Hi Aled. Not a question, but something to help you with any future 'Bedtime Stories at Breakfast' material here
http://listverse.com/2009/01/06/9-grues ... e-origins/I had to attend numerous lectures and write various essays on the origins of Fairytales as part of English Lit. which was actually really interesting. If you need to recap the story of 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears' tomorrow then you could go with one of two alternative versions mentioned on that site;
The original tale (which actually only dates to 1837) has two possible variations. In the first, the bears find Goldilocks and rip her apart and eat her. In the second, Goldilocks is actually an old hag who (like the sanitized version) jumps out of a window when the bears wake her up. The story ends by telling us that she either broke her neck in the fall, or was arrested for vagrancy and sent to the “House of Correction”.
A much more exciting ending than the usual boring old one I'm sure you'll agree.