The Boy Who Cried Wolf — Short Story with Vocabulary for Kids
A shepherd boy learns that nobody believes a liar — even when he tells the truth!
📖 The Boy Who Cried Wolf
In a small village near the mountains of Himachal Pradesh, there lived a young shepherd boy named Raju. Every day, his father sent him to the hilltop to watch over their flock of sheep.
Raju did not like his job. It was boring. There was nobody to talk to. Just sheep — and more sheep. He sat on a rock, watched the clouds, and felt very lonely.
One day, Raju had a naughty idea. “I know how to have some fun!” he thought.
He ran down the hill towards the village, shouting as loudly as he could: “WOLF! WOLF! A wolf is attacking my sheep!”
The villagers dropped everything. The farmers left their fields. The women left their cooking. Everyone ran up the hill with sticks and axes to save Raju and his sheep.
But when they arrived, there was no wolf. Raju was sitting on his rock, laughing.
“Ha ha! I tricked you!” said Raju. “There is no wolf!”
The villagers were very angry. “Don’t do that again, Raju!” they warned. “This is not funny!”
But Raju did it again the next week. “WOLF! WOLF!” he cried. Again the villagers came running. Again there was no wolf. The villagers were furious.
“We will not come again!” they said. “You are a liar!”
Then, one evening, a real wolf came! It had glowing yellow eyes and sharp teeth. It started chasing Raju’s sheep!
“WOLF! WOLF!” screamed Raju. “Please help! This time it’s REAL!”
But nobody came. The villagers heard him, but they ignored him. “He’s lying again,” they said, shaking their heads.
The wolf chased away many of Raju’s sheep. Raju sat on his rock and wept.
His father came and found Raju crying. “What happened?” he asked.
“Nobody believed me, Papa,” said Raju. “The wolf really came, but nobody helped.”
“That is what happens when you lie, Raju,” said his father gently. “Nobody believes a liar — even when he tells the truth.”
Raju never lied again.
💡 Moral of the Story
“Nobody believes a liar, even when they tell the truth. Always be honest.”
📚 Vocabulary — 15 New Words
🔄 Words in Context
- The shepherd in our village walks five kilometres every day with his sheep.
- Priya felt lonely when her best friend moved to another city.
- The villagers celebrated Diwali together with music and sweets.
- Mummy was furious when she found muddy footprints on the clean floor.
- Nobody believed Arjun when he said he saw a peacock in the school garden — but it was true!
❓ Comprehension Questions
📐 Grammar: Adjective Intensity: angry → furious
- angry → furious (furious = VERY angry)
- sad → miserable (miserable = VERY sad)
- happy → delighted (delighted = VERY happy)
- scared → terrified (terrified = VERY scared)
- tired → exhausted (exhausted = VERY tired)
🗣️ Retell the Story
Retell ‘The Boy Who Cried Wolf’ in your own words:
- Who is Raju? Where does he live? What is his job?
- Why was Raju bored? What naughty idea did he have?
- What happened when he cried ‘Wolf!’ the first and second time?
- What happened when the REAL wolf came?
- What lesson did Raju learn? What is the moral?
👨👩👧 Read Aloud Tips for Parents
- Shout ‘WOLF! WOLF!’ dramatically — kids will jump and laugh!
- Use a nasal, whiny voice for bored Raju, and a scary voice for the wolf.
- When the villagers don’t come, pause and ask: ‘Why aren’t they coming?’
- Make the ending sad but thoughtful — let it sink in.
- Discuss: ‘What happens when people stop trusting you? Is trust easy to rebuild?’
📚 Explore More on English1to5.com
❓ FAQ
What is ‘The Boy Who Cried Wolf’ about?
A shepherd boy named Raju gets bored watching sheep and tricks villagers by falsely crying ‘Wolf!’ twice. When a real wolf comes, nobody believes him and nobody comes to help. The moral: Nobody believes a liar, even when they tell the truth.
What words can children learn?
15 words: mountains, shepherd, hilltop, flock, boring, lonely, naughty, shouting, villagers, arrived, tricked, angry, furious, ignored, believed.
Why is this story set in Himachal Pradesh?
Himachal Pradesh has real shepherds who graze sheep in the mountains. Setting the story there makes it relatable for Indian children and teaches them about different parts of India.
What grammar point does this story teach?
Adjective Intensity — how some adjectives are stronger versions of others: angry→furious, sad→miserable, happy→delighted, scared→terrified.
How to discuss the moral with kids?
Ask: ‘Why is lying bad?’ ‘What happens when people stop trusting you?’ ‘Is it easy to rebuild trust?’ ‘Can you think of a time when telling the truth was hard but important?’