Mt Mayon, One Of The Most Dangerous Volcanoes In The World, Above Rice Paddys., Albay, Philippines

Philippine Folk Tales Compiled and Annotated by Mabel Cook Cole

Dawn Sky Over Taal Lake, Home Of Taal Volcano., Lake Taal, Batangas, Philippines

Philippine Folk Tales
by Mabel Cook Cole

Christianized Tribes


Philippine Folk Tales Table of Contents

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Juan Gathers Guavas
(Tagalog)

ONE day Juan's father sent him to get some ripe guavas, for a number of the neighbors had come in and he wanted to give them something to eat.

Juan went to the guava bushes and ate all the fruit he could hold, and then he decided to play a joke on his father's guests instead of giving them a feast of guavas. A wasp's nest hung near by. With some difficulty he succeeded in taking it down and putting it into a tight basket that he had brought for the fruit. He hastened home and gave the basket to his father, and then as he left the room where the guests were seated he closed the door and fastened it.

As soon as Juan's father opened the basket the wasps flew over the room; and when the people found the door locked they fought to get out of the windows. After a while Juan opened the door, and when he saw the swollen faces of the people, he cried.

"What fine, rich guavas you must have had! They have made you all so fat!"

Cole, Mabel Cook. Philippine Folk Tales. London: Curtis Brown, 1916.
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Philippine Folk Tales Compiled and Annotated by Mabel Cook Cole

Filipino Children's Favorite Stories by Liana Elena Romulo, Joanne de Leon

Abadeha: The Philippine Cinderella by Myrna J. De La Paz

Rockabye Crocodile: A Folktale from the Philippines by Jose Aruego

The Turtle and the Monkey (Philippine Tale) by Joanna C. Galdone, Paul Galdone

 Favorite Folktales from Around the World by Jane Yolen

 

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