G. M.—I daresay, yes, but you will find it more useful as you go through life to be civil to strangers, even when you don't know who they are. And now Jack, come with me and you shall live in a beautiful palace, where you shall marry a princess. As for you, you may let go the golden goose for ever (they all fall back), for you will remain humble wood-cutters all your lives. And, remember, it is only the deserving—especially the polite—who find the Golden Goose.
Curtain.
[CINDERELLA.]
A Play in Four Scenes.
| CHARACTERS. | |
|---|---|
| THE MOTHER. | THE FAIRY GODMOTHER. |
| MABEL. | THE PRINCE. |
| LUCY. | HERALD. |
| PEGGY (called CINDERELLA). | |
| Lords and Ladies at Ball, etc. | |
CINDERELLA.
Scene I.
(The mother sitting with daughters.)