Author's stories about autumn. Mini-essay about autumn for schoolchildren
Fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood" - one of the favorite fairy tales of many children. It is also one of Charles Perrault's most popular tales. It turns out that this Western European fairy tale has been known since the 15th century. different countries Europe. The fairy tale “roamed” from country to country and only the contents in the basket changed. Little Red Riding Hood, and the end was always the same - the Wolf ate everyone.
Only the Brothers Grimm gave the fairy tale a happy ending. And now I propose read the fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood" exactly in this version.
Also read other popular and favorite fairy tales on the site:
Little Red Riding Hood
Once upon a time there lived in a village a little girl who was so pretty that there was no one better than her in the world. Her mother loved her deeply, and her grandmother even more.
For her birthday, her grandmother gave her a red riding hood. Since then, the girl went everywhere in her new, elegant red cap. The neighbors said this about her:
- Here Little Red Riding Hood coming!
One day my mother baked a pie and said to her daughter:
- Go, Little Red Riding Hood, to your grandmother, bring her this pie and a pot of butter and find out if she is healthy.
Little Red Riding Hood got ready and went to her grandmother in another village.
She walks through the forest, and a gray wolf meets her. He really wanted to eat Little Red Riding Hood, but he didn’t dare - somewhere nearby, woodcutters were banging their axes.
The Wolf licked his lips and asked the girl:
- Where are you going, Little Red Riding Hood?
But Little Red Riding Hood did not yet know how dangerous it was to stop in the forest and talk to wolves. She greeted the Wolf and said:
“I’m going to my grandmother and bringing her this pie and a pot of butter.”
— How far does your grandmother live? - asks the Wolf.
“Quite far away,” he answers. Little Red Riding Hood.
- Over there in that village, behind the mill, in the first house on the edge.
“Okay,” says the Wolf, “I also want to visit your grandmother.” I will go along this road, and you go along that one. Let's see which of us comes first.
The Wolf said this and ran as best he could along the shortest path.
And Little Red Riding Hood took the longest road. She walked slowly, stopping every now and then along the way, picking flowers and collecting them into bouquets.
Before she even had time to reach the mill, the Wolf had already galloped up to her grandmother’s house and was knocking on the door: knock-knock!
- Who's there? - asks the grandmother.
- It’s me, your granddaughter, Little Red Riding Hood, - the Wolf answers in a thin voice. - I came to visit you, brought a pie and a pot of butter.
And my grandmother was sick at that time and was lying in bed. She thought that it really was Little Red Riding Hood and shouted:
“Pull the string, my child, and the door will open!”
The wolf pulled the string and the door opened.
The Wolf rushed at the grandmother and swallowed her at once. He was very hungry because he had not eaten anything for three days.
Then he closed the door, lay down on grandma’s bed and began to wait for Little Red Riding Hood.
Soon she came and knocked: knock-knock!
- Who's there? - asks the Wolf.
And his voice is rough and hoarse.
Little Red Riding Hood was scared, but then she thought that her grandmother was hoarse from a cold and that’s why she had such a voice.
“It’s me, your granddaughter,” says Little Red Riding Hood
. — I brought you a pie and a pot of butter.
The wolf cleared his throat and said more subtly:
“Pull the string, my child, and the door will open.”
Little Red Riding Hood pulled the string and the door opened.
The girl entered the house, and the Wolf hid under the blanket and said:
“Granddaughter, put the pie on the table, put the pot on the shelf, and lie down next to me.” You must be very tired.
Little Red Riding Hood lay down next to the wolf and asked:
- Grandma, why do you have such big hands?
- This is to hug you tighter, my child.
- Grandma, why do you have such big eyes?
- To see better, my child.
- Grandma, why do you have such big teeth?
- And this is so that I can eat you quickly, my child!
Before Little Red Riding Hood had time to gasp, the evil Wolf rushed at her and swallowed her with her shoes and red cap.
But, fortunately, at that very time, woodcutters with axes on their shoulders passed by the house.
They heard a noise, ran into the house and killed the Wolf. And then they cut open his belly, and from there came Little Red Riding Hood, and behind her the grandmother - both safe and sound.
Charles Perrault
Once upon a time there lived a little girl. Her mother loved her deeply, and her grandmother even more. For her granddaughter's birthday, her grandmother gave her a red riding hood. Since then, the girl wore it everywhere. The neighbors said this about her:
Here comes Little Red Riding Hood!
One day my mother baked a pie and said to her daughter:
Go, Little Red Riding Hood, to grandma, bring her a pie and a pot of butter and find out if she is healthy.
Little Red Riding Hood got ready and went to her grandmother.
She walks through the forest, and a gray wolf meets her.
Where are you going. Little Red Riding Hood? - asks the Wolf.
I go to my grandmother and bring her a pie and a pot of butter.
How far does your grandmother live?
“Far away,” answers Little Red Riding Hood. - Over there in that village, behind the mill, in the first house on the edge.
Okay,” says the Wolf, “I also want to visit your grandmother.” I will go along this road, and you go along that one. Let's see which of us comes first.
The Wolf said this and ran as fast as he could along the shortest path.
And Little Red Riding Hood took the longest road. She walked slowly, stopping along the way, picking flowers and collecting them in bouquets. Before she even had time to reach the mill, the Wolf had already galloped to her grandmother’s house and was knocking on the door:
Knock Knock!
Who's there? - asks the grandmother.
“It’s me, your granddaughter, Little Red Riding Hood,” the Wolf answers, “I came to visit you, brought a pie and a pot of butter.”
And my grandmother was sick at that time and was lying in bed. She thought that it really was Little Red Riding Hood and shouted:
Pull the string, my child, and the door will open!
The wolf pulled the string and the door opened.
The Wolf rushed at the grandmother and swallowed her at once. He was very hungry because he had not eaten anything for three days. Then he closed the door, lay down on grandma’s bed and began to wait for Little Red Riding Hood.
Soon she came and knocked:
Knock Knock!
Little Red Riding Hood was scared, but then she thought that her grandmother was hoarse from a cold, and answered:
It's me, your granddaughter. I brought you a pie and a pot of butter!
The wolf cleared his throat and said more subtly:
Pull the string, my child, and the door will open.
Little Red Riding Hood pulled the door rope and opened. The girl entered the house, and the Wolf hid under the blanket and said:
Granddaughter, put the pie on the table, put the pot on the shelf, and lie down next to me!
Little Red Riding Hood lay down next to the Wolf and asked:
Grandma, why are your hands so big?
This is to hug you tighter, my child.
Grandma, why are you like this? big ears?
To hear better, my child.
Grandma, why are your eyes so big?
To see better, my child.
Grandma, why do you have such big teeth?
And this is to quickly eat you, my child!
Before Little Red Riding Hood had time to gasp, the Wolf rushed at her and swallowed her.
But, fortunately, at that time woodcutters with axes on their shoulders passed by the house. They heard a noise, ran into the house and killed the Wolf. And then they cut open his belly, and Little Red Riding Hood came out, followed by her grandmother - both safe and sound.
Once upon a time there lived a little girl. She was modest and kind, obedient and hard-working. The mother could not be happier that she had such an assistant: her daughter helped her with the housework, and when all the work was done, she read something out loud to her mother.
Everyone liked this sweet girl, but her grandmother loved her the most. She once sewed a cap out of red velvet and gave it to her granddaughter for her name day.
The new hat suited the girl very well, and because from that day on she did not want to wear any other, people nicknamed her Little Red Riding Hood.
One day my mother decided to bake a pie.
She kneaded the dough, and Little Red Riding Hood picked apples from the garden. The pie came out great! His mother looked at him and said:
- Little Red Riding Hood, go and see your grandmother. I’ll put a piece of pie and a bottle of milk in your basket, and you’ll take it to her.
Little Red Riding Hood was delighted, she immediately got ready and went to her grandmother, who lived on the other side of the forest.
The mother went out onto the porch to see the girl off and began to give her farewell words:
“Daughter, don’t talk to strangers, don’t turn off the road.”
“Don’t worry,” answered Little Red Riding Hood, said goodbye to her mother and went through the forest to the house where her grandmother lived.
Little Red Riding Hood walked along the road, walked, and suddenly stopped and thought: “What beautiful flowers they grow here, and I don’t even look around, how loudly the birds sing, but it’s like I don’t even hear! It’s so nice here in the forest!”
Indeed, they made their way through the trees Sun rays, the clearings were fragrant with beautiful flowers, over which butterflies fluttered.
And Little Red Riding Hood decided:
“I’ll bring grandma a bouquet of flowers along with the pie. She'll probably be pleased. It’s still early, I can always make it to her.”
And she turned off the road straight into the forest and began to pick flowers. He picks a flower and thinks:
A girl is walking through the forest, picking flowers, singing a song, and suddenly an angry wolf meets her.
But Little Red Riding Hood was not afraid of him at all.
- Hello, Little Red Riding Hood! - said the wolf. -Where are you going so early?
- To Grandma.
-What do you have in your basket?
– A bottle of milk and a pie, my mother and I baked it to please my grandmother. She is sick and weak, let her get better.
- Little Red Riding Hood, where does your grandmother live?
– Bon Voyage to you, Little Red Riding Hood, the wolf muttered, and thought to himself: “Nice girl, that would be a tasty morsel for me; tastier, perhaps, than the old woman; but in order to capture both, you need to do the job more cunningly.”
And he rushed as fast as he could along the shortest route to his grandmother’s house.
Little Red Riding Hood is walking through the forest, not in a hurry, but Gray wolf is already knocking on grandma's door.
- Who's there?
“It’s me, Little Red Riding Hood, who brought you a pie and a bottle of milk, open it for me,” the wolf answered in a thin voice.
“Press the latch,” the grandmother shouted, “I’m very weak, I can’t get up.”
The wolf pressed the latch, the door opened, and, without saying a word, he went straight to grandma’s bed and swallowed the old woman.
Then the wolf put on her dress and cap, went to bed and closed the curtains.
And Little Red Riding Hood kept collecting flowers, and when she had already picked so many of them that she could no longer carry them, she remembered her grandmother and went to her.
Little Red Riding Hood approached her grandmother's house, and the door was open. She was surprised, went inside and shouted:
– Good morning! - But there was no answer.
Then she went up to the bed, parted the curtains, and saw her grandmother lying there, her cap pulled down over her face, and she looked strange.
- Oh, grandma, why do you have such big ears? - asked Little Red Riding Hood.
- To hear you better!
- Oh, grandma, what big eyes you have!
- This is to see you better!
- Oh, grandma, why do you have such big hands?
- To make it easier to hug you.
- Oh, grandma, what are you like? big mouth!
- This will make it easier to swallow you!
The wolf said this, jumped out of bed - and swallowed poor Little Red Riding Hood.
The wolf ate his fill and went back to bed, fell asleep and began to snore loudly and loudly.
A hunter walked past.
He heard some sounds coming from the house strange noises and became wary: it couldn’t be that the old woman was snoring so loudly!
He crept up to the window, looked inside - and there was a wolf lying in the bed.
- There you are, gray robber! - he said. - I've been looking for you for a long time.
The hunter wanted to shoot the wolf first, but changed his mind. What if he ate the grandmother, but she can still be saved.
The hunter then took a pair of scissors and ripped open the belly of the sleeping wolf. Little Red Riding Hood and Grandmother got out of there - both alive and unharmed.
And all three were very, very happy. The hunter skinned the wolf and took it home. Grandma ate the pie, drank the milk that Little Red Riding Hood brought her, and began to get better and gain strength.
Little Red Riding Hood understood that you should always obey your elders and never turn off the road in the forest.
Once upon a time there lived in a village a little girl, so pretty that there was no better person in the world than her. Her mother loved her deeply, and her grandmother even more.
For her granddaughter's birthday, her grandmother gave her a red riding hood. Since then, the girl went everywhere in her new, elegant red cap.
The neighbors said this about her:
- Here comes Little Red Riding Hood!
One day my mother baked a pie and said to her daughter:
- Go, Little Red Riding Hood, to your grandmother, bring her this pie and a pot of butter and find out if she is healthy.
Little Red Riding Hood got ready and went to her grandmother in another village. She walks through the forest, and a gray wolf meets her.
He really wanted to eat Little Red Riding Hood, but he didn’t dare - somewhere nearby, woodcutters were banging their axes. The Wolf licked his lips and asked the girl:
-Where are you going, Little Red Riding Hood?
But Little Red Riding Hood did not yet know how dangerous it was to stop in the forest and talk to wolves. She greeted the Wolf and said:
“I’m going to my grandmother and bringing her this pie and a pot of butter.”
— How far does your grandmother live? - asks the Wolf.
“Quite far away,” answers Little Red Riding Hood. - Over there in that village, behind the mill, in the first house on the edge.
“Okay,” says the Wolf, “I also want to visit your grandmother.” I will go along this road, and you go along that one. Let's see which of us comes first.
The Wolf said this and ran as best he could along the shortest path. And Little Red Riding Hood took the longest road. She walked slowly, stopping every now and then along the way, picking flowers and collecting them into bouquets.
Before she even had time to reach the mill, the Wolf had already galloped to her grandmother’s house and was knocking on the door:
- Knock Knock!
- Who's there? - asks the grandmother.
“It’s me, your granddaughter, Little Red Riding Hood,” the Wolf answers in a thin voice. - I came to visit you, brought a pie and a pot of butter.
And my grandmother was sick at that time and was lying in bed. She thought that it really was Little Red Riding Hood and shouted:
“Pull the string, my child, and the door will open!”
The wolf pulled the string and the door opened. The Wolf rushed at the grandmother and swallowed her at once. He was very hungry because he had not eaten anything for three days. Then he closed the door, lay down on grandma’s bed and began to wait for Little Red Riding Hood. Soon she came and knocked:
- Knock Knock!
- Who's there? - asks the Wolf.
Little Red Riding Hood was scared, but then she thought that her grandmother was hoarse from a cold and that’s why she had such a voice.
“It’s me, your granddaughter,” says Little Red Riding Hood. — I brought you a pie and a pot of butter.
The wolf cleared his throat and said more subtly:
“Pull the string, my child, and the door will open.”
Little Red Riding Hood pulled the string and the door opened.
The girl entered the house, and the Wolf hid under the blanket and said:
“Granddaughter, put the pie on the table, put the pot on the shelf, and lie down next to me.” You must be very tired.
Little Red Riding Hood lay down next to the wolf and asked:
- Grandma, why do you have such big hands?
- This is to hug you tighter, my child.
- Grandma, why do you have such big ears?
- To hear better, my child.
- Grandma, why are your eyes so big?
- To see better, my child.
- Grandma, why do you have such big teeth?
- And this is so that I can eat you quickly, my child!
Before Little Red Riding Hood had time to gasp, the evil Wolf rushed at her and swallowed her with her shoes and red cap.
But, fortunately, at that very time, woodcutters with axes on their shoulders passed by the house.
They heard a noise, ran into the house and killed the Wolf. And then they cut open his belly, and Little Red Riding Hood came out, followed by her grandmother—both safe and sound.
Charles Perrault's fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood is one of the undoubted leaders of fairy-tale characters around the world. The story that happened to the girl is short, but it teaches a lot. Love for grandmother, fearlessness, kindness of the heart of the cap are put at the forefront of the anger of the wolf, who lives alone in dark forest. The fairy tale is perfect for bedtime reading; many parents choose this fairy tale as the first fairy tale for their child.
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Morality of Little Red Riding Hood
Little Red Riding Hood is one of the most popular fairy tales, not only among the fairy tales of Charles Perrault, but also among the fairy tales of all authors around the world.
This fairy tale is on the list of those that are among the first to be read to a child. The simple and seemingly uncomplicated story of the girl in the red cap is actually a fairy tale with deep meaning and psychological implications.
The fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood is a story with a moral and clear conclusions:
- You can't do what your mother tells you not to do.
- You can't talk to strangers
- You can't stray from your intended path
- You can't be too trusting
However, Little Red Riding Hood acts badly. At the first meeting with danger, with a wolf, she forgets all her mother’s instructions and begins to talk to the beast. That's why the girl was eaten at the end of the fairy tale. The sad ending turns into a kind and cheerful one with the appearance of hunters who kill the wolf and free Riding Hood and her grandmother.
You should not try to interpret this fairy tale more seriously and look for hidden subtext in it - this will be wrong. The meaning of the fairy tale is very clear and subtle.