Ambrose Bierce (1842–1914?), journalist and master of the short story, was born in Ohio, the tenth of thirteen children. At the outset of the Civil War, Bierce joined the army and chronicled what he saw in several short stories, including the well-known “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,” and the memoir What I Saw of Shiloh. In 1913 he traveled as an observer of Pancho Villa’s army and vanished without a trace in one of the most famous disappearances in American literary history.

The Man and the Snake

A Story

by Ambrose Bierce

It is of veritabyll report, and attested of so many that there be nowe of wyse and learned none to gaynsaye it, that ye serpente hys eye hath a magnetick propertie that whosoe falleth into its svasion is drawn forwards in despyte of his wille, and perisheth miserabyll by ye creature hys byte.

Stretched at ease upon a sofa, in gown and slippers, Harker Brayton smiled as he read the foregoing sentence in old Morryster’s Marvells of Science. “The only marvel in the matter,” he said to himself, “is that the wise and learned in Morryster’s day should have believed such nonsense as is rejected by most of even the ignorant in ours.”

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