![]() “Please help me!” groaned the lion in pain. The little mouse was scared but walked towards the plea until it came across the lion. And so the little mouse ran away.Ī few days later, the little mouse heard a roar: “Help me!” “You’re too tiny to help me! Off you go,” said the lion amused that such a small creature would say such a thing. “Please let me go! Let me go! I will help you one day for your kindness!” squealed the little mouse. “Aaargh!” roared the lion and held up the squeaking mouse. In play, a little mouse ran up and down the lion’s body. One day in the jungle, a lion lay sleeping. You can narrate it with animal sounds too. This is another story from Aesop’s Fables. So, the big bad wolf was defeated and ran away. He then huffed and puffed but could not blow away the house of the third little pig, who sat cozy in his brick house. He said, “I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down!”Īnd each pig replied, “not by the hairs of my chin-y chin chins!”īut he huffed and puffed and blew away the straw and stick houses of the first two little pigs. One day, a big bad wolf came to attack each of the three little pigs. While the first two pigs played, the third pig worked every day to build a strong house made of brick. The second pig put in a little effort and built a house made of sticks. The first pig made hardly any effort and built a house made of straw. When their mother sent them out into the world, each of the three little pigs decided to build a house of their own. My daughter loves adding actions to this story. ![]() This oral story highlights the importance of hard work. He chased after him and pulled grandma and Little Red Riding Hood out of the wolf’s stomach.Īnd the next time Little Red took something to her grandmother, she stayed on the path and ignored any wolves that encouraged her to stray. Luckily, a huntsman passed the house and noticed the big Bad Wolf. “Oh, but, grandmother, what a terrible big mouth you have.”Īnd with one jump he swallowed up Little Red Riding Hood. “But, grandmother, what big eyes you have,” she said. “The better to hear you with, my child,” was the reply. When Little Red arrived, she said “Oh, grandmother, what big ears you have.” ![]() He ate dear old grandma, put on her clothes, and laid in her bed. The wolf told grandmother that he, indeed was Little Red Riding Hood, and so he tricked the grandma into letting him in. Meanwhile, the wolf ran straight to the grandmother’s house and knocked at the door. While the wolf chatted with her, Little Red told him all about her grandmother and where she lived.Īnd so, the wolf encouraged her walk off the path and take her time getting to her grandmother’s house. She did not know what he was, so she was not afraid of him. Her mother also told her to stay on the path and be wary of strangers.Īs Little Red Riding Hood was walking along to her grandmother’s house, a wolf met her. One day, her mother asked her to take food to her grandmother, who was ill and weak. Because of this, they called her Little Red Riding Hood. Once upon a time, there was a little girl who always wore a velvet red cape. Little Red Riding Hood is a classic tale that shows how important it is to be wary of strangers. The boy cried, “Wolf! Wolf! Please help me.”īut, the villagers assumed that he was tricking them again and did not come. Later that same day, a wolf came and terrorized the sheep. The villagers came to his aid, realized that it was a prank, and again left angry. The next day, the boy again cried out that the wolf was there. And so the villagers scolded him and left. On hearing him, the villagers rushed to help him.īut when they saw the grinning boy and realized he had cried wolf for his amusement, they got angry. One day, the boy was bored as he watched over the sheep and so he cried: “Wolf! Wolf!” as he ran into town. There once was a young boy whose father, a farmer, had asked him to take their herd of sheep grazing every day.
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