin
The Pied Piper is a very familiar and popular children’s folktale. Children all over have heard different versions of this story, a stranger who comes to a town to rid them of their infestation of rats. That is really all most people remember of this tale, but to actually read the entire story there is a lot more to the story than previously thought.
The people of Hemlin are distraught and searching for a solution to rid themselves of horrible rats that have consumed their town. The stranger comes to town at just the right moment claiming he is able to fix their crisis. The town elders accept, and in their enthusiasm offer the stranger fifty times more than he originally asked for. Whether or not their intentions were to give him what they offered or not is debatable, but most likely they believed he could not do it. Therefore proposing an absurd amount on the grounds that he would not succeed. However in the end they refused to even give him the minimum he asked for. Now that their problem was solved they had no use for the stranger and no real need to pay him, or so they thought.
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