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09/07/2020

The Wolf and the Seven Little Goats

11/30/2019

Once upon a time, there was a pig mother who gave birth to three little ones. These little pigs ate a lot and grew up so fast. When they were grown up, the mother said to them "You are now grown up, you aren't young anymore. Now, it's time for each of you to build your own house. But you must be carefull with the wolf, don't let it catch you"

11/30/2019

Once upon a time, in a forest, there lived a fox and a wolf. When the winter came, the fox and her children were starving so she left their cave to find some food. She stood in front of the cave, sniffling around. She smelled something tasty “Oh, there must be fish”

11/30/2019

Once upon a time, in the bottom of the ocean, there was a gorgeous castle where the Sea king lived with his beautiful daughters. The youngest one was Ariel, she was extremely beautiful and her voice was so clear and fresh like water in the sea

10/18/2019

LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD - FAIRY TALES

10/18/2019

The Hare and the Hedgehog - Grimms' Fairy Tales – Rabbit & Hedgehog
Once upon a time, in the autumn, when the buckwheat was in bloom, in a village, Hedgehog and other people happily started a new day when the sun was shining bright and the wind was blowing warmly across the rice plants. Hedgehog was standing before his door feeling pleased with the cool morning wind, humming a familiar song
Sharp spikes, sharp spikes, fighting the enemies
Sharp spikes, sharp spikes, I am the hedgehog
Then Hedgehog remembered about the field near his house, where he and his family usualy harvested big turnips. They may be able to be picked again. Thinking about the big, delicious turnips that will help the family's meal be heartier; Hedgehog felt happy. He did what he thought; he closed the door then went to the field. He didn’t took the main road, he was about to go pass two blackthorn bushes to make a shortcut, then he met the Hare was walking along the road to the field.
Hedgehogs worried “Is the Hare planing to steal my turnips?”. But he still greeted Hare nicely. The Hare, however seeing himself as elite and terribly arrogant about it, did not answer but said sarcastically.
-How is it that you are running around in the field so early in the morning?"
Hedgehog answered:
- I'm taking a walk,
"Taking a walk?" laughed the hare. "I thought that hedgehog can only show spikes to scare people”
The way that the Hare said it made Hedgehod fuming mad, for he could stand anything except remarks about his remarkable spikes. Hedgehog said to Hare:
- I bet that you can’t raise your hackles like us so you have to fold your ears whenever encounter a bad guy?
Hare said with pride “Although our ears are long, we never fold them because we have such quick legs to run away from enemies.
“If you think you’re good, let’s compete”, thought the Hedgehog, then said “You don’t have to show off, if we have a race, you may not win”
"That is a laugh! You with your short legs!" said the hare. "How ridiculous, let it be, if you are so eager. But we have to bet something. What will we wager?"
"A bottle of milk," said the hedgehog.
"Accepted," said happily the hare. "Shake hands, and we can take right off."
"No, I'm not in such a hurry," said the hedgehog. "I'm very hungry. First I have to go home and eat something. I'll be back here at this spot in half an hour."
The hare was agreeable with this, and the hedgehog left.
On his way home the hedgehog thought to himself, "The hare is relying on his long legs, but I'll still beat him. He may well be a distinguished gentleman, but he's still a fool, and he'll be the one to pay."
Arriving home, he said to his wife, "Wife, get dressed quickly. You've got to go out to the field with me."
"What's the matter?" said his wife.
"I bet a bottle of milk with the hare that I could beat him in a race, and you need to help me."
"My God, man," the hedgehog's wife cried, "are you mad? Have you lost your mind? How can you agree to run a race with the hare?"
"Don’t lose faith in your husband," said the hedgehog. "This is my affair. Get dressed, and come with me."
What had the hedgehog's wife to do? She had to obey, whether she wanted to or not.
On the road, the hedgehog said to his wife, “Now pay attention to what I tell you. Do you see that? We are going to run the race down that long field. The hare will run in one furrow and I in another one. you have to stand here in the furrow. When the hare approaches just call out to him, 'I'm already here.'" Then we can win. The hedgehog’s wife agreed
With that they arrived at the field, the hedgehog showed his wife her place, and then he went to the top of the field. When he arrived the hare was already there.
"Can we start?" said the hare.
"Yes, indeed," said the hedgehog.
They stood in each furrow. The hare counted "One, two, three," and he tore down the field like a windstorm. But the hedgehog ran only about three steps and then ducked down in the furrow, sat quietly.
When the hare, in full run, arrived at the bottom of the field, the hedgehog's wife cried, "I'm already here!"
The hare, so surprised, thought it was the hedgehog himself, for as everyone knows, a hedgehog's wife looks just like her husband.
The hare thought, "Something's not right here." He called out, "Let's run back again!" And he took off again like a windstorm, with his ears flying from his head. But the hedgehog's wife remained quietly in place.
When the hare arrived at the top, the hedgehog called out to him, "I'm already here!"
The hare, beside himself with excitement, shouted, "Let's run back again!"
"It's all right with me," answered the hedgehog. "It doesn’t matter, we can run as much as you can”
So the hare ran seventy-three times, and the hedgehog always kept up with him. Each time the hare arrived at the top or the bottom of the field, the hedgehog or his wife said, "I am already here!"
But the hare did not complete the seventy-fourth time, fell down to the ground, breathed heavily. Then the hare had a precious lesson that do not look down on your rival, since that time no hare has agreed to enter a race with a hedgehog.

07/30/2019

Once upon a time, there was a young man living alone in a hut. He was hard-working but he still struggled to make ends meet.
One day, while working, he muttered to himself:
- I don't know why I plowed the fields and cultivated rice while no one eat them with me
- I can eat with you. – he heard a woman voice
He looked around but didn't see anyone.
"I just heard someone's voice," he muttered, continuing to plunge into the ground
- Oh my God, I do farming from morning to night, but who will be the one to eat them with me? – After a while, he muttered again.
- I will eat with you, - again the woman's voice.
- Who said that? The man exclaimed, looking to where the voice coming. But once again there was no one.
- I just heard someone's voice - he shook his head and said.
- Let me live with you - the voice continued.
The man looked around then looked to his feet. A snail with a yellow and shinny shell caught his eye. It was unusually large and very beautiful. Without a second thought, he picked it up and put it in his basket.
That evening, when he was preparing for dinner, he poured out all the shrimp and fish out of the basket and the snail rolled again on the ground. He picked it up and looked at its beautiful shell. Then he dropped it into a water pot in the kitchen.
The next morning, when he woke up, he was surprised. On the creaking table, there was a delicious breakfast. He wondered who made it but still ate them well.
In the evening, when he returned home from the field, he saw a table full of food that had been done. He was delighted to sit at the dining table, thinking that it was the best dishes he had ever had and wished he had a good wife who would always prepare such tasty and delicious meals for him.
He thought:
- Tomorrow we have to see who prepared these foods. We must definitely watch for it
The next morning, after breakfast, he took his tools and went to the field as usual. But halfway there, he secretly hid the tool behind a nearby tree and returned home. He slowly went to the window, quietly looking into the kitchen.
He could not believe his eyes. A beautiful, young girl wearing a shiny yellow dress stepped out of the pot. She stretched, prepared her clothes and began cleaning the kitchen. The whole day, he discreetly observed the girl cleaning the house, washing and patching his clothes. When the sun was about to set, she prepared dinner and returned to the pot.
At dinner, he kept thinking about the beautiful girl in the pot. It would be wonderful if she could be his wife. He decided to meet her directly when she cleaned the house

07/30/2019

Mother Holle - Grimm's Fairy Tales – Mother Hulda Bedtime Stories for kids

A widow had two daughters; one was pretty and industrious, the other was ugly and lazy. The widow loved the ugly one more as she was her own daughter. The pretty one had to do all the housework so she looked as dirty as Cinderella in the family.
Every day the poor girl had to sit by a well on the high road and spin until her fingers bled. Once, the spindle was bloody, she dipped it into the well to wash it; but it slipped out of her hand and fell in.
Then she began to cry, and ran to her step-mother to tell about her misfortune; and her stepmother scolded her without mercy, and said in her rage: “As you have let the spindle fall in, you must go and fetch it out again!”
Then the girl went back again to the well, not knowing what to do. Being too terrified, she jumped down into the well to find the spindle. She fainted, when she opened her eyes and came to herself, she was in a beautiful meadow, with flowers grew under the sunshine.
And she walked on through the meadow until she came to a baker’s oven that was full of bread; and the bread cried out:
“Oh, take me out, take me out, or I shall burn; I am baked enough already!”
Then she came and took out all the loaves with a peel. And she went farther on till she came to a tree weighed down with apples, and it called out to her: “Oh, shake me, shake me, apples are ripe already!”
Then she shook the tree. the apples fell like rain, and she shook until there were no more to fall; and when she had gathered them together in a heap, she went on farther.
At last she came to a little house, and an old woman with great teeth was peeping out of it, the girl was terrified and about to run away, the old woman called back.
“What are you afraid of, my dear child? Live with me, and if you do the house-work, you will have everything. Just make sure to make my bed well, and shake it up thoroughly, so that the feathers fly about, and then in the world it snows, for I am Mother Hulda.”








06/11/2019

The poor miller's boy and the cat (english) - Grimms' Fairy Tales

In a certain mill lived an old miller who had neither wife nor child, and three apprentices served under him. As they had been with him several years, he one day said to them, "I am old, and want to sit in the chimney-corner, go out, and whichsoever of you brings me the best horse home, to him will I give the mill, and in return for it he shall take care of me till my death."
The third of the boys was, however, the drudge, who was looked on as foolish by the others; they begrudged the mill to him, and afterwards he would not have it. Then all three went out together, and when they came to the village, the two said to stupid Hans, "you mayst just as well stay here, as long as you live you will never get a horse."
Hans, however, went with them, and when it was night they came to a cave in which they lay down to sleep. The two sharp ones waited until Hans had fallen asleep, then they got up, and went away leaving him where he was. And they thought they had done a very clever thing, but it was certain to turn out ill for them.
When the sun arose, and Hans woke up, he was lying in a deep cavern. He looked around on every side and exclaimed, "Oh, heavens, where am I?" Then he got up and clambered out of the cave, went into the forest, and thought, "Here I am quite alone and deserted, how shall I obtain a horse now?"
while he was thus walking full of thought, he met a small tabby-cat which said quite kindly, "Hans, where are you going?" - "Alas, you canst not help me." - "I well know your desire," said the cat. "You wish to have a beautiful horse. Come with me, and be my faithful servant for seven years long, and then I will give you one more beautiful than any you have ever seen in your whole life."
"Well, this is a wonderful cat!" thought Hans, "but I am determined to see if she is telling the truth." So she took him with her into her enchanted castle, where there were nothing but cats who were her servants. They leapt nimbly upstairs and downstairs, and were merry and happy. In the evening when they sat down to dinner, three of them had to make music. One played the bassoon, the other the fiddle, and the third put the trumpet to his lips, and blew out his cheeks as much as he possibly could.
When they had dined, the table was carried away, and the cat said, "Now, Hans, come and dance with me." - "No," said he, "I won't dance with a p***y cat. I have never done that yet." - "Then take him to bed," said she to the cats.
So one of them lighted him to his bed-room, one pulled his shoes off, one his stockings, and at last one of them blew out the candle. Next morning they returned and helped him out of bed, one put his stockings on for him, one tied his garters, one brought his shoes, one washed him, and one dried his face with her tail. "That feels very soft!" said Hans.
He, however, had to serve the cat, and chop some wood every day, and to do that, he had an axe of silver, and the wedge and saw were of silver and the mallet of copper. So he chopped the wood small; stayed there in the house and had good meat and drink, but never saw anyone but the tabby-cat and her servants.
Once she said to him, "Go and mow my meadow, and dry the grass," and gave him a scythe of silver, and a whetstone of gold, but made him deliver them up again carefully. So Hans went right away, and did what he was told, and when he had finished the work, he carried the scythe, whetstone, and hay to the house, and asked if it was not yet time for her to give him his reward. "No," said the cat, "you must first do something more for me of the same kind. There is timber of silver, carpenter's axe, square, and everything that is needful, all of silver, with these build me a small house."
Then Hans built the small house, and said that he had now done everything, and still he had no horse. Nevertheless the seven years had gone by with him as if they were six months. The cat asked him if he would like to see her horses? "Yes," said Hans
Then she opened the door of the small house, and when she had opened it, there stood twelve horses, such horses, so bright and shining, that his heart rejoiced at the sight of them. And now she gave him to eat and drink, and said, "Go home, I will not give the hourse to you now; but in three days' time I wil bring him to you myself"
So Hans set out, and she showed him the way to the mill. She had, however, never once given him a new coat, and he had been obliged to keep on his dirty old clothes, which he had brought with him, and which during the seven years had everywhere become too small for him.
When he reached home, the two other apprentices were there again as well, and each of them certainly had brought a horse with him, but one of them was a blind one, and the other lame. They asked Hans where his horse was. "It will follow me in three days' time." Then they laughed and said, "Indeed, stupid Hans, where will you get a horse?"
Hans went into the parlor, but the miller said he should not sit down to table, for he was so ragged and torn, that they would all be ashamed of him if any one came in. So they gave him a mouthful of food outside, and at night, when they went to rest, the two others would not let him have a bed, and at last he was forced to creep into the goose-house, and lie down on a little hard straw. In the morning when he awoke, the three days had passed, and a coach came with six horses and they shone so bright that it was delightful to see them! and a servant brought a seventh as well, which was for the poor miller's boy.
And a magnificent princess alighted from the coach and went into the mill, and this princess was the little tabby-cat whom poor Hans had served for seven years. She asked the miller where the miller's boy was? Then the miller said, "We cannot have him here in the mill, for he is so ragged; he is lying in the goose-house."]]
Then the King's daughter said that they were to bring him immediately. So they brought him out, and he had to hold his little smock-frock together to cover himself. The servants unpacked splendid garments, and washed him and dressed him, and when that was done, no King could have looked more handsome. Then the maiden desired to see the horses which the other apprentices had brought home with them, and one of them was blind and the other lame. So she ordered the servant to bring the seventh horse, and when the miller saw it, he said that such a horse as that had never yet entered his yard. "And that is for the third miller's boy," said she. "Then he must have the mill," said the miller,
but the King's daughter said that the horse was there, and that he was to keep his mill as well, and took her faithful Hans and set him in the coach, and drove away with him. They first drove to the little house which he had built with the silver tools, and behold it was a great castle, and everything inside it was of silver and gold
and then she married him, and he was rich, so rich that he had enough for all the rest of his life. After this, let no one ever say that anyone who is silly can never become a person of importance.



05/23/2019

Once upon a time there was a poor woodcutter who worked from morning until late at night. When he had finally saved up some money he said to his boy, "You are my only child. I want to spend the money that I have earned by the sweat of my brow on your education. Learn an honest trade so you can support me in my old age when my limbs have grown stiff and I have to sit at home."...
Spirit in the Bottle




05/13/2019

The Wolf and the Seven Little Goats - Fairy Tales Of The World
There was once an old goat who had seven little ones. Just like any other mothers, she loves her children so much. One day she had to go into the wood to fetch food for them, so she called them to gather

“Dear children,” said she, “I am going out into the wood; and while I am gone, be on your guard against the wolf, for if he were once to get inside he would eat you up, skin, bones, and all. The wolf often disguises himself, but he may always be known by his hoarse voice and black paws.”

“Dear mother,” answered the kids, “you don't need to be worried, we will be consious.” And the mother bleated good-bye, and went to the wood with an easy mind.

It was not long before some one came knocking at the house-door, and crying out: “Open the door, my dear children, your mother is come back, and has brought each of you something.”

But the little kids knew it was the wolf by the hoarse voice. “We will not open the door,” cried they; “you are not our mother, she has a delicate and sweet voice, and your voice is hoarse; you must be the wolf.”

Then the wolf rush to a shop and bought a big lump of chalk, and ate it up to make his voice cleaner. He came back, knocked at the door, and cried: “Open the door, my dear children, your mother is here, and has brought each of you something.”










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