<SPAN name="chapter_13"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page143" title="143"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="thirteen">XIII</span><br/> WRIGGLETTO</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">It</span> was in the afternoon of a beautiful summer
day, and Mr. Munchausen had come up from
the simmering city of Cimmeria to spend a day or
two with Diavolo and Angelica and their venerable
parents. They had all had dinner, and were now
out on the back piazza overlooking the magnificent
river Styx, which flowed from the mountains to the
sea, condescending on its way thither to look in
upon countless insignificant towns which had
grown up on its banks, among which was the one in
which Diavolo and Angelica had been born and
lived all their lives. Mr. Munchausen was lying
comfortably in a hammock, collecting his thoughts.</p>
<p>Angelica was somewhat depressed, but Diavolo
was jubilant and all because in the course of a walk
they had had that morning Diavolo had killed a
snake.</p>
<p>“It was fine sport,” said Diavolo. “He was
lying there in the sun, and I took a stick and put
him out of his misery in two minutes.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page144" title="144"> </SPAN>Here Diavolo illustrated the process by whacking
the Baron over his waist-coat with a small
malacca stick he carried.</p>
<p>“Well, I didn’t like it,” said Angelica. “I don’t
care for snakes, but somehow or other it seems to
me we’d ought to have left him alone. He wasn’t
hurting anybody off there. If he’d come walking
on our place, that would have been one thing, but
we went walking where he was, and he had as much
right to take a sun-bath there as we had.”</p>
<p>“That’s true enough,” put in Mr. Munchausen,
resolved after Diavolo’s whack, to side against him.
“You’ve just about hit it, Angelica. It wasn’t
polite of you in the first place, to disturb his snakeship
in his nap, and having done so, I can’t see why
Diavolo wanted to kill him.”</p>
<p>“Oh, pshaw!” said Diavolo, airily. “What’s
snakes good for except to kill? I’ll kill ’em every
chance I get. They aren’t any good.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Mr. Munchausen, quietly. “I
suppose you know all about it; but I know a thing
or two about snakes myself that do not exactly
agree with what you say. They are some good
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page145" title="145"> </SPAN>sometimes, and, as a matter of fact, as a general
rule, they are less apt to attack you without reason
than you are to attack them. A snake is
rather inclined to mind its own business unless he
finds it necessary to do otherwise. Occasionally
too you’ll find a snake with a truly amiable character.
I’ll never forget my old pet Wriggletto, for
instance, and as long as I remember him I can’t
help having a warm corner for snakes in my heart.”</p>
<p>Here Mr. Munchausen paused and puffed
thoughtfully on his cigar as a far-away half-affectionate
look came into his eye.</p>
<p>“Who was Wriggletto?” asked Diavolo, transferring
a half dollar from Mr. Munchausen’s pocket
to his own.</p>
<p>“Who was he?” cried Mr. Munchausen. “You
don’t mean to say that I have never told you about
Wriggletto, my pet boa-constrictor, do you?”</p>
<p>“You never told me,” said Angelica. “But I’m
not everybody. Maybe you’ve told some other little
Imps.”</p>
<p>“No, indeed!” said Mr. Munchausen. “You
two are the only little Imps I tell stories to, and as
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page146" title="146"> </SPAN>far as I am concerned, while I admit you are not
everybody you are somebody and that’s more than
everybody is. Wriggletto was a boa-constrictor I
once knew in South America, and he was without
exception, the most remarkable bit of a serpent I
ever met. Genial, kind, intelligent, grateful and
useful, and, after I’d had him a year or two, wonderfully
well educated. He could write with himself as
well as you or I can with a pen. There’s a recommendation
for you. Few men are all that—and few
boa-constrictors either, as far as that goes. I admit
Wriggletto was an exception to the general run of
serpents, but he was all that I claim for him, nevertheless.”</p>
<p>“What kind of a snake did you say he was?”
asked Diavolo.</p>
<p>“A boa-constrictor,” said Mr. Munchausen,
“and I knew him from his childhood. I first
encountered Wriggletto about ten miles out of
Para on the river Amazon. He was being swallowed
by a larger boa-constrictor, and I saved his
life by catching hold of his tail and pulling him
out just as the other was getting ready to give the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page147" title="147"> </SPAN>last gulp which would have taken Wriggletto in
completely, and placed him beyond all hope of ever
being saved.”</p>
<p>“What was the other boa doing while you were
saving Wriggletto?” asked Diavolo, who was fond
always of hearing both sides to every question, and
whose father, therefore, hoped he might some day
grow up to be a great judge, or at least serve with
distinction upon a jury.</p>
<p>“He couldn’t do anything,” returned Mr. Munchausen.
“He was powerless as long as Wriggletto’s
head stuck in his throat and just before I
got the smaller snake extracted I killed the other
one by cutting off his tail behind his ears. It was
not a very dangerous rescue on my part as long as
Wriggletto was likely to be grateful. I must confess
for a minute I was afraid he might not comprehend
all I had done for him, and it was just possible
he might attack me, but the hug he gave me
when he found himself free once more was reassuring.
He wound himself gracefully around my
body, squeezed me gently and then slid off into the
road again, as much as to say ‘Thank you, sir.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page148" title="148"> </SPAN>You’re a brick.’ After that there was nothing Wriggletto
would not do for me. He followed me everywhere
I went from that time on. He seemed to
learn all in an instant that there were hundreds of
little things to be done about the house of an old
bachelor like myself which a willing serpent could
do, and he made it his business to do those things:
like picking up my collars from the floor, and finding
my studs for me when they rolled under the
bureau, and a thousand and one other little services
of a like nature, and when you, Master Diavolo,
try in future to say that snakes are only good
to kill and are of no use to any one, you must at
least make an exception in favour of Wriggletto.”</p>
<p>“I will,” said Diavolo, “But you haven’t told us
of the other useful things he did for you yet.”</p>
<p>“I was about to do so,” said Mr. Munchausen.
“In the first place, before he learned how to do little
things about the house for me, Wriggletto acted
as a watch-dog and you may be sure that nobody
ever ventured to prowl around my house at night
while Wriggletto slept out on the lawn. Para was
quite full of conscienceless fellows, too, at that
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page149" title="149"> </SPAN>time, any one of whom would have been glad to
have a chance to relieve me of my belongings if they
could get by my watch-snake. Two of them tried
it one dark stormy night, and Wriggletto when he
discovered them climbing in at my window, crawled
up behind them and winding his tail about them
crept down to the banks of the Amazon, dragging
them after him. There he tossed them into the
river, and came back to his post once more.”</p>
<p>“Did you see him do it, Uncle Munch?” asked
Angelica.</p>
<p>“No, I did not. I learned of it afterwards.
Wriggletto himself said never a word. He was too
modest for that,” said Mr. Munchausen. “One of
the robbers wrote a letter to the Para newspapers
about it, complaining that any one should be
allowed to keep a reptile like that around, and suggested
that anyhow people using snakes in place of
dogs should be compelled to license them, and put
up a sign at their gates:</p>
<p id="snake_sign">BEWARE OF THE SNAKE!</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page150" title="150"> </SPAN>“The man never acknowledged, of course, that
he was the robber,—said that he was calling on
business when the thing happened,—but he didn’t
say what his business was, but I knew better, and
later on the other robber and he fell out, and they
confessed that the business they had come on was
to take away a few thousand gold coins of the
realm which I was known to have in the house
locked in a steel chest.</p>
<p>“I bought Wriggletto a handsome silver collar
after that, and it was generally understood that he
was the guardian of my place, and robbers bothered
me no more. Then he was finer than a cat for
rats. On very hot days he would go off into the
cellar, where it was cool, and lie there with his
mouth wide open and his eyes shut, and catch rats
by the dozens. They’d run around in the dark, and
the first thing they’d know they’d stumble into
Wriggletto’s mouth; and he swallowed them and
licked his chops afterwards, just as you or I do
when we’ve swallowed a fine luscious oyster or a
clam.</p>
<p>“But pleasantest of all the things Wriggletto
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page151" title="151"> </SPAN>did for me—and he was untiring in his attentions in
that way—was keeping me cool on hot summer
nights. Para as you may have heard is a pretty
hot place at best, lying in a tropical region as it
does, but sometimes it is awful for a man used to
the Northern climate, as I was. The act of fanning
one’s self, so far from cooling one off, makes one
hotter than ever. Maybe you remember how it was
with the elephant in the poem:</p>
<div class="poem">
<p>“‘Oh my, oh dear!’ the elephant said,</p>
<p class="i2">‘It is so awful hot!</p>
<p>I’ve fanned myself for seventy weeks,</p>
<p class="i2">And haven’t cooled a jot.’</p>
</div>
<p>“And that was the way it was with me in Para
on hot nights. I’d fan and fan and fan, but I
couldn’t get cool until Wriggletto became a member
of my family, and then I was all right. He
used to wind his tail about a huge palm-leaf fan
I had cut in the forest, so large that I couldn’t possibly
handle it myself, and he’d wave it to and fro
by the hour, with the result that my house was
always the breeziest place in Para.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page152" title="152"> </SPAN>“Where is Wriggletto now?” asked Diavolo.</p>
<p>“Heigho!” sighed Mr. Munchausen. “He died,
poor fellow, and all because of that silver collar I
gave him. He tried to swallow a jibola that
entered my house one night on wickedness intent,
and while Wriggletto’s throat was large enough
when he stretched it to take down three jibolas,
with a collar on which wouldn’t stretch he couldn’t
swallow one. He didn’t know that, unfortunately,
and he kept on trying until the jibola got a quarter
way down and then he stuck. Each swallow, of
course, made the collar fit more tightly and finally
poor Wriggletto choked himself to death. I
felt so badly about it that I left Para within a
month, but meanwhile I had a suit of clothes made
out of Wriggletto’s skin, and wore it for years, and
then, when the clothes began to look worn, I had
the skin re-tanned and made over into shoes and
slippers. So you see that even after death he was
useful to me. He was a faithful snake, and that is
why when I hear people running down all snakes I
tell the story of Wriggletto.”</p>
<div id="illo12" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo12.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo12-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="416" alt="A large snake fans the Baron while he reads" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“He used to wind his tail about a fan and
he’d wave it to and fro by the hour.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter XIII.</span></p>
</div>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page153" title="153"> </SPAN>There was a pause for a few moments, when
Diavolo said, “Uncle Munch, is that a true story
you’ve been giving us?”</p>
<p>“True?” cried Mr. Munchausen. “True?
Why, my dear boy, what a question! If you don’t
believe it, bring me your atlas, and I’ll show you
just where Para is.”</p>
<p>Diavolo did as he was told, and sure enough, Mr.
Munchausen did exactly as he said he would, which
Diavolo thought was very remarkable, but he still
was not satisfied.</p>
<p>“You said he could write as well with himself as
you or I could with a pen, Uncle Munch,” he said.
“How was that?”</p>
<p>“Why that was simple enough,” explained Mr.
Munchausen. “You see he was very black, and
thirty-nine feet long and remarkably supple and
slender. After a year of hard study he learned to
bunch himself into letters, and if he wanted to say
anything to me he’d simply form himself into a
written sentence. Indeed his favourite attitude
when in repose showed his wonderful gift in chirography
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page154" title="154"> </SPAN>as well as his affection for me. If you will
get me a card I will prove it.”</p>
<p>Diavolo brought Mr. Munchausen the card and
upon it he drew the following:</p>
<div id="fig3" class="fig">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig03.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="186" alt="A snake in the form of ‘UncleMunch’" /></div>
<p>“There,” said Mr. Munchausen. “That’s the
way Wriggletto always used to lie when he was at
rest. His love for me was very affecting.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />