The Little Red Hen šŸ” Story Moral

In the story, the little red hen finds a grain of wheat and asks the other barnyard animals "Who will help me plant the wheat?ā€
The response ā€œNot Iā€ said the cat, ā€œNot Iā€ said the dog, ā€œNot Iā€ said the pig.
So the Little Red Hen said ā€œThen I will plant the seed myselfā€ and she did.
At each later stage (harvest, threshing, milling and baking the flour to make bread) the hen asks the 3 animals for help in the process again, and at each stage the animals reply with the same response
ā€œNot Iā€ said the cat, ā€œNot Iā€ said the dog, ā€œNot Iā€ said the pig.
At the final stage, when the hen has finally baked the bread, she asks
ā€œNow, who will help me eat the bread?ā€

If youā€™ve heard the story before you know the end. But, Iā€™m almost positive that they arenā€™t teaching this story in school anymore. The response? ā€œNo, you did not help me plant, nor help me harvest, nor help me mill, nor help me bake the breadā€ so the Little Red Hen ate the bread and gave it to her chicks.
Such a simple lesson on being a responsible individual and helping others. Modern society no longer embraces this kind of thinking it seems.

ā€œIt doesnā€™t matter that you did not contribute to any of the work or preparation in making something successfulā€¦you still get to eat from the fruit of peopleā€™s labor.ā€
This kind of thinking is wrong. It promotes laziness and slothfulness and the ultimate feeling of entitlement that we see in our world today.
So you see, this is why this story should be resurrected and taught to our children at very early agesā€¦like it once wasā€¦like it was in the days when people were more responsible and understood ā€œcause and effectā€ relationships. Yes, letā€™s revive this ā€œLiterary Classicā€ before it is too late!

ā€œThe story of the Little Red Hen has been retold many times. First published in 1874, this folk tale teaches children the value of hard work and self-reliance. In the story, a hen finds a seed of wheat, which she decides to plant in order to make bread. Though she seeks the help of other farm animals, they refuse, and the hen must do all the work herself. When the bread is finally made, the other animals wish to partakeā€”but, because they did not help the hen along the way, they are refused the fruits of her labor. The story has been featured as part of the popular ā€œLittle Golden Booksā€ series and as a Walt Disney animated film, The Wise Little Hen (1938).ā€

The Little Red Hen is an American fable first collected by Mary Mapes Dodge in St. Nicholas Magazine in 1874. The story is meant to teach children the importance of hard work and personal initiative. Wikipedia Originally published: 1918



** Scanned images from this book found at Golden Gems

View/Read more little Golden FlipBooks here

Even while we were with you, we gave you this command: "Those unwilling to work will not get to eat."
2 Thessalonians 3:10
 
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LoriAnn
LoriAnn

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