Answer:
One morning, three friends went for a drive. They came across a forest and decided to go inside it. They got out of their car and began walking. Unfortunately, they got lost without a clue of how to get back, and to top it off it began raining. They saw in the distance a hut, so they hurried on over to it.
After knocking on the door, an old man answered. They explained their situation to him. He was kind enough to let them wait inside until the rain stopped and then he escorted them out of the forest, back to their car. They called their other friends and told them about how they got lost, met an old man, and were driving back. They then safely went back to their homes.
It is how the life is a gamnadjdi etht real world.
Anglo-Saxons liked to gather in the lord's great hall, to eat and drink, and to listen to songs and stories. They loved tales about brave warriors and their adventures. A favourite story told how Beowulf, a heroic prince, kills the fierce man-eating monster Grendel, and Grendel's equally horrid mother. The story of Beowulf was first written down in the 8th-9th centuries, but long before that the story was told around the fire. The storyteller played music to accompany the songs and poems, on a small harp or on another stringed instrument called a lyre