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Transcript The Kind Hearted Pea

The Kind-Hearted Pea is a story about three peas in a pod who, after being harvested, express their desires to the wind. While the first two peas seek grandeur, the third pea wishes to help others, leading it to grow into a plant that brings joy and healing to a sick boy. Ultimately, the boy and his mother cherish the heart-shaped peas that grow from the kind-hearted pea plant, symbolizing love and care.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views4 pages

Transcript The Kind Hearted Pea

The Kind-Hearted Pea is a story about three peas in a pod who, after being harvested, express their desires to the wind. While the first two peas seek grandeur, the third pea wishes to help others, leading it to grow into a plant that brings joy and healing to a sick boy. Ultimately, the boy and his mother cherish the heart-shaped peas that grow from the kind-hearted pea plant, symbolizing love and care.

Uploaded by

Matheus Ramos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Kind-Hearted Pea – Transcript

Welcome to Easy Stories in English, the podcast that will take your English from OK to
Good, and from Good to Great.
I am Ariel Goodbody, your host for this show. Today’s story is for beginners. The name
of the story is The Kind-Hearted Pea. You can find a transcript of the episode at
EasyStoriesInEnglish.com/Pea, where you can also download the episode as a PDF.
Today’s story is adapted from a book called Storyworld. The original story comes from
Malta, and was collected by Saviour Pirotta. But, as usual, when I wrote my version, I
changed things a bit.
OK, I’ll just explain some words that are in today’s story.
Someone who is kind-hearted is very kind, very nice. They have a kind heart.
Kind-hearted people will sit and listen to your problems and try to help you solve them, for
example.
Peas are a small green vegetable. You eat lots of peas at
once because they are so small. In the UK, people often buy
frozen peas and then put them in the freezer, because frozen
peas are very convenient to cook. Peas grow in pods. Pods are
long, flat things that grow on some plants. In each pea pod,
there are usually about three peas. When the pod is finished
growing, you take it off the plant, open it and
take the peas out. Some pods can be eaten,
for example runner bean pods.
Harvest is the time of year when crops –
food that is grown on a farm – is collected.
During the year, farmers grow crops, for
example tomatoes, potatoes and rice, and then during harvest time they harvest, they
collect, the food. In the past, harvest time was a very important time of the year, and
everyone would work together to collect the harvest. Nowadays, harvesting is often done by
machines.
When the wind blows, it goes whoosh whoosh. If the wind is blowing very strongly, it
can be hard to walk around. In autumn, the wind blows leaves around.
When you drop something, it might not break, but it might get a
crack in it. A crack is when something is almost broken but not fully
broken. If you have a crack in a glass, you can’t use the glass
because the water will fall through the crack. If you have a crack in
the wall of your house, then the wind will blow through the crack and
it will get cold. Some people believe that it is bad luck to walk on
cracks in the street. They say, ‘Step on a crack and you’ll break your
back.’
If you can afford something, then you have enough money to
buy it. Usually, we talk about not being able to afford something. For
example, I can’t afford to buy a house. In fact, most people my age
can’t afford to buy a house!
Shoo is a word you say to children and animals to make them
go away. Shoo! For example, if you are eating lunch in the park and a bird is coming very
close to you, the bird might try and take your food. So you can say ‘Shoo!’ and move your
arms to make the bird go away – you shoo the bird away.
When you water a plant, you give it water.
Usually, you take a watering can and fill it with
water, and then you use the watering can to water
your plants. If you water your plants too often or
too little, they might die.
When something is shaped like something
else, it has the same shape, the same
appearance as it. For example, most cakes are
round, but maybe you get a special cake that is
shaped like a star. Or maybe you buy a card for
Valentine’s day, and the card is shaped like a
heart.
OK, so listen and enjoy!

The Kind-Hearted Pea


Once, there was a pea pod. The pea pod grew on a long pea plant. One day, when it was
harvest time, the farmer came and cut the pea plant, and the pea pod fell down. The pod
opened and the three peas inside woke up.
‘Oh, the world is so big!’ said the first pea.
‘Oh, the world is so beautiful!’ said the second pea.
‘Oh, I am scared!’ said the third pea. ‘The world is too big and too beautiful! I want to
sleep in my pod.’
But then a wind blew and talked to the peas.
‘Peas, peas,’ said the wind. ‘I can carry you! I can take you to interesting places. Where
do you want to go?’
‘I want to go to the sun!’ said the first pea.
So the wind blew the pea up into the sky. The pea flew through the clouds and the pea
flew into the stars. The pea saw the world and it was amazing!
But then the pea got close to the sun, and it was very hot. It was too hot for the pea.
‘Oh, kind-hearted wind, I think I want to go –’
BANG! And the pea was gone.
The wind blew back down to the pea pod and spoke to the second pea. ‘I have taken
your friend to the sun!’ it said. ‘Now, where do you want to go?’
‘I want to be a queen!’ said the second pea.
So the wind blew the pea to a castle. The pea flew onto the queen’s chair. The pea
watched all the people, and the pea said, ‘Aha! I am the queen! I am queen pea!’
But then the real queen came and sat down, and the real queen was much bigger than
the pea. SPLAT! And the pea was gone.
The wind blew again, and went back to the third pea. ‘Where do you want to go?’ it
asked. ‘Maybe to the bottom of the sea?’
‘Hmm,’ said the pea. ‘I don’t want to see the sun or the stars, and I don’t want to be a
queen. I just want to help people. Take me somewhere where I can help.’
‘Very well,’ said the wind.
So the wind blew the pea to a house. The pea flew into a crack by a window. The pea
didn’t understand why the wind had taken it to the crack. How could it help in this place?
Then the pea heard people talking inside the house.
There was a boy in bed, and his mother and a doctor were standing beside the bed. The
boy was very ill.
‘He isn’t getting better,’ said the doctor. ‘He needs a reason to live. Give him something
interesting, something that will make him want to live. Maybe some books? Or he could
draw?’
‘I can’t afford it,’ said the mother. ‘It’s already hard for me to afford his food and
medicine. I can’t afford books and paper and pens as well.’
‘Well…’ said the doctor. ‘Good luck.’
The doctor left and the mother looked very sad. The pea felt her sadness, but it didn’t
know how it could help.
For a few weeks, the pea slept. It dreamed about the boy. Sometimes, it rained on the
pea. The pea knew it couldn’t help, and it felt bad about it, so all it wanted to do was sleep.
Then, one day, something changed. All that rain had done something to the pea, and the
pea felt a change. It hurt a little, but in a good way. The pea wanted to move, but it couldn’t
move – it was just a pea! But it tried and tried to move, to grow, and then – POP!
Suddenly, the pea was not just a pea – it was a plant! It could move and grow, and it
was excited to see what it would become. It had made a little home in the crack, and now it
was going to be a beautiful… something!
‘Look, Mum!’ said the boy. ‘There’s a plant growing in this crack!’
That’s me! thought the pea.
And the boy loved the pea plant. He sat by it all day. When the birds tried to eat it, he
shooed them away. ‘Shoo, shoo!’ When it didn’t rain, the boy watered the pea plant. And
slowly, the boy started to get better. The mother and the doctor were very happy.
The boy got tired of always shooing the birds away, so he put cardboard around the
plant to keep the birds away. He went and got fresh, clean water and watered the plant every
day. If any of the leaves went brown, he took away the brown leaves. Sometimes, his mum
tried to look at the plant, and he shooed her away.
‘Mum, go away! You’re taking the pea’s light.’
Now that little pea who wanted to help people was just a small part of the plant. And the
pea was growing old and tired. The plant was big now, and soon it would be time to harvest
it.
So the boy’s mother got a bowl and said, ‘Go and harvest the peas, and we’ll have pea
soup for dinner.’
The boy took the pea pods from the plant. But when he opened the pods, he saw that
there were not normal peas inside – the peas were shaped like hearts!
‘Mum, Mum!’ he said, and he showed her the peas. ‘The peas are shaped like hearts!
Oh, I loved that kind-hearted pea plant, and that kind-hearted pea plant loved me as well… I
don’t think I can eat these peas. They’re too special.’
So they didn’t cook the heart-shaped peas. They went into the garden and planted the
peas in the ground. Just like before, the boy looked after the plants. He shooed away the
birds and watered the plants every day. The plants grew big and strong, and the boy did as
well.
Of course, peas grow much better in a garden than in a crack by the window. But it was
the boy’s love, and the help of the kind-hearted pea, that made the garden so special.
Every pea that grew there was shaped like a heart, and people began to be interested in
them. When the boy’s mother was old and couldn’t work, he started selling the peas. The
boy and his mother were never rich, but they could always afford what they needed, and that
was all that mattered.

THE END
Are you ready to take your English from Great to AMAZING? Then you should take
classes with me! In my online lessons, we’ll work through the problems that are holding you
back, and write personalised stories that will have you laughing your little boots off. To book
a class, go to Calendly.com/ArielGoodbody and to find out more go to
EasyStoriesInEnglish.com/Classes. See you soon, future student!

Image Attributions
Photo of peas by Artie Kostenko on Unsplash:
https://unsplash.com/photos/green-round-fruits-in-close-up-photography-Sgnhru4-z78
Photo of pea pod by Rachael Gorjestani on Unsplash:
https://unsplash.com/photos/shallow-focus-photography-of-green-pea-on-brown-wooden-sur
face-XlA2994Txhw
Photo of a crack by Brina Blum on Unsplash:
https://unsplash.com/photos/crack-on-white-concrete-surface-nqttZgQZFyc?utm_content=cr
editCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash
Photo of a watering can by David Ballew on Unsplash:
https://unsplash.com/photos/water-pouring-on-gray-steel-watering-can-P7saq8j11pM?utm_c
ontent=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash
Photo of field (in thumbnail) by Federico Respini on Unsplash:
https://unsplash.com/photos/brown-field-near-tree-during-daytime-sYffw0LNr7s?utm_content
=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash

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