Write the story of Goose that lays golden eggs, with different end. Start your story from the man was about to cut the goose and it flew away ...
Answers
Answer:
Golden Fowls
Aesop's "Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs"
and other tales of magical birds
edited by
D. L. Ashliman
© 1998-2019
Contents
The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs (Aesop).
The Goose and the Golden Eggs (Aesop).
The Golden Mallard (from The Jataka; or, Stories of The Buddha's Former Births).
The Lucky-Bird Humá (Kashmir).
The Duck That Laid Golden Eggs (Russia).
The Golden Goose (Germany).
Return to D. L. Ashliman's folktexts, a library of folktales, folklore, fairy tales, and mythology.
The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs
Aesop
A man and his wife had the good fortune to possess a goose which laid a golden egg every day. Lucky though they were, they soon began to think they were not getting rich fast enough, and, imagining the bird must be made of gold inside, they decided to kill it in order to secure the whole store of precious metal at once. But when they cut it open they found it was just like any other goose. Thus, they neither got rich all at once, as they had hoped, nor enjoyed any longer the daily addition to their wealth.
Much wants more and loses all.
Source: Æsop's Fables, a new translation by V. S. Vernon Jones (London: W. Heinemann, 1912), p. 2.
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The Goose and the Golden Eggs
Aesop
One day a countryman going to the nest of his goose found there an egg all yellow and glittering. When he took it up it was as heavy as lead, and he was going to throw it away, because he thought a trick had been played upon him. But he took it home on second thoughts, and soon found to his delight that it was an egg of pure gold. Every morning the same thing occurred, and he soon became rich by selling his eggs. As he grew rich he grew greedy; and thinking to get at once all the gold the goose could give, he killed it and opened it only to find -- nothing.
Greed oft o'erreaches itself.
Source: The Fables of Æsop, selected, told anew, and their history traced by Joseph Jacobs (London and New York: Macmillan and Company, 1894), no. 57, pp. 134-35.
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The Golden Mallard
from The Jataka
Once upon a time when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisatta was born a Brahmin, and growing up was married to a bride of his own rank, who bore him three daughters named Nanda, Nanda-vati, and Sundari-nanda. The Bodhisatta dying, they were taken in by neighbors and friends, whilst he was born again into the world as a golden mallard endowed with consciousness of its former existences.
Answer:
It D if am not wrong
Explanation: