SPEAKING PRACTICE - 40 STORIES TO RETELL @Aslanovs Lessons
STORY 33. Dick was seven years old, and his sister, Catherine, was five. One day their mother took them to
their aunt’s house to play while she went to the big city to buy some new clothes The children played for an
hour, and then at half past four their aunt took Dick into the kitchen. She gave him a nice cake and a knife and
said to him, ‘Now here’s a knife, Dick. Cut this cake in half and give one of the pieces to your sister, but
remember to do it like a gentleman.’ ‘Like a gentleman?’ Dick asked. ‘How do gentlemen do it? ‘They always
give the bigger piece to the other person,’ answered his aunt at once. ‘Oh,’ said Dick. He thought about this for
a few seconds. Then he took the cake to his sister and said to her, ‘Cut this cake in half, Catherine.’
STORY 34. A small boy and his father were having a walk in the country when it suddenly began to rain very
hard. They did not have their umbrellas with them, and there was nowhere to hide from the rain, so they were
soon very wet, and the small boy did not feel very happy. For a long time while they were walking home
through the rain, the boy was thinking. Then at last he turned to his father and said to him, ‘Why does it rain,
Father? It isn’t very nice, is it?’ ‘No, it isn’t very nice, but it’s very useful, Tom,’ answered his father. ‘It rains
to make the fruit and the vegetables grow for us, and to make the grass grow for the cows and sheep.’ Tom
thought about this for a few seconds, and then he said, ‘Then, why does it rain on the road too, Father?’
STORY 35. A man went into a bar, sat down, called the barman and said to him, ‘Give me a drink before the
trouble starts.’ The barman was busy with other people, so he did not say anything, but he gave the man the
drink, and the man drank it quickly. Then he put his glass down, called the barman again and said to him, ‘Give
me another one before the trouble starts.’ Again the barman was too busy to say anything, so he gave the man
his drink and went away. The man drank that too, and then again he called the barman and said to him, ‘One
more drink before the trouble starts, please.’ This time the barman was not very busy, so when he brought the
man his third drink, he said to him, ‘What trouble are you talking about?’ The man answered, ‘I haven’t got any
money.’