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  2. 18 Children’s Books with Moral Lessons to Raise ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/18-children-books...

    Every parent’s primary goal is to raise a decent human, but didactic speeches about right and wrong aren’t exactly in the cards when you’re dealing with a kid who can’t tear himself away ...

  3. The Tiger Who Came to Tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tiger_Who_Came_to_Tea

    The Tiger Who Came to Tea is a short children's story, first published by William Collins, Sons in 1968, written and illustrated by Judith Kerr. [1] The book concerns a girl called Sophie, her mother, and an anthropomorphised tiger who invites himself to their afternoon tea and consumes all the food and drink they have.

  4. The North Wind and the Sun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_North_Wind_and_the_Sun

    In Hecatomgraphie (1540), the first of these, the story is told in a quatrain, accompanied by a woodcut in which a man holds close a fur cloak under the wintry blast while on the other side he strips naked beneath the sun's rays. It is titled with the moral "More by gentleness than strength" (Plus par doulceur que par force). [4]

  5. The Ant and the Grasshopper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ant_and_the_Grasshopper

    The English writer W. Somerset Maugham reverses the moral order in a different way in his short story, "The Ant and The Grasshopper" (1924). It concerns two brothers, one of whom is a dissolute waster whose hard-working brother has constantly to bail out of difficulties.

  6. Henny Penny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henny_Penny

    The story is listed as Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index type 20C, which includes international examples of folktales that make light of paranoia and mass hysteria. [2] There are several Western versions of the story, of which the best-known concerns a chick which believes that the sky is falling when an acorn falls on its head.

  7. Fable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fable

    Anthropomorphic cat guarding geese, Egypt, c. 1120 BCE. Fable is a literary genre defined as a succinct fictional story, in prose or verse, that features animals, legendary creatures, plants, inanimate objects, or forces of nature that are anthropomorphized, and that illustrates or leads to a particular moral lesson (a "moral"), which may at the end be added explicitly as a concise maxim or ...

  8. The Reluctant Dragon (short story) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Reluctant_Dragon...

    One scholar describes the book as "a story about language", such as the "dialect of the illiterate people", and the "literary aspirations of the dragon". [3] The story also has an opening scene in which a little girl named Charlotte (a character from Grahame's The Golden Age) and a grown-up character find mysterious reptilian footprints in the snow and follow them, eventually finding a man who ...

  9. The Frog and the Ox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Frog_and_the_Ox

    The story related by Phaedrus has a frog motivated by envy of the ox, illustrating the moral that 'the needy man, while affecting to imitate the powerful, comes to ruin'. [3] It is to this that Martial alludes in a short epigram (X.79) about two citizens trying to outdo each other by building in the suburbs. [ 4 ]