There were three cute little pigs and they all wanted to build a beautiful house. The oldest casually built a house out of straw. "Haha, I have my own house!" Oldest jumped for joy.
The second, on the other hand, built a house out of wood. Oldest, however, wanted to build a house out of bricks and mortar, so it worked night and day. The older brothers had long since moved into their new house, and it was still working tirelessly to build walls and paint.
After three months of this, Lao-san's new house was finished. It was so happy! One day, a big wild wolf came. The eldest panicked and hid in his straw house. The oldest one had to flee to the second one's house. The big wolf chased him to the door of the second house and stopped, thinking, "Do you think a wooden house will be hard for me to stop? It slammed into the gate as hard as it could.
With a crash, the wooden house was knocked down. The two brothers fled desperately to Lao San's house, panting, "The wolf is coming!" Lao San hurriedly closed the doors and windows, said with confidence: "Don't be afraid! No problem!"
The big wolf stood in front of the gate, knowing that there were three little pigs in the house, but not knowing how to get in. He blew and banged at the house, but it was impenetrable. Exasperated, the wolf circled the house and finally climbed up to the roof, where he tried to sneak in through the chimney.
The oldest spotted it from the window and immediately lit a fire. The big coyote slid down just enough to fall into the fireplace, and its whole tail burned. It howled and fled with its tail between its legs, never daring to come after the three little pigs again.
Expanded:
The origin of the story of the Three Little Pigs:
The Three Little Pigs. Featuring talking animals, published probably in the 18th century or earlier, the Three Little Pigs are now one of the fairy tales known to children around the world, thanks to the May 27, 1933 feature-length animation produced by Disney.
The Three Little Pigs is taken from Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales, a collection of fairy tales written by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen,*** consisting of 166 stories.
The work of love and hatred, passionate praise for the working people, praise their goodness and purity of good morals; mercilessly expose and criticize the princes and nobles of stupidity, incompetence, greed and brutality.
The more famous stories are: The Little Mermaid, The Ugly Duckling, The Little Girl Who Sells Matches, and Thumbelina. Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales have been translated and published in more than 150 languages. His fairy tales have also inspired numerous films, ballets, stage plays, and movie animations.
Author introduction:
Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875) was a Danish writer of 19th-century fairy tales, and is known as the "Sun of World Children's Literature". Hans Christian Andersen was born in Odense into a poor shoemaker's family, and spent his childhood in poverty. His father was a shoemaker and his mother was a servant.
In his early years, he studied at a charity school and worked as an apprentice. Influenced by his father and folk oral literature, he grew up loving literature. 11 years old when his father died of illness, his mother remarried. At the age of 14, he came to Copenhagen alone to pursue his art.
After 8 years of struggle, he finally showed his talent in the poetic drama "Alfsol". As a result, he was sent to Slagelse Grammar School and Helsing?e School for free by the Royal Art Theater. It lasted five years. 1828, and was promoted to the University of Copenhagen.
The child's point of view, unique to Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales, is a breakthrough from the original omniscient narrative model, which used adults as narrators. The author assumes the adult narrator to be a child.
The author uses a child's way of speaking to create the language of the work, which is straightforward and natural, and follows the child's way of thinking and psychological development to create the thematic ideas of the work, and uses some vivid but not outrageous, magical but not grotesque storylines to tell a profound truth.
Da Sample's works in the process of reading, both will feel many unexpected scenes, give vivid vitality, but will not feel exaggerated, but to increase the sense of reality.
He used the children's point of view narrative mode to create "Andersen's Fairy Tales" this genre of the unique way to form their own creative style, the development of world literature has had a positive impact on the process.
With the affirmation of this children's perspective narrative mode in the literary world, a large number of literary works have also broken the traditional omniscient narrative mode, and tried to experiment with this newborn creative techniques. Many writers and theorists began to question and reflect on the traditional narrative approach.
They realized that the past narrative mode of omniscience and the narrator's insight and mastery of the whole situation had lost its authenticity and lack of freshness, and that the articles seemed to be very bound, without unexpected gains and vitality of life.
His writing is witty and soft, deft and light, yet heavy with sadness and elegy. Many of his techniques are refined but not pretentious, his themes deep but not stereotyped.
He is able to connect and magnetize the romantic, ancient, heartfelt and weak elements of the literary tradition with the modern, fast, indifferent and casual moods.
Stories like "The Girl with the Thumb" and "The Old Man Always Does Things Right", for example, allow simple hearts, simple ideas, and ancient principles of life to exude a pungent, nostalgia-inducing pleasantness and sadness in the atmosphere of modern life.