A Summary and Analysis of the ‘Three Little Pigs’ Fairy Tale (2023)

By Dr Oliver Tearle

The anonymous fable or fairy tale of the Three Little Pigs is one of those classic anonymous tales which we hear, and have read to us, when we are very young. The fable contains many common features associated with the fairy tale, but there are some surprises when we delve into the history of this well-known story. Let us begin with a summary of the Three Little Pigs tale before proceeding to an analysis of its meaning and origins.

The Three Little Pigs: plot summary

First, a brief summary of the tale as it’s usually told. An old sow has three pigs, her beloved children, but she cannot support them, so she sends them out into the world to make their fortune. The first (and oldest) pig meets a man carrying a bundle of straw, and politely asks if he might have it to build a house from. The man agrees, and the pig builds his house of straw. But a passing wolf smells the pig inside the house.

He knocks at the door (how you can ‘knock’ at a door made of straw is a detail we’ll gloss over for now), and says: ‘Little pig! Little pig! Let me in! Let me in!’

The pig can see the wolf’s paws through the keyhole (yes, there’s a keyhole in this straw door), so he responds: ‘No! No! No! By the hair on my chinny chin chin!’

The wolf bares his teeth and says: ‘Then I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down.’

(Video) Fairy Tales - The 3 Little Pigs Story

He does as he’s threatened to do, blows the house down, and gobbles up the pig before strolling on.

The second of the three little pigs, meanwhile, has met a man with a bundle of sticks, and has had the same idea as his (erstwhile) brother. The man gives him the sticks and he makes a house out of them. The wolf is walking by, smells the pig inside his house made of sticks, and he knocks at the door (can you ‘knock’ at a door made of sticks?), and says: ‘Little pig! Little pig! Let me in! Let me in!’

The pig can see the wolf’s ears through the keyhole (how can there – oh, forget it), so he responds: ‘No! No! No! By the hair on my chinny chin chin!’

The wolf bares his teeth and says: ‘Then I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down.’

He does as he’s threatened to do, blows the house down, and gobbles up the pig before strolling on.

Now, the final of the three little pigs – and the last surviving one – had met a man with a pile of bricks, and had had the same idea as his former siblings, and the man had kindly given him the bricks to fashion a house from. Now, you can guess where this is going.

The wolf is passing, and sees the brick house, and smells the pig inside it. He knocks at the door (no problem here), and says: ‘Little pig! Little pig! Let me in! Let me in!’

(Video) Three Little Pigs in English | Story | @EnglishFairyTales

The pig can see the wolf’s great big eyes through the keyhole, so he responds: ‘No! No! No! By the hair on my chinny chin chin!’

The wolf bares his teeth and says: ‘Then I’ll huff and I’ll puff and I’ll blow your house down.’

So the wolf huffs and puffs and huffs and puffs and huffs and puffs and keeps huffing and puffing till he’s out of puff. And he hasn’t managed to blow the pig’s house down! He thinks for a moment, and then tells the little pig that he knows a field where there are some nice turnips for the taking. He tells the pig where the field is and says he will come round at six o’clock the next morning and take him there.

But the little pig is too shrewd, so the next morning he rises at five o’clock, goes to the field, digs up some turnips and takes them back to his brick house. By the time the wolf knocks for him at six, he is already munching on the turnips. He tells the wolf he has already been and got them. The wolf is annoyed, but he comes up with another plan, and tells the wolf that he knows of some juicy apples on a tree in a nearby garden, and says he will knock for the pig the next morning at five o’clock and personally show him where they are.

The little pig agrees, but rises the next morning before four o’clock, and goes to the garden to pick some apples. But the wolf has been fooled once and isn’t about to be fooled twice, so he heads to the apple tree before five and catches the pig up the tree with a basket of apples. The pig manages to escape by throwing the wolf an apple to eat, but throwing it so far away that by the time the wolf has fetched it and returned, the little pig has escaped with his basket and gone home to his brick house.

The wolf tries one final time. He invites the little pig to the fair with him the next day, and the pig agrees; but he heads to the fair early on, buys a butter churn, and is returning home when he sees the big bad wolf on the warpath, incandescent with rage at having been thwarted a third time. So the pig hides in the butter churn and ends up rolling down the hill towards the wolf. The pig squeals in fear as he rolls, and the sound of the squealing and the speed of the churn rolling towards him terrifies the wolf, and he tucks tail and runs away.

The next day, the wolf shows up at the little pig’s house, to apologise for not accompanying him to the fair the day before. He tells the pig that a loud, scary thing was rolling down a hill towards him. When the pig tells him that it must have been him inside the butter churn, the wolf loses his patience, and climbs on the roof, determined to climb down the chimney into the little pig’s house and eat him. But the pig has a pot of water boiling under the chimney, and when the wolf drops down into the house, he plops straight into the boiling hot water. The little pig puts the lid on the pot and cooks the wolf and then eats him for supper!

(Video) The TRUE story of the 3 little pigs by A.Wolf as told to Jon Scieszka. Grandma Annii's Story Time

The Three Little Pigs: analysis

We all know these essential features of the story: the three little pigs, the big bad wolf. Yet neither of these is an essential feature of the story, or hasn’t been at some point or other in the fable’s history. In one version – the earliest published version, from English Forests and Forest Trees, Historical, Legendary, and Descriptive (1853) – the little pigs were actually little pixies, and the wolf was a fox; the three houses were made of wood, stone, and iron. In another version, the Big Bad Wolf was actually a Big Kind Wolf. In at least one telling, the middle pig builds his house out of furze (i.e. gorse, a kind of shrub) rather than sticks.

As the Writing in Margins blog observes, an 1877 article published in Lippincott’s detailing folklore of African Americans in the southern United States outlines a story involving seven little pigs, which contains many of the details we associate with the Three Little Pigs tale, including the chimney-fire-pot finale and the chinny-chin-chinning. Joel Chandler Harris’ 1883 collection Nights with Uncle Remus contains a similar tale (featuring six pigs rather than three), suggesting that the tale was part of African-American folklore in the nineteenth century. Was the tale related to race relations in the United States during the antebellum (and immediate postbellum) era?

Perhaps, although it’s worth noting there were also Italian versions of the tale in circulation around the same time (with three geese rather than three pigs). The definitive English version – with all of the features of the story outlined in the plot summary above – appears to have made its debut in print only in 1886, in James Orchard Halliwell’s Nursery Rhymes of England.

This was a sort of hybrid version of the various tellings of the story in circulation, incorporating aspects of the Italian, African-American, and English versions. We recommend the Writing in Margins post linked to above for more information on the evolution of the story. Among other fascinating insights, the author suggests that the ‘pixies’ version of the tale arose from a mishearing of the Devon dialect word for pig, ‘pigsie’, as ‘pixie’. Certainly, no other version of the Three Little Pigs contains pixies, and the pixies in the story behave unlike the pixies found in other stories from English folklore.

1886 is rather late for the tale (as we now know it) to be making its debut in print. It feels much older, especially since it contains so many features we commonly associate with fairy tales and children’s stories. Indeed, it’s thought that the story is considerably older, and was perhaps circulated orally before it finally made its way into published books. Certainly, despite these slight differences between disparate versions of the tale, the raw narrative elements are those we are used to finding in fairy tales.

The rule of three – a common plot feature in classic fairy tales – is there several times over in the fable of the Three Little Pigs. There are three little pigs; there are three houses; the wolf tries to trick the last of the three pigs three times. In each case, the third instance acts as the decisive one: the first two pigs are eaten, but the third survives; the first two houses are insufficient to withstand the wolf, but the third is able to; and the third trick played by the wolf proves his ultimate undoing, since it is the last straw (no pun intended) which makes him erupt in rage and go on the offensive, with devastating consequences (for him).

(Video) The Three Little Pigs and Big Bad Wolf | HD Animated Fairy Tales for Children | Full Story

This helps to build a sense of narrative tension, even if we suspect we know where the tale is going. And of course, there is a delicious irony (delicious in more than one sense) in the pig eating the wolf at the end of the fable, rather than vice versa.

But if fables are meant to have a moral message to impart, what is the meaning of the Three Little Pigs tale? In the last analysis, it seems to be that plucky resourcefulness and careful planning pay off, and help to protect us from harm. There’s also a degree of self-sufficiency: the mother cannot look after the three little pigs, so they must stand on their own two (or four) feet and make their own way in the world. (This is another popular narrative device in fairy tales: the hero must absent themselves from home early on and go out into the world alone.)

Of course, the third little pig survives not just by standing on his own feet but by thinking on his feet, too: it’s his quick thinking that enables him to outwit the wolf, himself not exactly a simpleton, even if he isn’t the sharpest straw in the hay-bale.

The author of this article, Dr Oliver Tearle, is a literary critic and lecturer in English at Loughborough University. He is the author of, among others,The Secret Library: A Book-Lovers’ Journey Through Curiosities of HistoryA Summary and Analysis of the ‘Three Little Pigs’ Fairy Tale (2)andThe Great War, The Waste Land and the Modernist Long Poem.

Image: via Wikimedia Commons.

Related

FAQs

What is the summary of The Three Little Pigs story? ›

"The Three Little Pigs" is a fable about three pigs who build four houses of different materials. A Big Bad Wolf blows down the first two pigs' houses which are made of straw and sticks respectively, but is unable to destroy the third pig's house that is made of bricks.

What is the analysis on The Three Little Pigs? ›

​The primary moral lesson learned from "The Three Little Pigs" is that ​hard work and dedication pay off. ​ While the first two pigs quickly built houses of straw and had more free time to play, the third pig labored in the construction of his house of bricks.

What is the Marxist analysis of The Three Little Pigs? ›

The Marxist view on the three little pigs is very different. Marxism tells us that the pigs are the bad guys in this story. The pigs represent the capitalist Bourgeoisie, while the wolf represents the working class, or Proletariat.

What is the conclusion of Three Little Pigs? ›

It ends with the Big Bad Wolf being eaten by the Third Little Pig. This clearly shows that the Pig is very smart and is able to think quickly on his feet. He doesn't panic, but instead he thinks of a plan to stop the Wolf from entering his house and eating him.

What is the main problem in The Three Little Pigs? ›

When looking at the pigs, your child might notice that the pigs look worried. You could say: “Uh- oh, there's a big problem here – the wolf wants to eat the pig, and is going to break his house down!”

What is the main conflict in The Three Little Pigs? ›

Conflict: The tension or interest created in the story. In The Three Little Pigs, the conflict is that the big bad wolf wants to get inside the pig's homes to eat them. The wolf tells the pigs to open up and let him in or he will blow their house down.

What is the climax of the 3 Little Pigs? ›

CLIMAX: Wolf decides to sneak down the chimney to get the pigs. Wolf falls into boiling pot of soup. RESOLUTION: The Big Bad Wolf is so scared of the 3 Pigs that he runs off in the woods never to be seen again. The 3 little pigs live happily ever after.

What is the author's purpose in writing Three Little Pigs? ›

Students might respond in the following ways: "I think the author's purpose was to persuade, because the wolf was telling his side of the story and trying to act innocent;" "I think the author was trying to inform us of the true story;" or "The author was entertaining us because the story is fictional and isn't real."

How does The Three Little Pigs relate to the Great Depression? ›

The Disney movie "Three Little Pigs" was seen as symbolic of the Great Depression. Released in 1933, the pigs were seen as American citizens and the wolf as the Depression. The moral of the story was if the citizens worked together, the Depression could be defeated.

What is the plot of a story? ›

What is a story plot? Essentially, a story plot is what happens in the story. More specifically, the plot is the series of events that take place. It's the action of the story that drives the narrative forward.

What is the happy ending in The Three Little Pigs? ›

The little pigs quickly lit a fire in the fireplace and put a kettle of water on to boil. The wolf climbed down the chimney and SPLASH, fell into the kettle! The wolf sprang out of the hot water and ran away as fast as he could! That was the end of the little pigs' troubles with the Big Bad Wolf!

What is the theme of a story? ›

A theme is an important idea that is woven throughout a story. It's not the plot or the summary, but something a little deeper. A theme links a big idea about our world with the action of a text.

Who are the three main pigs and who do they represent? ›

Old Major represents Karl Marx, Snowball represents Leon Trotsky, Napoleon represents Josef Stalin, Squealer represents propaganda, and Boxer is a representation for all the Russian laborers and workers.

Is The Three Little Pigs a metaphor? ›

In part one of this tip (if you missed it, you can read it here), I shared the story of the three little pigs as a metaphor for how people innocently try to find their security and well-being in the world of form.

What are the plot components of The Three Little Pigs? ›

Summary of The Three Little Pigs

The first pig builds a house of straw, the second a house of sticks and the third pig uses bricks for his house. A big bad wolf comes to the house of the first pig and demands to be let in. The pig refuses, and the wolf blows down the house of straw.

What is the difference between The Three Little Pigs and The True Story of the Three Little Pigs? ›

In "The Story of the Three Little Pigs," the wolf knocks down the houses of the first two little pigs on purpose. In The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, the wolf knocks down the houses of the first two little pigs by accident.

What is the climax of a story? ›

Another element of the PLOT is the CLIMAX. The CLIMAX of the story is when the CONFLICT of the PLOT is resolved.It is often the most exciting part of the story: when the hero saves the princess, discovers the buried treasure, or slays the dragon.

What point of view is the true story of the Three Little Pigs? ›

This clever variation of the classic story, The Three Pigs, is told from the perspective of the wolf (normally the “bad” guy).

What is the author's purpose for writing the story The Three Little Pigs? ›

Students might respond in the following ways: "I think the author's purpose was to persuade, because the wolf was telling his side of the story and trying to act innocent;" "I think the author was trying to inform us of the true story;" or "The author was entertaining us because the story is fictional and isn't real."

Videos

1. Plot Elements Introduction
(Miss Dexter Online Teaching)
2. Silly Symphony - The Three Little Pigs
(newlookchick)
3. Goldilocks and the Three Bears Story | English Fairy Tales And Stories | storytime
(English Fairy Tales and Stories)
4. The Messed Up Origins of The Three Little Pigs | Disney Explained - Jon Solo
(Jon Solo)
5. The Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf | Fairy Tale Story for Children | Kids Learning Videos
(Kids Learning Videos)
6. "The Three Little Pigs" by Paul Galdone
(Learning Tree T.V.)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Last Updated: 11/21/2022

Views: 5663

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Birthday: 1993-07-01

Address: Suite 763 6272 Lang Bypass, New Xochitlport, VT 72704-3308

Phone: +22014484519944

Job: Banking Officer

Hobby: Sailing, Gaming, Basketball, Calligraphy, Mycology, Astronomy, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Rev. Leonie Wyman, I am a colorful, tasty, splendid, fair, witty, gorgeous, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.