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‘Little Red Riding Hood’ is a fairy tale about a young girl who wears a red cloak and encounters a wolf on her way to visit her ailing grandmother. Depending on the version of the story, the girl is either eaten by the wolf or saved by a woodsman or hunter.
When Little Red Riding Hood arrives at Grandmas cottage, there's someone BIG, HAIRY and very, very SCARY waiting in Granny's bed...
"Grandma, what big TEETH you have!" Join us in this read aloud of children's classic fairy tale, "Little Red Riding Hood", as she is fooled by the cunning bi...
The versions circulating in 17th-century France, when Charles Perrault first wrote down the story in his collection called Mother Goose Tales, featured a cannibalistic granddaughter and a pedophile wolf who tells Red to strip down before she climbs in his bed.
Then sat himself in Grandma’s chair. In came the little girl in red. She stopped. She stared. And then she said, “What great big ears you have, Grandma.” “All the better to hear you with,” the Wolf replied. “What great big eyes you have, Grandma.” said Little Red Riding Hood. “All the better to see you with,” the Wolf replied.
A young village girl who lives with her mother is given a little red riding-hood to wear, and everyone starts to refer to her as ‘the Little Red Riding-Hood’ on account of it. One day, the girl’s mother asks her to go and visit her grandmother, who lives in the next village, through the forest.
"But Grandmother! What big teeth you have," said Little Red Riding Hood her voice quivering slightly. "The better to eat you with, my dear," roared the wolf and he leapt out of the bed and began to chase the little girl. < PREV [Story all on one page] NEXT >
Little Red Riding Hood, however, had been running about picking flowers, and when she had gathered so many that she could carry no more, she remembered her grandmother, and set out on the way to her.
"Little Red Riding Hood" as illustrated in a 1927 story anthology. The story centers around a girl named Little Red Riding Hood, after the red hooded cape that she wears. The girl walks through the woods to deliver food to her sickly grandmother (wine and cake depending on the translation).
“Where are you going, Little Red Riding-Hood,” said he, “all alone?” “I am going to my grandmamma’s,” said the child. “Good day; I must make haste now, for it grows late.” While Little Red Riding-Hood was at play in the wood, the great wolf galloped on as fast as he could to the old woman’s house.