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Rh Thus they kept on quarrelling and fighting about the egg, and they were very near tearing each other's hair. But at last they agreed that it should belong to them all, and that they should sit on it as the geese do and hatch a gosling. The Brst woman sat on it for eight days, taking it very comfortably and doing nothing at all, while the others had to work hard both for their own and her living. One of the women began to make some insinuations to her about this. " Well, I suppose you didn't come out of the egg either before you could chirp," said the woman who was on the egg. "But I think there is something in this egg, for I fancy I can hear some one inside grumbling every other moment: 'Herring and soup! Porridge and milk 1 ' You can come and sit for eight days now, and then we will sit and work in turn, all of us." So when the fifth in turn had sat for eight days, she heard plainly some one inside the egg screeching for " Herring and soup! Porridge and milk!" And so she made a hole in it ; but instead of a gosling out came a baby, but it was awfully ugly, and had a big head and a tJny little body. The first thing it screamed out for, as soon as it put its head outside the egg, was " Herring and soup! Porridge and milk!" And so they called it " the greedy youngster." Ugly as he was, they were fond of him at first ; but before long he became so greedy that he ate up all the meat they had. When they boiled a dish of soup or a pot of porridge which they thought would be suflicient for all six, he finished it all by himself. So they would not have him any longer. " I have not had a decent meal since this changeling crept out of the eggshell," said one of them, and when the youngster heard that they were all of the same opinion, tie said he was quite willing