How the narrator come to own the road engine
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
Did you know that if you win the lottery, you also inherit a hefty tax bill to go along with it? The same goes for other type of winnings, too, such as a car, jewelry, or a trip. The short story is that the U.S. government considers your winnings to be income, and they want their cut (of course). While you may still be glad to win that money or a new set of wheels, your winnings also come with an extra bit of aggravation. But, it's nothing like the aggravation our narrator experiences when he finds himself with the winning raffle ticket. Continue on to see what happens.
Summary of ''Engine Trouble''
What starts off as a prize winning quickly becomes a nightmare for our narrator, known only as the ''Talkative Man.'' At the start of the story, it appears that a carnival of sorts has rolled into town. The author describes the affair as ''all sorts of fun and gambling and side-shows,'' brought to town by ''a showman owning an institution called the Gaiety Land.'' Gaiety means happiness or excitement.
And, it's certainly exciting for the narrator, who finds himself the lucky winner of a road engine. The narrator had purchased tickets for a type of raffle drawing. His ticket was drawn, and he was an instant winner.
Winner Winner
To win a road engine was a pretty big ordeal, and the narrator was stunned. Now he had to figure out how to get the large and heavy engine home. Unable to transport it himself, he works out a deal with the Gymkhana Grounds, where the event was taking place, to keep the engine there until the season was over and he could make arrangements to get it moved.
Despite the peculiarity of the win, many came to congratulate the Talkative Man on his winnings. Friends and family were sure it would fetch a lot of money if he were to sell it.
The event concludes and the narrator is instructed to come and remove the engine or pay rent (totaling 10 rupees per month or roughly 16 cents in U.S. currency) to leave it where it sat. The narrator, a poor man, could scarcely afford the rent: ''Even the house which I and my wife occupied cost me only four rupees a month,'' he offers by comparison.