The Old Man's Bag, by T. W. H. 
Crosland 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Old Man's Bag, by T. W. H. 
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Title: The Old Man's Bag 
Author: T. W. H. Crosland 
Illustrator: J. R. Monsell 
Release Date: November 15, 2007 [EBook #23485] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OLD 
MAN'S BAG *** 
 
Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images 
generously made available by The Internet Archive) 
 
Transcriber's Note: Minor typographical errors have been corrected
without note. 
THE OLD MAN'S BAG 
T. W. H. CROSLAND AND J. R. MONSELL 
The Dumpy Books for Children 
NO. 22. THE OLD MAN'S BAG. 
THE DUMPY BOOKS FOR CHILDREN. 
Cloth, Royal 32 mo, 1/6 each. 
I. The Flamp, the Ameliorator, and the Schoolboy's Apprentice. By E. 
V. LUCAS. 
II. Mrs. Turner's Cautionary Stories. Edited by E. V. LUCAS. 
III. The Bad Family. By MRS. FENWICK. Edited by E. V. LUCAS. 
IV. The Story of Little Black Sambo. Illustrated in Colours. By 
HELEN BANNERMAN. 
V. The Bountiful Lady. By THOMAS COBB. 
VI. A Cat Book. Portraits by H. OFFICER SMITH. Text by E. V. 
LUCAS. 
VII. A Flower Book. Illustrated in Colours by NELLIE BENSON. Text 
by EDEN COYBEE. 
VIII. The Pink Knight. Illustrated in Colours by J. R. MONSELL. 
IX. The Little Clown. By THOMAS COBB. 
X. A Horse Book. Illustrated in Colours. By MARY TOURTEL. 
XI. Little People: An Alphabet. Illustrated in Colours by HENRY
MAYER. Verses by T. W. H. CROSLAND. 
XII. A Dog Book. Illustrated in Colours by CARTON MOORE PARK. 
Text by ETHEL BICKNELL. 
XIII. The Adventures of Samuel and Selina. Illustrated in Colours by 
JEAN C. ARCHER. 
XIV. The Little Girl Lost. By ELEANOR RAPER. 
XV. Dollies. Illustrated in Colours by RUTH COBB. Verses by 
RICHARD HUNTER. 
XVI. The Bad Mrs. Ginger. Illustrated in Colours by HONOR C. 
APPLETON. 
XVII. Peter Piper's Practical Principles. Illustrated in Colours. 
XVIII. Little White Barbara. Illustrated in Colours by ELEANOR S. 
MARCH. 
XIX. The Japanese Dumpy Book. Illustrated in Colours by YOSHIO 
MARKINO. 
XX. Towlocks and His Wooden Horse. Illustrated in Colours by 
HONOR C. APPLETON. Text by ALICE M. APPLETON. 
XXI. The Three Little Foxes. By MARY TOURTEL. Illustrated in 
Colours. 
XXII. The Old Man's Bag. By T. W. H. CROSLAND. Illustrated in 
Colours by J. R. MONSELL. 
XXIII. The Three Goblins. By M. E. TAGGART. Illustrated in 
Colours. 
A Cloth Case to contain Twelve Volumes can be had, price 2s. net; or 
the First Twelve Volumes in Case, price £1 net.
LONDON: GRANT RICHARDS, 48 Leicester Square. 
 
[Illustration: The old man went for a walk and took the bag with him.] 
 
THE OLD MAN'S BAG 
 
By 
T. W. H. CROSLAND 
 
PICTURES BY 
J. R. MONSELL 
 
LONDON: GRANT RICHARDS 1903 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS. 
THE OLD MAN WENT FOR A WALK Frontispiece 
PAGE 
THE OLD MAN SAID "CHUCK, CHUCK!" 2 
THE RED POLICEMAN RAN AFTER HIM 7 
"WHATEVER ARE YOU LAUGHING AT?" 10 
SHE TOOK THE BAG DOWN 15 
"BUTTER IS CHEAP TO-DAY" 18
"YOU ARE A VERY FOOLISH OLD WOMAN" 23 
WHO SHOULD STEP IN BUT THE RED POLICEMAN 26 
"PLEASE MEASURE ME FOR A SOLDIER'S SUIT" 31 
HE BEGAN TO STRUT ABOUT 42 
THE OLD WOMAN WAS KNOCKING APPLES OFF A TREE 47 
BURNT THE PIECES ON THE FIRE 58 
 
THE OLD MAN'S BAG. 
CHAPTER I. 
The old man lived in a wood. He had a wife and a bag. The bag was 
quite a large bag. One day the old man went out for a walk. He took the 
bag with him. By and by he saw a hen in a field. Now when you see a 
hen in a field you say "Chuck, chuck!" The old man said "Chuck, 
chuck!" And the hen came to him. So that he caught her by the neck 
and put her in his bag. She made a great to-do, but he put her in. 
[Illustration: The old man said "Chuck, chuck!" and the hen came to 
him.] 
On his way home, just as he turned a corner, the old man saw a 
policeman. The policeman had a red suit. He was one of those 
policemen who wear red suits because they are tired of wearing blue. 
The red policeman looked very hard at the old man and very hard at his 
bag. In fact he looked so very very hard that the old man got frightened 
and turned round and ran away. 
Of course the    
    
		
	
	
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