The Frog and the Ant
There
was once a pretty little frog who lived in a small round lake, near a big town. One day, she wanted to go shopping. “Dear
oh dear, I’ve no
oil for my lamp. I must buy some today.”
She hopped out of her small, neat home and went down the road. On the way, she passed an ant-hill. The ants were very busy. The cold weather was coming on. They were dragging food into their home.
“Good
morning,” said
the frog. The ants stared at her. They did not like strangers. They weren’t a
bit friendly. Before she could get out of their way, they had climbed all over
her. Hundreds of them. They jumped on her and bit her. “Ouch!
Please stop it. You’re
hurting me!”
But they were cruel and would not stop. “Rivet! Rivet!” croaked the frog unhappily. Her cheeks
puffed and became red and her stomach began to swell. She twisted this way and that way. She
shook most of them off her back.
“You’re
very unkind. I only wanted to be friends,” said
the frog. Then the ants became ashamed
of themselves. They agreed to be friends.
“Dear Aunty, please be our guest.
Help yourself to whatever food we have,” they
said. The frog was very pleased. She had never been so
happy in a" her life. “Dear
Aunty, we sometimes hear you singing when we’re working. Won’t you sing for us now?”
asked the Queen Ant. The frog turned red. She did not know that she had such a
loud voice.
As
she sang, the ants hummed with her. They loved to sing but had poor voices.
They invited her to stay the night in the ant-hill. Early next morning she woke
up. The sun was high in the sky. She saw only a few ants
and they were busy washing up after last
night’s
party. The others are in the woods gathering food,” they
told her.
That
afternoon when the Queen Ant returned home, she spoke to her. “You’ve been so kind to me. I’d like to invite you to my
home by the lake,” said
the frog shyly.
“That’s
very kind of you. But I can’t
feast on my own. The others will have to come too,” said
the Queen Ant. The frog invited them all to come. The ants
were pleased. It wasn’t
often they had a chance to feast twice in a week. On the way, they passed many
other ant-hills.
“We’re off
to visit the frog,” they told their friends.
“We’ll come
too.”
Finally, they came to her home. “Here it is,” said the frog and turned round. The shore was covered with thousands of red, black and brown ants. There was not a blade of grass to be seen. The frog’s
eyes bulged and
almost popped out
of her head. “Rivet!
Rivet!” she
croaked worriedly. What was she to do?
She only had a few cabbage leaves with which to feed the ants. It
wasn’t
enough. “Please
wait here and I’ll
get everything ready,” said
the frog, disappearing into her home.
The
ants waited patiently outside. “I’m
sure she’s
preparing a lovely feast,” said the Queen Ant. They waited a
whole day and still there was no sign of the frog.
“Perhaps
she’s
ill,” said
the ants worriedly. They had grown to love the pretty little frog. Then the Queen Ant knocked on the
door. There was no reply. She pushed the door open but there was nobody at
home. The back door was wide open. The frog had disappeared.
The ants were very angry. “Well, that should teach
us a good lesson. We could die just waiting for the frog to give us a
treat.” The Queen Ant was sad that the frog had not kept her promise. She tightened her belt around her empty
belly and went home. All the other ants did the same. Ever since then, ants have had their belts tightened over their bellies and all frogs have had large, bulging eyes.
hai, this is a great source of stories,
ReplyDeleteI've read some of them. it's very interesting.
by the way, my teacher gave ma a task, she told my class to look for a narrative text and post it on our blog then do a story telling front of the class, I wish you won't mind if I copy your post to my blog? okay?
thankyou so much before.
have a nice day.