- Ali Hakim: Where are you going?
- Will Parker: I'm gonna stop Ado Annie from killing your wife!
- Ali Hakim: Mind your own business!
- Laurey: [comes out holding laundry hamper]
- [singing]
- Laurey: Oh, what a beautiful mornin'! Oh, what a beautiful day.
- Laurey: [sees curly]
- [speaking]
- Laurey: Oh, thought you were somebody.
- Laurey: [continues singing while hanging clothesline] I got a beautiful feeling, ev'rythin's goin' my way.
- Laurey: [looks at Curly and Aunt Eller] Is this all that's come a-callin' an' already 10 o'clock on a Saturday mornin'?
- [first lines]
- Curly: [singing] There's a bright golden haze on the meadow, / There's a bright golden haze on the meadow. / The corn is as high as a elephant's eye, / And it looks like it's climbin' clear up to the sky. / Oh, what a beautiful mornin', / Oh, what a beautiful day! / I got a beautiful feelin' / Everything's goin' my way.
- Curly: Hey, that's a good lookin' rope you got there. You know Will Parker? Yeah, well he can sure spin a rope! That's a strong hook you got there, Judd. You could hang yourself on that.
- Jud Fry: I could what?
- Curly: Uh... hang yourself. It'd be as easy as falling of a log. In fact, you could stand on a log, or a chair if you'd rather. Right about here, see? Just put this here 'round your neck, tie that good up there first, of course, and all you'd have to do would be to fall off the log, or the chair, whichever you'd rather fall off of, and in five minutes or less with good luck you'd be... you'd be dead as a doornail.
- Jud Fry: What do you mean by that?
- Curly: Uh, well, then folks would come to your funeral and sing sad songs.
- Jud Fry: [in disbelief] Eh.
- Curly: Oh, they would. Oh you never know how many people like you till you're dead!
- Ado Annie: I never think of no one unlessin he's with me.
- Will Parker: Then I'm never gonna leave your side!
- Andrew Carnes: [singing] The farmer is a good and thrifty citizen, no matter what the cowman says or thinks! You'll seldom see him drinking in a barroom.
- Curly: [singing] Unless somebody else is buying drinks!
- Laurey: I don't see why this had to happen when everything was so fine.
- Aunt Eller: Now don't let your mind run on it.
- Laurey: [sobbing] I won't ever forget, I tell ya. Never will.
- Aunt Eller: That's alright, Laurey baby. You can't forget, just don't try to. Oh, lots of things happen to folks. Sickness or being poor and hungry, being old and a feared to die. That's the way it is, cradle to grave, and you can stand it. There's just one way: you gotta be hardy. You gotta be. You can't deserve the sweet and tender in life unless'n you're tough.
- Laurey: I wisht I was the way you are!
- Aunt Eller: Oh, fiddlesticks. Scrawny and old... why, you couldn't hire me to be the way I am.
- Curly: Aunt Eller, where'd you get such an uppity niece that wouldn't pay no heed to me?
- [thinks for a second]
- Curly: Who's the best bronc buster in this 'ere territory?
- Aunt Eller: You, I bet.
- Curly: And the best bull-dogger in seventeen counties?
- [waits for an answer]
- Curly: Me, that's who. And looky here, I'm handsome, ain't I?
- Aunt Eller: Purty as a pitcher.
- Curly: And curly headed, ain't I? And bow-legged from the saddle for god knows how long, ain't I?
- Aunt Eller: Couldn't stop a pig on the road!
- Curly: Then what else does she want, the damn she mule?
- Curly: The preacher'd get up and he'd say, "Folks! We are gathered here to moan and groan over our brother Jud Fry, who hung himself up by a rope in the smokehouse." Then there'd be weepin' and wailin' from some of those womern. Then he'd say, "Jud was the most misunderstood man in the territory. People useter think he was a mean, ugly feller! And they called him a dirty skunk and a ornery pig stealer!" But the folks that really knowed him, knowed that beneath them two dirty shirts he always wore,
- [sings]
- Curly: there beat a heart as big as all outdoors.
- Jud Fry: [sings] As big as all outdoors!
- Curly: [sings] Jud Fry loved his feller man!
- Jud Fry: [sings] He loved his feller man!
- Curly: [Spoken] He loved the birds of the forest, and the beasts of the field! He loved the mice and the vermin of the barn, and he treated the rats like equals - which was right! And he loved little children! He loved everyone and everything in the whole world... only he never let on, so nobody ever knowed it.
- Laurey: Who's that?
- Will Parker: Aw, it's me, Laurey! Hey, have you seen Ado Annie? She's gone, again.
- Laurey: Will?
- Will Parker: Uh huh.
- Laurey: Could you do something for me? Go and find Curly and tell him I'm here?
- [crying]
- Laurey: I wanna see Curly real bad.
- [Curly enters the corral, puts hands on hips]
- Laurey: I gotta see him real bad!
- Curly: Then whyn't you turn around and look then, you crazy woman!
- Chorus: [singing] Oh, what a beautiful mornin', / Oh, what a beautiful day! / I got a beautiful feelin' / Everything's goin' my way, / Oh, what a beautiful day!
- [last spoken lines]
- Aunt Eller: Why Ado Annie, where on earth have you been?
- Ado Annie: Will and me had a little misunderstanding. But he explained it fine.