The Little White Bird by J. M. Barrie (sight word readers txt) ๐
Description
The Little White Bird is generally divided into three sections: the first chronicles the narratorโs life in London, beginning with how he came to know a little boy named David (who joins him on his adventures), and describes other matters of his everyday life.
The second section tells the story of how Peter Pan came to be a โbetwixt-and-betweenโ and his adventures in Kensington Gardens, including his interactions with the birds as well as the fairies hidden in the park.
Finally, the third section of the book revisits London with the narrator and David. The two make brief visits to Kensington Gardens and embark on a new adventure to Patagonia.
The Little White Bird is the first story to include the famous Peter Pan character, two years before Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldnโt Grow Up, the play that made the character famous. While The Little White Bird can be described as a prelude to the play, inconsistencies such as Peter Panโs age make the two stories incompatible.
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- Author: J. M. Barrie
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โWhat we were talking of,โ she replied wincing, but forgiving me again. โIf I once thought that, it was pretty to me while it lasted and it lasted but a little time. I have long been sure that your kindness to me was due to some other reason.โ
โMaโam,โ said I very honestly, โI know not what was the reason. My concern for you was in the beginning a very fragile and even a selfish thing, yet not altogether selfish, for I think that what first stirred it was the joyous sway of the little nursery governess as she walked down Pall Mall to meet her lover. It seemed such a mighty fine thing to you to be loved that I thought you had better continue to be loved for a little longer. And perhaps having helped you once by dropping a letter I was charmed by the ease with which you could be helped, for you must know that I am one who has chosen the easy way for more than twenty years.โ
She shook her head and smiled. โOn my soul,โ I assured her, โI can think of no other reason.โ
โA kind heart,โ said she.
โMore likely a whim,โ said I.
โOr another woman,โ said she.
I was very much taken aback.
โMore than twenty years ago,โ she said with a soft huskiness in her voice, and a tremor and a sweetness, as if she did not know that in twenty years all love stories are grown mouldy.
On my honour as a soldier this explanation of my early solicitude for Mary was one that had never struck me, but the more I pondered it nowโ โ. I raised her hand and touched it with my lips, as we whimsical old fellows do when some gracious girl makes us to hear the key in the lock of long ago. โWhy, maโam,โ I said, โit is a pretty notion, and there may be something in it. Let us leave it at that.โ
But there was still that accursed dedication, lying, you remember, beneath the blotting-pad. I had no longer any desire to crush her with it. I wished that she had succeeded in writing the book on which her longings had been so set.
โIf only you had been less ambitious,โ I said, much troubled that she should be disappointed in her heartโs desire.
โI wanted all the dear delicious things,โ she admitted contritely.
โIt was unreasonable,โ I said eagerly, appealing to her intellect. โEspecially this last thing.โ
โYes,โ she agreed frankly, โI know.โ And then to my amazement she added triumphantly, โBut I got it.โ
I suppose my look admonished her, for she continued apologetically but still as if she really thought hers had been a romantic career, โI know I have not deserved it, but I got it.โ
โOh, maโam,โ I cried reproachfully, โreflect. You have not got the great thing.โ I saw her counting the great things in her mind, her wondrous husband and his obscure success, David, Barbara, and the other trifling contents of her jewel-box.
โI think I have,โ said she.
โCome, madam,โ I cried a little nettled, โyou know that there is lacking the one thing you craved for most of all.โ
Will you believe me that I had to tell her what it was? And when I had told her she exclaimed with extraordinary callousness, โThe book? I had forgotten all about the book!โ And then after reflection she added, โPooh!โ Had she not added Pooh I might have spared her, but as it was I raised the blotting-pad rather haughtily and presented her with the sheet beneath it.
โWhat is this?โ she asked.
โMaโam,โ said I, swelling, โit is a Dedication,โ and I walked majestically to the window.
There is no doubt that presently I heard an unexpected sound. Yet if indeed it had been a laugh she clipped it short, for in almost the same moment she was looking large-eyed at me and tapping my sleeve impulsively with her fingers, just as David does when he suddenly likes you.
โHow characteristic of you,โ she said at the window.
โCharacteristic,โ I echoed uneasily. โHa!โ
โAnd how kind.โ
โDid you say kind, maโam?โ
โBut it is I who have the substance and you who have the shadow, as you know very well,โ said she.
Yes, I had always known that this was the one flaw in my dedication, but how could I have expected her to have the wit to see it? I was very depressed.
โAnd there is another mistake,โ said she.
โExcuse me, maโam, but that is the only one.โ
โIt was never of my little white bird I wanted to write,โ she said.
I looked politely incredulous, and then indeed she overwhelmed me. โIt was of your little white bird,โ she said, โit was of a little boy whose name was Timothy.โ
She had a very pretty way of saying Timothy, so David and I went into another room to leave her alone with the manuscript of this poor little book, and when we returned she had the greatest surprise of the day for me. She was both laughing and crying, which was no surprise, for all of us would laugh and cry over a book about such an interesting subject as ourselves, but said she, โHow wrong you are in thinking this book is about me and mine, it is really all about Timothy.โ
At first I deemed this to be uncommon nonsense, but as I considered I saw that she was probably right again, and I gazed crestfallen at this very clever woman.
โAnd so,โ said she, clapping her hands after the manner of David when he makes a great discovery, โit proves to be my book after all.โ
โWith all your pretty thoughts left out,โ I answered, properly humbled.
She spoke in a lower voice as if David must not hear. โI had only one pretty thought for the book,โ she said, โI was to give it a happy ending.โ She said this so timidly that I was about to melt to her when she added with extraordinary boldness, โThe little white bird was to bear an olive-leaf in
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