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Stevenson, Augusta

"Children's Classics in Dramatic Form"


HOSTLER. What will you give me for the sackful? Your wife would then have a
great deal of property.
GOODMAN. Well, I will give you my fowl in exchange.
HOSTLER. Here is your sack of rotten apples.
GOODMAN. Here is your fowl.
[_The Hostler goes with the fowl._]
TOLL-KEEPER. Toll, Goodman!
GOODMAN. I will not go to the Fair to-day. I have done a great deal of
business, and I am tired. I will go back home.

SCENE III
TIME: _two hours later_.
PLACE: _the old farmhouse_.
* * * * *
THE GOODMAN.
HIS WIFE.
* * * * *
[_Enter the_ GOODMAN, _carrying the sack. The_ WIFE _waits for him in the
spare room, because he has been away._]
GOODMAN. Well, Wife, I've made the exchange.
WIFE. Ah, well, you always understand what you're about.
GOODMAN. I got a cow in exchange for the horse.
WIFE. Good! Now we shall have plenty of milk and butter and cheese on the
table. That was a fine exchange!
GOODMAN. Yes, but I changed the cow for a sheep.
WIFE. Ah, better still! We have just enough grass for a sheep.--Ewe's milk
and cheese! Woolen jackets and stockings! The cow could not give all those.
How you think of everything!
GOODMAN.


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