首页 > 名言警句 > 寓言 > 儿童故事 > 英文民间故事:Rabbit the hunter

英文民间故事:Rabbit the hunter

   来源:古今学识馆    阅读: 1.04W 次
字号:

用手机扫描二维码 在手机上继续观看

手机查看

One day Rabbit took his bow and arrow and went hunting. He left the house where he lived with his grandmother and hopped through the forest, happy

英文民间故事:Rabbit the hunter

to be out and about. Suddenly he saw huge footprints

in the track.

"Wow! Check out the size of this!" Rabbit said,

twitching his nose. He hopped into the middle of the left footprint, then took six long hops to reach the right one.

"This dude is some giant" he said out loud, talking

to himself because no one else was there. The forest

was silent. He couldn't even hear a wing flap, or a

bear breathing.

"I bet that giant's hunted everything!" said Rabbit

angrily. And sure enough, when he checked, there

wasn't anything left to hunt.

Rabbit went home to his grandmother and told her he hadn't hunted

anything for dinner because the giant had been to the forest first. She patted him on the head. "Don't worry dear. I've picked some berries. We can have them for dinner."

"I don't want stupid berries. I want to eat something I've hunted!"

Rabbit grumbled to himself. He didn't say it out loud because he didn't

want to hurt his grandmother's feelings.

The next day Rabbit got up earlier, hoping to hunt before the giant

came. No luck. Everything had gone already. "It's not fair!" cried

Rabbit, stamping his feet.

Each day Rabbit got up earlier and earlier, and each day the same thing

happened. The giant got there first.

Rabbit became angrier and angrier. "I will set a trap for the giant. And when I catch him, I'll shoot him with my bow and arrow." He strung a

net across the track to catch anyone who walked down it. Then he went

home to his grandmother, thinking "this will be the last night I have to

eat berries for dinner. Tomorrow I'll be able to go hunting."

The next morning Rabbit got up extra early and went to check on his net. "Oh no!" He wailed.

"The giant has walked right throng it and made a big

hole!" He went home and told his grandmother.

"Don't worry dear, have a berry" she said.

"I don't want any more berries" cried Rabbit "I

want to eat something I have hunted." Then he looked at his grandmother and thought for a

moment. "You know some magic. Will you make me

a special net?" he pleaded.

"Alright. If it will make you happy." She told Rabbit to go away because the magic was secret. When he came back she gave him a net as thin as a spider's web, but stronger than any net ever made.

Rabbit tied it across the track in

the forest. The next morning, he got

up extra early and rushed out into the forest. He hopped round a bend in the track and skidded to a halt. There was a blinding light coming

from his magic net. It was so bright, he couldn't look at it for more than

a second. "Oh No!" he wailed. "I've captured the Sun".

"Let me out of here," roared Sun in a deep load voice that shook the forest. Rabbit fell backwards onto the track, then hopped home as fast

as he could to tell his grandmother.

"You must let Sun out of the net," said his Grandmother "Look how

dark it is everywhere." "I'm scared" said Rabbit.

"I know" answered his grandmother, "but if you don't let Sun out of the net it will always be dark. Here's a magic knife. Go and cut the net." Rabbit hopped back into the forest.

"Let me out of here" roared Sun, thrashing around

in the net with his big feet. Rabbit slowly moved

forward, his little legs shaking with fright. The closer

he got, the hotter it became. Closer and hotter,

closer and hotter.

Little legs shaking and sweat

gushing from him, Rabbit shielded his eyes and reached up to cut the net with the magic knife

Sun struggled free then jumped upwards. One of his big feet kicked Rabbit on the shoulders, almost knocking him over. The sky filled with light again and all the animals cried out in happiness.

Rabbit looked at his sore shoulders. They were scorched brown with the heat from Sun's foot - and they are still brown to this day.

伊索寓言
寓言故事
传说
爱情故事
儿童故事
民间故事
睡前故事
童话故事