![]() ![]() In this version of the fairy tale, Goldilocks was scared, and since the bears didn't harm her, she still decided to jump through the window by herself thus punishing herself, although her faith stays unknown and we don't know if she learned her lesson. Also, the writer made a comment that Goldilocks could be a thief as if the spoons weren't wooden but silver, she surely would've put them in her pocket.Īt best, Goldilocks illustrates the moral of the story: don't break into someone's home, steal someone's food or use their things, because you will be captured and punished. One of them was a Little Wee Bear, and one was a Middle-sized. She has certain desires, so she tests everything (from porridge to beds) before fulfilling her wishes. Once upon a time there were three Bears, who lived together in a house of their own, in a wood. She enters their house uninvited, peeks through the window, peeps through the keyhole, eats food without asking, comfortably sleeps in somebody else's bed. Opposite to the bears, Goldilocks as the antagonist of the story is described by her acts. So she helps herself to their porridge she sits in their chairs and she lies down in their beds. "said the Little, Small, Wee Bear, with his little voice." Goldilocks When Goldilocks sneaks into the three bears cottage, it seems theres no one home. Nouns: bowl, chair, bed, woods/forest, house, three, bears Verbs: eat, sleep, sit Cultural vocabulary. ![]() "said the Middle-sized Bear, with his middle voice." Goldilocks, Father Bear, Mother Bear, Baby Bear. "…said the Great, Big Bear, with his gruff, rough, great voice" The Great Bear has a rough, gruff voice, the Middle-sized bear has a middle voice and the Little Wee Bear has a little voice. ![]()
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