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Key words£ºax,
miss,
woodcutter, steal |
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Genre£ºfable |
Topic£ºsuspicion |
Words:150 |
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"...a guilty look on his face.
I can't prove it,
but he MUST have stolen my ax." |
Who stole my ax?
¡¡
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Author£º Lieh
Tzu |
Source£ºwww.developingteachers.com
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Nation£ºChina |
Date£º2008-8-21 |

A
woodcutter went out one morning to cut some firewood and
discovered that his favorite ax was missing. He couldn't find it
anywhere. Then he noticed his neighbor's son standing near the
woodshed. The woodcutter thought, "Aha! That boy must have
stolen my ax. I see how he lurks about the shed, shifting
uneasily from foot to foot, greedy hands stuffed in his pockets,
a guilty look on his face. I can't prove it, but he MUST have
stolen my ax."
A
few days later the woodcutter was surprised and happy to come
upon the ax under a pile of firewood. "I remember now," he said,
"Just where I'd left it!"
The next time he saw his neighbor's son, the woodcutter looked
intently at the boy, scrutinizing him from head to toe. How odd,
he thought, somehow this boy has lost his guilty look . . .
Discussion£º
1. Why did the woodcutter
believe the boy had stolen his ax?
2. Where did the
woodcutter find his ax?
3. How did the woodcutter
feel about the boy after he found his ax?
¡¡
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