The Cap Seller and the Monkeys — Short Story with Vocabulary for Kids

The Cap Seller and the Monkeys — Short Story with Vocabulary | English1to5.com
📖 Moral Stories

The Cap Seller and the Monkeys — Short Story with Vocabulary for Kids

A clever cap seller outsmarts naughty monkeys using his brain — think before you act!

📖 350 words ⏱️ 4 min ⭐⭐ Medium (Grade 2-3) 📚 15 vocabulary 📖 Story 7 of 45

📖 The Cap Seller and the Monkeys

Long ago, in a town near Mysore, there lived a cap seller named Ramu. He sold colourful caps — red, blue, green, yellow, and orange. He carried all his caps in a big bundle on his head.

One hot afternoon, Ramu was walking through a forest to reach the next village. The sun was blazing. Ramu was tired and sweaty.

“I need to rest,” he said. He sat under a tall banyan tree and placed his bundle of caps beside him. He kept one red cap on his head and soon fell fast asleep.

When Ramu woke up, his bundle was empty! All his caps were gone!

“Where are my caps?” he cried. He looked left. He looked right. He looked behind the tree. Nothing!

Then he heard chattering sounds above him. He looked up and — oh no! The banyan tree was full of monkeys! And every monkey was wearing one of his caps!

“Give me back my caps, you naughty monkeys!” shouted Ramu.

But the monkeys just imitated him. When Ramu shouted, the monkeys shouted. When Ramu waved his arms, the monkeys waved their arms. Monkeys love to copy whatever they see!

Ramu was very frustrated. “How will I get my caps back?” he thought. He tried throwing stones. The monkeys threw twigs. He tried shaking the tree. The monkeys just held on tighter.

Then Ramu had a brilliant idea! He remembered that monkeys copy everything.

Ramu took the red cap off his own head and threw it on the ground.

The monkeys watched. Then, one by one, every monkey took off its cap and threw it on the ground too! They were copying Ramu!

Caps rained down from the tree — red, blue, green, yellow, orange! Ramu quickly gathered all his caps, put them back in his bundle, and walked away whistling happily.

“Sometimes,” said Ramu with a smile, “you need to use your brain, not your muscles!”

And from that day, Ramu always made sure to sleep with one eye open when passing through monkey forests!

💡 Moral of the Story

“Use your brain, not just your muscles. Clever thinking solves problems.”

📚 Vocabulary — 15 New Words

bundle
गट्ठर/गठरी
Things wrapped or tied together
“The dhobi carried a bundle of clothes on his head.”
blazing
तपती/जलती
Extremely hot and bright
“The blazing sun made the road feel like fire.”
sweaty
पसीने से तर
Covered in sweat from heat or exercise
“After playing football, Arjun was very sweaty.”
banyan
बरगद
A large Indian tree with hanging roots
“The village meetings happen under the old banyan tree.”
asleep
सोया हुआ
In a state of sleep
“The baby fell asleep in Mummy’s arms.”
empty
खाली
Having nothing inside
“The fridge was empty — we need to buy groceries.”
monkeys
बंदर
Playful animals that climb trees
“The monkeys at Varanasi temple are very naughty!”
imitated
नकल की
Copied someone’s actions or words
“The parrot imitated Papa’s voice perfectly!”
copy
नकल करना
Do the same thing as someone else
“Don’t copy your friend’s answers in the test!”
frustrated
निराश/हताश
Feeling upset because you can’t solve something
“Meera was frustrated when her kite wouldn’t fly.”
twigs
टहनियाँ
Small thin branches of a tree
“The bird built its nest using twigs and leaves.”
brilliant
शानदार/बुद्धिमान
Very clever, extremely smart
“That was a brilliant idea, Priya!”
quickly
जल्दी से
In a fast way, with speed
“Quickly finish your food — the bus is coming!”
whistling
सीटी बजाते हुए
Making a musical sound by blowing air
“Papa was whistling a happy tune while cooking.”
brain
दिमाग
The organ in your head used for thinking
“Use your brain to solve this puzzle!”

🔄 Words in Context

  • The banyan tree in our school is over 100 years old!
  • Little children love to imitate their parents — they copy everything!
  • Aarav felt frustrated when he couldn’t solve the last maths problem.
  • What a brilliant plan! You should be a detective!
  • Priya quickly ran to catch the auto-rickshaw before it left.

❓ Comprehension Questions

1. What did Ramu sell?
2. Where did Ramu fall asleep?
3. What did the monkeys do with the caps?
4. How did Ramu get his caps back?
5. The moral is:
6. ✏️ Why did the monkeys throw their caps when Ramu threw his?
7. ✏️ Can you think of another clever way Ramu could have gotten his caps back?
8. ✏️ When was the last time you used clever thinking to solve a problem?

📐 Grammar: Action Verbs: Showing Not Telling

Use specific action verbs to make stories exciting instead of using ‘said’ and ‘went’.
  • Ramu shouted (not ‘said loudly’)
  • The monkeys chattered (not ‘made noise’)
  • Ramu gathered his caps (not ‘took’ his caps)
  • He walked away whistling (not ‘walked happily’)
  • Caps rained down (not ‘fell down’)
💡 Replace boring verbs: went→rushed, said→whispered/shouted, looked→stared/peeked. Strong verbs make stories come alive!

🗣️ Retell the Story

Retell ‘The Cap Seller and the Monkeys’ in your own words:

  1. Who was Ramu? What did he sell?
  2. Where did he rest? What happened to his caps?
  3. What did the monkeys do when Ramu shouted?
  4. What brilliant idea did Ramu have?
  5. How did he get all his caps back? What is the moral?

👨‍👩‍👧 Read Aloud Tips for Parents

  • Use a tired voice when Ramu sits down, then shocked when he wakes up!
  • Make monkey sounds — ‘ooh ooh aah aah!’ Kids will LOVE this!
  • Build suspense before the brilliant idea: ‘Then Ramu thought… and thought…’
  • When caps rain down, use excited counting: ‘One! Two! Five! Ten!’
  • Ask: ‘How would YOU have gotten the caps back from the monkeys?’

❓ FAQ

What is this story about?

A cap seller named Ramu falls asleep under a banyan tree. Monkeys steal his caps and wear them. Ramu cleverly throws his own cap on the ground, and the monkeys copy him, throwing theirs too. Moral: Use your brain to solve problems.

What vocabulary is taught?

15 words: bundle, blazing, sweaty, banyan, asleep, empty, monkeys, imitated, copy, frustrated, twigs, brilliant, quickly, whistling, brain.

Is this an Indian story?

Yes! This is one of India’s most popular children’s stories, often set in South India. The banyan tree and the mischievous monkeys are quintessentially Indian elements.

What grammar is covered?

Action Verbs — using specific verbs instead of generic ones: shouted vs said, gathered vs took, rained vs fell. Makes writing vivid and exciting.

Why do monkeys copy?

Monkeys are highly intelligent and learn by imitation. In the wild, they copy others to learn new skills. This natural behaviour is what the clever cap seller uses to his advantage!

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