How Anansi the spider won all the world’s stories—and then gave them away to everyone.
Before Anansi, there were no stories in the world.
All the stories belonged to Nyame, the Sky God, and he kept them locked in a great golden box at the top of the sky. People lived and worked and slept and woke, but they had no tales to tell around the fire. Life was quiet. Too quiet.
Anansi the spider climbed up his silken thread to the top of the sky and knocked on Nyame’s door.
“I would like to buy the stories,” he said.
Nyame laughed. Kings with great armies had tried to buy the stories. Warriors with chests of gold had failed.
“My price is this,” said Nyame, amused. “Bring me the python Onini, the hornets of Mmoboro, and the leopard Osebo—alive.”
Anansi bowed and descended to earth.
He caught Onini by telling the python he was the longest creature alive and inviting him to prove it by stretching out beside a bamboo pole—then tied him fast.
He smoked out the hornets of Mmoboro by convincing them a rainstorm was coming and they should shelter inside a gourd—then stoppered it.
He trapped Osebo by digging a deep pit in the leopard’s path, covering it with branches, and waiting.
He brought all three to Nyame.
The Sky God looked at the spider with new eyes. He handed over the golden box.
Anansi descended to earth with all the world’s stories. And he opened the box and let them all out.
Every story flew to a different place. Some nested in trees where children would find them. Some rode the wind across the ocean. Some lived in the crackle of fires on cold nights.
Anansi kept none of them. He gave them all away.
That is why stories belong to everyone. And why, to this day, they say: “This is a story of Anansi”—not because Anansi hoards them, but because Anansi set them free.
Moral of the Story
The greatest things we earn or receive become most valuable when we share them with everyone. Sharing knowledge and stories multiplies them—it does not reduce them.
Learn These Words
- gourd
- a hollow dried shell of a plant, used as a container
- stopper
- to close an opening with a plug
- hoard
- to collect and keep a large amount of something, unwilling to share
- descended
- moved downward
- amused
- finding something entertaining or funny
Test Your Understanding
1Who owned all the world’s stories at the beginning?
2What three creatures did Anansi need to bring to Nyame?
3How did Anansi catch the hornets?
4What did Anansi do with the stories after winning them?
5What lesson does this story teach?
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the story of Anansi and Nyame’s spider web about?
Nyame’s Spider Web retells the classic West African folktale of how Anansi the spider outwitted the Sky God Nyame to win all the world’s stories. Through cleverness rather than strength, Anansi captures three fearsome creatures as payment, earns the stories, and ultimately shares them with all of humanity.
Who is Anansi the spider in African folklore?
Anansi is a beloved trickster figure from Akan and West African tradition, often depicted as a spider who uses wit and cunning to overcome much stronger opponents. He is closely associated with storytelling, wisdom, and knowledge, and appears in folktales across Africa and the African diaspora.
What price did Nyame ask Anansi to pay for the world’s stories?
Nyame demanded that Anansi bring him three seemingly impossible prizes: the great python Onini, the deadly hornets of Mmoboro, and the fearsome leopard Osebo — all captured alive. Many kings and warriors had failed before Anansi, but he succeeded using clever tricks rather than brute force.
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How did Anansi capture the python, hornets, and leopard?
Anansi used a different trick for each creature. He flattered the python Onini into stretching beside a pole, then tied him. He convinced the hornets to shelter inside a gourd from a fake rainstorm, then sealed it. He dug a pit in the leopard’s path and waited for Osebo to fall in.
What is the moral lesson of the Anansi and Nyame story?
The story teaches that wisdom and creativity can achieve what wealth and power cannot. It also celebrates storytelling itself as a priceless gift meant to be shared with everyone, not hoarded by the powerful. Anansi’s choice to give the stories away underscores the idea that knowledge grows when it is shared.

