One day, when her mother had baked a batch of cakes she said to Little Red Riding Hood: "I hear your poor grandam has been ailing, so, prithee, go and see if she be any better, and take her this cake and a little pot of butter." Little Red Riding Hood, who was a willing child, and always ready to be useful, put the things into a basket, and immediately sett off for the village where her grandmother lived, which lay on the other side of a thick wood. [SWITCH] As she reached the outskirts of the forest, she met a wolf, who would have liked vastly to have devoured her at once, had there not been some wood-cutters near at hand, whom he feared might kill him in turn. So he sidled up to the little girl, and said, in as winning a tone as he could assume, "Good morning, Little Red Riding Hood." "Good morning, Master Wolf," answered she, who had no idea of being afraid of so civil a spoken animal. "And pray where may you be going so early?" quoth the wolf. "I am going to my grandmother's" replied Little Red Riding Hood, who thought there could be no harm in telling him. "And what are you carrying in your basket, my pretty little maid?" continued the wolf, sniffing its contents. "Why, a cake and a pot of butter," answered simple Little Red Riding Hood, "because grandmother has been ill." "And where does poor grandmamma live?" inquired the wolf, in a tone of great interest. "Down beyond the mill, on the other side of the wood," said she. "Well," cried the wolf, "I don't mind if I go and see her too. So I'll take this road, and do you go through the wood, and we'll see which of us shall be there first."
Now, the wily wolf knew well enough that he would be the
winner in such a race. For, letting alone his four feet against
poor little Red Riding Hood's two, he could dash through the
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underwood, and swim across a pond, that would bring him by a
very short cut to the old grandam's cottage, while he shrewdly
guessed that the little girl would stop to gather strawberries, or
to make up a posy, as she loitered along the pleasanter but more
round-about path through the wood.
[SWITCH]
Meanwhile Little Red Riding Hood rambled through the
wood with child-like glee, stopping every now and then to
listen to the birds that were singing so sweetly on the green
boughs, and picking strawberries, which she knew her grandam
loved to eat with cream, till she had nearly filled her basket;
nor had she neglected to gather all the pretty flowers, red,
blue, white, or yellow, that hid their sweet little heads amidst
the moss; and of these her apron was at last so full, that
she sat down under a tree to sort them and wind them into
a wreath.
While she was thus occupied, a wasp came buzzing along,
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and delighted at finding so many flowers without the trouble
of searching for them, he began to drink up their honey very
voraciously. Little Red Riding Hood knew well the difference
of a wasp and a bee--how lazy the one, and how industrious
the other, yet, as they are all God's creatures, she would'nt
kill it, and only said: "Take as much honey as you like, poor
wasp, only do not sting me." The wasp buzzed louder, as if to
thank her for her kindness, and, when he had sipped his fill,
flew away. Presently, a little tom-tit, who had been hopping
about on a bough opposite, darted down on the basket, and
pecked at one of the strawberries. "Eat as much as you like,
pretty tom-tit," said Little Red Riding Hood: "there will be
still plenty left for grandam and for me." The tom-tit replied,
"Tweat-tweat," in his own eloquent language; and, after
gobbling up at least three strawberries, flew away, and was soon
out of sight. Little Red Riding Hood now bethought her it
was time to go on; so putting her wreath into her basket, she
tripped along demurely enough, till she came to a brook, where
she saw an aged crone, almost bent double, seeking for something
along the bank. "What are you looking for Goody?"
said the little girl. "For water-cresses, my pretty maid,"
mumbled the poor old woman; "and a sorry trade it is, that
does not earn me half bread enough to eat." Little Red
Riding Hood thought it very hard the poor old creature should
work and be hungry too, so she drew from her pocket a large
piece of bread, which her mother had given her to eat by the
way, and said, "Sit down, Goody, and eat this, and I will
gather your water-cresses for you." The old woman willingly
accepted the offer, and sat down on a knoll, while Little Red
Riding Hood set to work in good earnest, and had presently
filled her basket with water-cresses. When her task was finished,
the old crone rose up briskly, and patting the little maid's
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head, said, in a quite different voice: "Thank You, my pretty
Little Red Riding Hood, and now, if you happen to meet the
green huntsman as you go along, pray give him my respects,
and tell him there is game in the wind." Little Red Riding
Hood promised to do so, and walked on, but presently she
looked back to see how the old woman was getting along, but,
look as sharp as she might, she could see no trace of her, nor of
her water-cresses. She seemed to have vanished clean out of
sight. "It is very odd," thought Little Red Riding Hood, to
herself, "for surely I can walk faster than she." Then she
kept looking about her, and prying into all the bushes, to see
for the green huntsman, whom she had never heard of before,
and wondered why the old woman had given her such a message.
At last, just as she was passing by a pool of stagnant
water, so green that you would have taken it for grass, and
have walked into it, as Little Red Riding Hood, who had
never seen it before, though she had gone that same way often
enough, had nearly done, she perceived a huntsman clad in
green from top to toe, standing on the bank, apparently watching
the flight of some birds that were wheeling above his head.
"Good morning, Master Huntsman," said Little Red Riding
Hood; "the old water-cress woman sends her service to you,
and says there is game in the wind." The huntsman nodded
assent, and bent his ear to the ground to listen, and then drew
out an arrow tipped with a green feather, and strung his bow,
without taking any further notice of Little Red Riding Hood,
who trudged onward, wondering what it all meant.
[SWITCH]
Presently,
the little girl reached her grandmother's well-known
cottage, and knocked at the door. "Who is there?"
cried the wolf, forgetting to disguise his voice. Little Red
Riding Hood was somewhat startled at first; then thinking her
grandam had a bad cold made her very hoarse, she
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answered: "It is your grandchild, Little Red Riding Hood,
who has brought you a cake, and a little pot of butter, which
mother sends you." The wolf then softened his voice a little,
as he replied: "Lift the latch, and the bolt will fall." Little
Red Riding Hood did as she was told, and entered the cottage.
The wolf then hid his head under the bed-clothes, and said:
"Put the cake and the pot of butter on the shelf, my dear, and
come and help me to rise." Little Red Riding Hood set down
her basket, and then went and drew back the curtain, when she
was much surprised to see how oddly her grandmother looked
in her night-clothes.
[SWITCH]
"Dear
me! grandmamma," said the little girl, "what long
arms you have got!" "The better to hug you my child,"
answered the wolf.
"But, grandmamma, what long ears you have got!" persisted
Little Red Riding Hood.
"The better to listen to you, my child," replied the wolf.
"But, grandmamma, what large eyes you have got!" continued
the little girl.
"The better to see you, my child," said the wolf.
"But, grandmamma, what terrible large teeth you have
got!" cried Little Red Riding Hood, who now began to be
frightened.
"The better to eat you up," exclaimed the wolf, who was
just about to make a spring at the poor little girl, when a wasp,
who had followed her into the cottage, stung the wolf in his
nostril, and made him sneeze aloud, which gave the signal to a
tom-tit perched on a branch near the open casement, who called
out "Tweat-tweat," which warned the green huntsman, who
accordingly let fly his arrow, that struck the wolf right through
the ear and killed him on the spot.
Little Red Riding Hood was so frightened, even after the
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wolf had fallen back dead, that she bounced out of the cottage,
and, shutting the door, darted into the forest like a
frightened hare, and ran till she was out of breath, when she
dropped down quite exhausted under a tree.
Here she discovered that she had mistaken the road, when
to her great relief, she espied her old friend the water-cress
woman, at some distance; and, feeling sure she could soon overtake
the aged dame, she again set off, calling out to her every
now and then, to stop. The old crone, however, seemed too
deaf to hear; and it was not till they had reached the skirts of
the forest that she turned round, when to Little Red Riding
Hood's surprise, she perceived a young and beautiful being in
place of the decrepit creature she thought she was following.
"Little Red Riding Hood," said the fairy, for such she was,
"your goodness of heart has saved you from a great danger.
Had you not helped the poor old water-cress woman, she would
not have sent word to the green huntsman, who is generally
invisible to mortal eyes, to save you. Had you killed the wasp,
or driven away the tom-tit, the former could not have stung the
wolf's nostril, and made him sneeze, nor the latter have given
the huntsman the signal to let fly his shaft. In future, no wild
beast shall ever harm you, and the fairy folks will always be
your friends."
So saying, the fairy vanished, and Little Red Riding Hood
hastened home to tell her mother all that had befallen her;
nor did she forget that night to thank Heaven, fervently, for
having delivered her from the jaws of the wolf.