The Talking Eggs – Audio Story
FULL
AUDIO STORY HERE:
Two sisters make very different choices when
they come upon a mysterious old woman and her
magical talking eggs.
The Talking Eggs Audio
Story based on The Talking Eggs Short Story:
THERE was once a woman who had two daughters
and their names were Millison and Blanche.
Millison was nasty-tempered and cruel, while her younger sister Blanche was
sweet and cheerful. The mother's
favorite was not sweet Blanche, but the sharp-tongued Millison, probably because the older daughter was
the very likeness of her own mean self. The mother made Blanche work hard all day long while she and Millison did
nothing but loll about from morning
to night, spinning tales of how they were bound to live in the city as grand
ladies,
surrounded by admirers.
One morning the mother sent Blanche to the
well to fetch some water in a bucket. When she
arrived at the well, the girl saw an old woman, who said to her,
"My little one, I am so terribly thirsty.
Do give me some water."
"Yes, auntie, of course," said
Blanche. She rinsed her bucket and drew plenty of good fresh water to drink.
"Thank you, child, you are a good girl!" said
the old woman.
A few days later, the mother scolded Blanche
more horribly than she had ever done before, and beat her badly. In terror, the girl ran away into the woods. She cried, and knew not where to go,
because she was afraid to return home. When suddenly, standing in front of her,
Blanche
recognized the same old woman she had met at
the well. "Ah! child, why are you crying?" "Auntie, my mamma has beaten me, and I am afraid to
return home."
"Well, then, come with me," said the
old woman. "I will give you dinner and a place to sleep. But you must promise me one thing: You
must not laugh at anything you will see."
She took Blanche's hand and they began to walk
into the deep wood. Strangely, thorn bushes
opened up by themselves before them and closed behind their backs. A
little further on, Blanche saw two
axes fighting each another all by themselves. She found such goings-on very odd, but she did not laugh or say
anything. They walked further and behold! it was two arms which were fighting; a little further, two
legs; at last, she saw two heads fighting by banging their foreheads against each other. All this was strange beyond
belief, but Blanche did not laugh or
say a word.
At last they arrived at the old woman's cabin.
"Make a fire, child, to cook the
supper," said the old woman, and she sat down near the fireplace. Then she reached
up to her head and twisted
it off, placing it on her knees
like a
small round watermelon. Blanche found this the
most bizarre thing she had seen yet, but still, she did not utter a sound. Then the old woman began to comb
and braid her hair. When she was
through, she twisted her head back into place.
"Well!" she said, "that feels
better." She gave Blanche a large bone to put on the fire for their
supper. Blanche could not imagine
how only one bone could make a soup, and a sorry-looking bone at that, but just the same she put the bone in the pot.
Lo! in a moment the pot was full of good
hearty meat stew.
The old woman gave Blanche a grain of rice to
pound with the pestle. Blanche could not see the point of grinding a single grain of rice, but she did so
nevertheless, and quickly the mortar brimmed
to overflowing with steaming rice.
When Blanche got up the next morning, the old
woman said to her, "You must go home now.
As you've been a good girl I want to make you a present of the talking
eggs. Go to the chicken- house. All
the eggs that say to you, 'Do not take me,' you must not take. Take only the
eggs that say, 'Take me.' When you
are on the road, throw the eggs behind your back, one by one, to break them, and you will have a
surprise."
Blanche went to the chicken-house where,
indeed, lay a pile of eggs. Some of them looked as plain as hundreds of chicken eggs Blanche had seen all her life,
but others were made of pure gold and
were encircled by jewels. Unfortunately, it was the plain-looking eggs that
called out, "Take me, take
me!" So Blanche took a few of the plain talking eggs and left the golden
ones behind.
Once Blanche was on the road, she threw one of
the eggs behind her. In the corner of her eye,
she caught a glance of something shining. She turned around and --
imagine her surprise! -- there, amid
the broken egg shells, glittered a pile of diamonds! From another broken egg
sprang gold jewelry, from another one a
beautiful carriage. Yet from another, beautiful dresses beyond belief. By the time she arrived at her mother's, she
had so many fine things that it
wasn't easy to fit them all into the house.
Her mother was delighted and pretended to be very glad to see her. The next day at dawn, the mother shook her
older daughter awake and
whispered to her, "You, too, must go to
the woods to look for this same old woman. There is no reason you shouldn't have even finer dresses than your
sister."
Millison was not at
all pleased at having to get up out of bed so early in the morning.
Grumbling and muttering, she marched into the woods. Before long she
met the same old
woman, who invited her to come to her cabin.
The old woman warned her, also, not to laugh at anything she saw. But when Millison saw the axes, the arms,
the legs, and the heads fighting,
she couldn't help but laugh and laugh. And
when the old woman took off her head and set it on her lap to comb and braid her hair, the girl shrieked,
pointing, "Well, now, if that isn't the
stupidest thing I've ever seen!"
The next day the old woman said to Millison,
"Listen to me. What I am about to tell you is exactly what I told your sister. And like her, out in the chicken-house I believe you will find
exactly what you deserve. You must take only
the talking eggs that say, 'Take me.' The others you must leave behind. When you throw the eggs behind your back,
one by one, you will have a surprise."
With glee, Millison rushed into the
chicken-house. Like before, the plain-looking ones called, "Take me, take me!" while the dazzling, golden eggs were the ones that called,
"Don't take me!"
In an instant, Millison grabbed as many golden
eggs as she could carry and hurried away with
them.
As she walked, she broke one egg behind her,
and then another. But instead of riches out came a quantity of snakes, toads and frogs, which began to run
after her. From other eggs sprang
swarms of gnats and mosquitoes, which circled
around her head. Millison screamed and ran.
She arrived at her mother's so tired that she
was not able to speak. Blanche knew that to stay at the cabin would mean being blamed for her big sister's
troubles. It was clear she must leave at once, but to help her sister, she left behind a quantity of jewels and riches. Gathering
the rest of her treasure, she left
in her carriage to the
city. There she lived the rest of
her days as a grand lady, kind
to all, surrounded by friends and admirers.
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Teacher can you send 1 more audio story please?
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ReplyDeleteI liked the talking eggs story very much !!
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