Little Red Riding Hood ~ Kids Stories, Lama Katha / Stories for Kids - Kids Stories Collection
Little Red Riding Hood Kids Story ~ Read / Download Kids Stories / Kids Stories from Siyalla Kids Stories Collection
Once upon a time in the middle of a thick forest stood a small cottage,
the home of a pretty little girl known to everyone as Little Red Riding
Hood. One day, her Mummy waved her goodbye at the garden gate, saying: "Grandma
is ill. Take her this basket of cakes, but be very careful. Keep to the
path through the wood and don't ever stop. That way, you will come to no
harm."
Little Red Riding Hood kissed her mother and ran off. "Don't worry,"
she said, "I'll run all the way to Grandma's without stopping."
Full of good intentions, the little girl made her way through the wood,
but she was soon to forget her mother's wise words. "What lovely strawberries!
And so red."
Laying her basket on the ground, Little Red Riding Hood bent over the strawberry
plants. "They're nice and ripe, and so big! Yummy! Delicious! Just
another one. And one more. This is the last. Well, this one Mmmm."
The red fruit peeped invitingly through the leaves in the grassy glade,
and Little Red Riding Hood ran back and forth popping strawberries into
her mouth. Suddenly she remembered her mother, her promise, Grandma and
the basket and hurried back towards the path. The basket was still in the
grass and, humming to herself, Little Red Riding Hood walked on.
The wood became thicker and thicker. Suddenly a yellow butterfly fluttered
down through the trees. Little Red Riding Hood started to chase the butterfly.
"I'll catch you! I'll catch you!" she called. Suddenly she saw
some large daisies in the grass.
"Oh, how sweet!" she exclaimed and, thinking of Grandma, she picked
a large bunch of flowers.
In the meantime, two wicked eyes were spying on her from behind a tree a
strange rustling in the woods made Little Red Riding Hood's heart thump.
Now quite afraid she said to herself. "I must find the path and run
away from here!"
At last she reached the path again but her heart leapt into her mouth at
the sound of a gruff voice which said: "Where are you going, my pretty
girl, all alone in the woods?"
"I'm taking Grandma some cakes. She lives at the end of the path,"
said Little Riding Hood in a faint voice.
When he heard this, the wolf (for it was the big bad wolf himself) politely
asked: "Does Grandma live by herself?"
"Oh, yes," replied Little Red Riding Hood, "and she never
opens the door to strangers!"
"Goodbye. Perhaps we'll meet again," replied the wolf. Then he
loped away thinking to himself "I'll gobble the grandmother first,
then lie in wait for the grandchild!" At last, the cottage came in
sight. Knock! Knock! The wolf rapped on the door.
"Who's there?" cried Grandma from her bed.
"It's me, Little Red Riding Hood. I've brought you some cakes because
you're ill," replied the wolf, trying hard to hide his gruff voice.
"Lift the latch and come in," said Grandma, unaware of anything
amiss, till a horrible shadow appeared on the wall. Poor Grandma! For in
one bound, the wolf leapt across the room and, in a single mouthful, swallowed
the old lady. Soon after, Little Red Riding Hood tapped on the door.
"Grandma, can I come in?" she called.
Now, the wolf had put on the old lady's shawl and cap and slipped into the
bed. Trying to imitate Grandma's quavering little voice, he replied: "Open
the latch and come in!
"What a deep voice you have," said the little girl in surprise.
"The better to greet you with," said the wolf.
"Goodness, what big eyes you have."
"The better to see you with."
"And what big hands you have!" exclaimed Little Red Riding Hood,
stepping over to the bed.
"The better to hug you with," said the wolf.
"What a big mouth you have," the little girl murmured in a weak
voice.
"The better to eat you with!" growled the wolf, and jumping out
of bed, he swallowed her up too. Then, with a fat full tummy, he fell fast
asleep.
In the meantime, a hunter had emerged from the wood, and on noticing the
cottage, he decided to stop and ask for a drink. He had spent a lot of time
trying to catch a large wolf that had been terrorizing the neighborhood,
but had lost its tracks. The hunter could hear a strange whistling sound;
it seemed to be coming from inside the cottage. He peered through the window
and saw the large wolf himself, with a fat full tummy, snoring away in Grandma's
bed.
"The wolf! He won't get away this time!"
Without making a sound, the hunter carefully loaded his gun and gently opened
the window. He pointed the barrel straight at the wolf's head and BANG!
The wolf was dead.
"Got you at last!" shouted the hunter in glee. "You'll never
frighten anyone again.
He cut open the wolf's stomach and to his amazement, out popped Grandma
and Little Red Riding Hood, safe and unharmed.
"You arrived just in time," murmured the old lady, quite overcome
by all the excitement.
"It's safe to go home now," the hunter told Little Red Riding
Hood. "The big bad wolf is dead and gone, and there is no danger on
the path.
Still scared, the little girl hugged her grandmother. Oh, what a dreadful
fright!"
Much later, as dusk was falling, Little Red Riding Hood's mother arrived,
all out of breath, worried because her little girl had not come home. And
when she saw Little Red Riding Hood, safe and sound, she burst into tears
of joy.
After thanking the hunter again, Little Red Riding Hood and her mother set
off towards the wood. As they walked quickly through the trees, the little
girl told her mother: "We must always keep to the path and never stop.
That way, we come to no harm!"
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