Vol. 1 No. 21
September 30, 2006



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       Now Wendy was every inch a woman, though there were not very many inches, and she peeped out of the bed-clothes.
       “Do you really think so, Peter?”
       “Yes, I do.”
       “I think it's perfectly sweet of you,” she declared, “and I'll get up again,” and she sat with him on the side of the bed. She also said she would give him a kiss if he liked, but Peter did not know what she meant, and he held out his hand expectantly.
       “Surely you know what a kiss is?” she asked, aghast.
       “I shall know when you give it to me,” he replied stiffly, and not to hurt his feeling she gave him a thimble.
       “Now,” said he, “shall I give you a kiss?” and she replied with a slight primness, “If you please.” She made herself rather cheap by inclining her face toward him, but he merely dropped an acorn button into her hand, so she slowly returned her face to where it had been before, and said nicely that she would wear his kiss on the chain around her neck. It was lucky that she did put it on that chain, for it was afterwards to save her life.
       When people in our set are introduced, it is customary for them to ask each other's age, and so Wendy, who always liked to do the correct thing, asked Peter how old he was. It was not really a happy question to ask him; it was like an examination paper that asks grammar, when what you want to be asked is Kings of England.
       “I don't know,” he replied uneasily, “but I am quite young.” He really knew nothing about it, he had merely suspicions, but he said at a venture, “Wendy, I ran away the day I was born.”
       Wendy was quite surprised, but interested; and she indicated in the charming drawing-room manner, by a touch on her night-gown, that he could sit nearer her.
       “It was because I heard father and mother,” he explained in a low voice, “talking about what I was to be when I became a man.” He was extraordinarily agitated now. “I don't want ever to be a man,” he said with passion. “I want always to be a little boy and to have fun. So I ran away to Kensington Gardens and lived a long long time among the fairies.”
       She gave him a look of the most intense admiration, and he thought it was because he had run away, but it was really because he knew fairies. Wendy had lived such a home life that to know fairies struck her as quite delightful. She poured out questions about them, to his surprise, for they were rather a nuisance to him, getting in his way and so on, and indeed he sometimes had to give them a hiding. Still, he liked them on the whole, and he told her about the beginning of fairies.
       “You see, Wendy, when the first baby laughed for the first time, its laugh broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of fairies.”
       Tedious talk this, but being a stay-at-home she liked it.
       “And so,” he went on good-naturedly, “there ought to be one fairy for every boy and girl.”
       “Ought to be? Isn't there?”
       “No. You see children know such a lot now, they soon don't believe in fairies, and every time a child says, ‘I don't believe in fairies,’ there is a fairy somewhere that falls down dead.”
       Really, he thought they had now talked enough about fairies, and it struck him that Tinker Bell was keeping very quiet. “I can't think where she has gone to,” he said, rising, and he called Tink by name. Wendy’s heart went flutter with a sudden thrill.


Full text available at Project Gutenberg


Copyright notice: this edition is considered in the public domain in the United States. Copyright status in other countries—specifically in members or former members of the British Commonwealth—is uncertain.


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