Three Little Pigs

"Long, long ago, when pigs could talk, and long before any one ever heard of bacon, an old piggy mother lived all alone with her three little sons... One day when she had worked hard and found only three acorns, she called her sons to her, and while the tears rolled down her cheeks, told the little pigs that she must send them out into the world to seek their fortune."

"Little pig, little pig, let me come in!"
"Not by the hair on my chinny-chin-chin!"
"Then I'll huff, and I'll puff, and I'll blow your house in!"

"The Three Little Pigs" is a Talking Animals story that was written in the 1840s. The young pigs of the story's title move out of their mother's house to seek their fortune, but it is hindered by the fact that there is a The Big Bad Wolf out there with intentions of eating them. The first little pig builds his house out of straw, but the wolf blows it down and eat him. The second little pig builds his house out of sticks and meets the same fate. The third pig, however, being the brains of the outfit, builds his house out of bricks, which the wolf cannot blow down. The wolf makes several attempts to trick the pig into coming out of the house, but fails each time. Finally, he tries going down the pig's chimney, but is cooked in a pot that the pig puts there.

Among the many retellings that have been made of the story, perhaps the best known is Walt Disney's 1933 cartoon version.

The Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies version of the story, "Pigs in a Polka", has lapsed into the Public Domain in the USA and can be watched on Wikimedia Commons. ("Pigs in a Polka" is not to be confused with the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes version of the story, "Three Little Bops", which is still under copyright.)

Tropes used in Three Little Pigs include: