Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2016

Week 9 Storytelling: A Goblin Gone Good

Author's Note. The story was inspired by the happenings of the short story The Goblin and the Sneeze.  A goblin lives in an old house and eats anyone who sneezes.  The only way to stop the goblin is for someone to say "God bless you" and then the sneezer has to say "The same to you!"  One day a father and son realized they must stay in the abandoned house because they had to wait until dawn to enter the city.  The goblin stirs up dust to force one to sneeze and the father began sneezing sporadically.  As the goblin goes in to kill the father, the son sees the goblin and yells "God bless you!" and the father returns with "the same to you!"  The goblin is hungry so he comes out angry.  The son does not react with hatred or mistreatment, but instead is kind to the goblin.  He suggests he come with the father and son and be a decent person.
Now comes the next story!  It is the continuation of the father, son, and goblin and where they go from here.

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The son grabbed the goblin's hand.  Gobby looked up at his new friend, a tear in his eye.  The three got up to the gate and the security guard stopped them quickly. 

"He can't come in here!" the security guard yelled with a finger pointed towards the city.  His eyes were red and fuming, for he had heard the stories of the goblin.

"It is okay, my friend! He is a changed goblin; he no longer wants to hurt people!" the son pleaded with the guard.  Gobby smiled as big as he could with his crooked and yellow stained teeth showing fully.  The guard grimaced and then looked away.

"He is your complete responsibility." The guard pointed at the son and father.  "If he so much as kills a kitten it is completely on you."  This was unnerving to the father, but the son agreed promptly and did not hesitate to take blame for any troubles his new friend could cause.

The guard opened the gate slowly and motioned for the three to enter into the city.

Gobby did exactly as he said he would.  He held hands with both the son and father, and they walked merrily along the paved main road.  They came across little shops, food carts, and salesman throughout the streets.  They hadn't realized it, but suddenly the streets were very full of other customers.  The father purchased three giant, juicy apples and they each ate one on a quiet curb. 


The father, the goblin, and the son from The Goblin and the Sneeze

Suddenly, Gobby heard something he thought he had put behind him.

"Aaachoooooo!" sneezed the donkey tied to the eggs and chickens cart.  Gobby's eyes started burning, and his fingers curled.  He took a few more bites of the apple trying not to draw attention to himself.  

"I have to go to the bathroom," Gobby announced as he stood up.  He had eaten the entire apple, even the core.  "I will just run to that alley right over there and be right back."  He pointed to a small opening between carts about a hundred feet away.  Before he could hear an answer, he hurriedly rushed toward the alley... and the donkey.  

With a quick flick of his sharp claw he cut the rope tying the donkey to the cart.  He discreetly pulled the rope behind his back towards the empty alley.  In a matter of seconds he was standing on the donkey's back, ready to take the first glorious bite of flesh he had tasted in months.  He dug his claws in and as his face got closer he felt a sudden pain in his neck.  He could no longer move.  Wait, no, he was spinning.  It was dark.  Gobby blinked.  He was on the ground, sideways.  So dark...

"Well, you didn't have to go to quite that length," the son yelled as he turned the corner just in time to see his father standing over the lifeless Gobby. "Maybe stopping him with your hands could have helped him learn better than cutting off his head!"

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Author's Note, continued. I did not want to give away what was going to happen in the initial author's note, but I felt it was important to explain the story beforehand.  The original story ends where the son, father, and goblin go about their merry way because the son changed him to be good.
The stories in "The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India" are painfully sad.  The majority of the characters end up dying a gruesome death because of their foolishness.  I really enjoy happily ever afters, so this was a branch out for me.  This story was one of the few with a happy ending so I decided to rewrite it to match the rest.
The picture I chose came from the book listed above.  I wrote the part of the story where they enter the city to look like the picture depicted.

Bibliography. This short story is called The Goblin and the Sneeze and it comes from the book The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India written by W. H. D. Rouse and illustrated by W. Robinson in 1897.

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Week 9 Reading Diary, continued: The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India, Part B

Title: The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India
Author: W. H. D. Rouse
Illustrator: W. Robinson
Year: 1897

Reading Part B
Birds of a Feather
This story was adorable.  The wild horses would hurt everyone, but they loved and were kind to each other.  I did not expect this ending.  I was pleasantly surprised.

The monkey lost one pea, but in his greed and tunnel vision he didn't realize that many more had fallen out of his hands and mouth while he panicked for the one.  This is a good lesson on greed.
WOW.  I definitely did not see it ending this way.  A storytelling idea could be to write a different ending where the crane changed his ways and became a good crane!  Maybe even a vegetarian one...
These stories do not have happy endings.  I am assuming they are to teach a lesson as they definitely don't have any happily ever afters.  This one in particular ends with a simple sentence saying the main characters were then taken home for dinner...

Silence is Golden
This reminds me of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.  He wasn't exactly like the others so he was made fun of.  Unfortunately it doesn't have the happy ending like Rudolph did; it only ended in them making fun of him (how sad).

Silence is Golden (Gutenberg)


[skip: The Great Yellow King and his Porter]
These stories really know how to end gruesome.  I have heard the final phrase before and I am curious if this story is where it came from.

[skip: Pride Must Have a Fall]
The guy seems pretty stupid, but I guess you could say it is bold since he didn't get punished.
That lion girl is a jerk.  She did not even deserve to be proposed to by a jackal is she is going to be such a snooty snob.
I wonder if it is coincidence the similarity to The Boy Who Cried Wolf.  They questioned the boar at first, then they didn't believe him at all the second time.
Wow again.  This story was ridiculous.  I have no idea what the learning point was here.
The lesson here is that honesty is the best policy.  That it is!  This would make a good pre-story for the old man losing his nose.
This was a great lesson in terms of being a good person.  I also liked that the "better" king still went out of his way to make the other king just as great.

Week 9 Reading Diary: The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India, Part A

Title: The Giant Crab, and Other Tales from Old India
Author: W. H. D. Rouse
Illustrator: W. Robinson
Year: 1897


The Giant Crab
What a fun story this could be!  A giant crab alone in the sea with no one quite his size.
What a lesson to be learned.  The head rat was very intelligent here.
This was a very fun story.  The monkey easily outwitted the crocodile, who had an evil plan for him from the beginning.  

[skip: The Axe, the Drum, the Bowl, and the Diamond]
I still do not understand what has happened in this story, and I read it twice...  I am sure it has something to do with the "tell-tale tit" phrase he keeps repeating.  I tried googling the phrase with "old english" in the phrase as well but I was still stumped.
The Wise Parrot and the Foolish Parrot (Gutenberg)
This was a fantastic story on the golden rule "Honesty is the best policy."  I really enjoyed this; a by-product would make a great storytelling idea.

This story was quite grim.  The cat was simply following its' instincts.  This is not my favorite story.  The ending was positive for two of the three.
Wow.  This was incredibly grim.  I guess the moral of the story is you shouldn't always talk?  OR that there is a time and place for speaking?  I am not sure what to take away from this.
Okay these stories are not getting any happier.  I did enjoy the lesson here.  If you trust a fool to handle your affairs, then you are an even bigger fool.  This is true in all aspects of life.
This would make a great story; what happens next with the goblin and his two humans!  Maybe it could be a story where they go into the city the next day and have to convince people they won't die.

[skip: The Grateful Beasts and the Ungrateful Prince]
I like how the man came up and saved the day.  What a good lesson concerning both the evil goblin and the thoughful monkeys.
How cute!  Even though he ended up messing up the verse, the king thought it quite hilarious and decided to give him six instead of just one.
What a great lesson of patience.  The wolf was punished because both he couldn't keep a promise and he was impatient.  probably much deserved!

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Tech Tip Poster

The text is from an unknown author.  This is one of my favorite quotes (which I also posted in my Introduction).  I really like how easy this site was to use, and I am sure i will be using it again.

Poster made using AutoMotivator