85 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
85 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
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THE WOLF AND THE SEVEN KIDS
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Once upon a time . . . a Mother Goat lived in a pretty little house with
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her seven kids. Mother often had to leave home to do the shopping, and on that
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fateful day, she had given her children the usual warnings, before setting off
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to market.
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"You mustn't open the door to anyone. Don't forget, there's a wicked wolf
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lurking about here. It's black, with horrible paws and a nasty deep voice. If
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it knocks, keep the door tightly shut!" Mother Goat's words were wise indeed,
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for as she was telling one of her neighbours about her fears, the wolf
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disguised as a peasant was hiding close by, listening to every word.
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"Good! Very good!" said the wolf to himself."If the goat goes market, I'II
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drop by her house and gobble the kids!' Then,trying not to look too
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conspicuous, the wolf hurried along to the goat's house. There, he threw off
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his disguise. He then growled in a deep voice: "Open the door! Open the door!
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It's Mother! I've just come back from market! Open the door!" When the kids
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heard the deep voice, they remembered their mother's warning. From behind the
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barred door, they said to the wolf: "We know who you are! You're the wolf! Our
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mother has a sweet gentle voice, not a deep nasty one like yours! Go away!
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We'll never open the door to you!"
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And though the wolf banged furiously on the door, the kids, though
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trembling with terror, refused to let him into the house, and so the door
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remained shut. Then the wolf had a brainwave. He dashed off to the baker's and
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got a big cake dripping with honey. He hoped this would sweeten his voice. And
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in fact, after eating it, his voice didn't sound quite so deep. Over and over
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again, he practised imitating Mother Goat's voice. You see, he'd heard it in
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the woods. When he felt certain he could easily be mistaken for Mother Goat
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herself, he rushed back to the house and the seven kids.
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"Open the door! Open the door! It's Mother! I've just come back from
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market! Open the door!" he called. This time, the kids had doubts: the voice
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did rather sound like mother's, and they were about to unlock the door, when
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the black kid suspiciously cried: "Mother, let us see your foot!" Without
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thinking, the wolf raised a black hairy paw. And the kids knew that the wolf
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had come back.
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"You're not our mother! She doesn't have horrid black paws!" cried the
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kids. "Go away, you wicked wolf!"
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And once more, in spite of all his hard work, the wolf found the door
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locked against him. The wolf ran down to the mlll, and found a sack of flour.
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He thrust his paws into it until they were pure white.
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"I'll trick them this time," he said. "Mmm! My mouth's watering already!
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I'm hungry! My tummy's empty and my trousers are falling off! I'll swallow
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these tender kids whole!" Again he knocked on the door.
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"Open the door! Open the door! It's Mother! I've just come back from
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market! Open the door!" The voice seemed exactly like mother's, but the wary
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kids quickly called out: "Mother, let us see your foot!" The wily wolf lifted
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a snow white paw, and the kids, now reassured, threw open the door. What a
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shock they received! An enormous set of jaws with sharp fangs growled
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fiercely. Cruel claws reached out for their prey. The kids scattered in
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terror. One dived under the table, while other crawled below the bed. Another
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kid hid in the cupboard and one tried to hide in the oven, though the stove
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was still hot. One kid crouched inside a barrel and one hid in the grandfather
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clock. There he huddled, holding his breath, as the wolf hunted down his
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brothers. One by one, the kids were pulled from their hiding places. All
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except for the kid in the clock. The wicked wolf's appetite did not pass until
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he had found them and swallowed each in a single gulp.
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The only one to escape was the little black kid, for the wolf never
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imagined that there was room for a kid inside the very narrow grandfather
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clock. In the meantime, Mother Goat had really come back from market. When,
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from a distance, she noticed that the door was ajar, she rushed home, her
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heart in her mouth. She had a sinking feeling: what she feared had really
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happened. The wicked wolf had gobbled up all her children. She dropped into a
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chair, sobbing bitterly, but as she cried, the door of the grandfather clock
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swung open and out ran the black kid.
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"Mummy! Mummy!" wept the kid. "It was terrible! The wolf came, and I think
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he's eaten all my brothers!"
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"My poor child!" sobbed Mother Goat. "You're the only one left! That evil
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brute has gobbled them all!"
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Not long after, Mother Goat and her son left the house to take a stroll in
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the garden. Suddenly, she heard a low wheezing sound: someone was snoring
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heavily. It was the greedy wolf. His feast of kids had been too much for him
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and he was fast asleep, dead to the world. In a flash, Mother Goat had a
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brainwave. She said to her son: "Run and fetch me a needle and thread and a
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pair of scissors!" With these, she swiftly slit open the wolf's stomach. As
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she had hoped, the ravenous brute had swallowed every kid whole. There they
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were all stlll alive alive inside his tummy. One by one, out they popped from
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the wolf's tummy.
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"Hurry! Hurry! Not a sound! We must get away before he wakens up! Wait!
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Fetch me a heap of stones!" And so they filled the wolf's stomach with stones
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and stitched it up again. The wolf woke later with a raging thirst.
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"What a heavy tummy I have!" he said. "I've eaten too much! All these
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kids!" But when he went down the river to drink, his tummy full of stones
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tipped him over and he fell into the water. The weight took him straight to
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the bottom, and the goat and her kids shrieked with joy as he sank. The
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wicked wolf was dead and the kids trotted home happily with Mother.
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