The
Velveteen Rabbit
There was once a velveteen
rabbit, and in the beginning he was really splendid. He
was fat and bunchy, as a rabbit should be; his coat was
spotted brown and white, he had real thread whiskers, and
his ears were lined with pink sateen. On Christmas
morning, when he sat wedged in the top of the Boy's
stocking, with a sprig of holly between his paws, the
effect was charming.
There were other things in the
stocking, nuts and oranges and a toy engine, and
chocolate almonds and a clockwork mouse, but the Rabbit
was quite the best of all. For at least two hours the Boy
loved him, and then Aunts and Uncles came to dinner, and
there was a great rustling of tissue paper and unwrapping
of parcels, and in the excitement of looking at all the
new presents the Velveteen Rabbit was forgotten.
For a long time he lived in the
toy cupboard or on the nursery floor, and no one thought
very much about him. He was naturally shy, and being only
made of velveteen, some of the more expensive toys quite
snubbed him. The mechanical toys were very superior, and
looked down upon every one else; they were full of modern
ideas, and pretended they were real. The model boat, who
had lived through two seasons and lost most of his paint,
caught the tone from them and never missed an opportunity
of referring to his rigging in technical terms. The
Rabbit could not claim to be a model of anything, for he
didn't know that real rabbits existed; he thought they
were all stuffed with sawdust like himself, and he
understood that sawdust was quite out-of-date and should
never be mentioned in modern circles. Even Timothy, the
jointed wooden lion, who was made by the disabled
soldiers, and should have had broader views, put on airs
and pretended he was connected with Government. Between
them all the poor little Rabbit was made to feel himself
very insignificant and commonplace, and the only person
who was kind to him at all was the Skin Horse.
The Skin Horse had lived longer
in the nursery than any of the others. He was so old that
his brown coat was bald in patches and showed the seams
underneath, and most of the hairs in his tail had been
pulled out to string bead necklaces. He was wise, for he
had seen a long succession of mechanical toys arrive to
boast and swagger, and by-and-by break their mainsprings
and pass away, and he knew that they were only toys, and
would never turn into anything else. For nursery magic is
very strange and wonderful, and only those playthings
that are old and wise and experienced like the Skin Horse
understand all about it.
"What is REAL?" asked
the Rabbit one day, when they were lying side by side
near the nursery fender, before Nana came to tidy the
room. "Does it mean having things that buzz inside
you and a stick-out handle?"
"Real isn't how you are
made," said the Skin Horse. "It's a thing that
happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long
time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then
you become Real."
"Does it hurt?" asked
the Rabbit.
"Sometimes," said the
Skin Horse, for he was always truthful. "When you
are Real you don't mind being hurt."
"Does it happen all at
once, like being wound up," he asked, "or bit
by bit?"
"It doesn't happen all at
once," said the Skin Horse. "You become. It
takes a long time. That's why it doesn't happen often to
people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have
to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are
Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes
drop out and you get loose in your joints and very
shabby. But these things don't matter at all, because
once you are Real you can't be ugly, except to people who
don't understand."
"I suppose you
are real?" said the Rabbit. And then he wished he
had not said it, for he thought the Skin Horse might be
sensitive. But the Skin Horse only smiled.
"The Boy's Uncle made me
Real," he said. "That was a great many years
ago; but once you are Real you can't become unreal again.
It lasts for always."
The Rabbit sighed. He thought
it would be a long time before this magic called Real
happened to him. He longed to become Real, to know what
it felt like; and yet the idea of growing shabby and
losing his eyes and whiskers was rather sad. He wished
that he could become it without these uncomfortable
things happening to him.
There was a person called Nana
who ruled the nursery. Sometimes she took no notice of
the playthings lying about, and sometimes, for no reason
whatever, she went swooping about like a great wind and
hustled them away in cupboards. She called this
"tidying up," and the playthings all hated it,
especially the tin ones. The Rabbit didn't mind it so
much, for wherever he was thrown he came down soft.
One evening, when the Boy was
going to bed, he couldn't find the china dog that always
slept with him. Nana was in a hurry, and it was too much
trouble to hunt for china dogs at bedtime, so she simply
looked about her, and seeing that the toy cupboard stood
open, she made a swoop.
"Here," she said,
"take your old Bunny! He'll do to sleep with
you!" And she dragged the Rabbit out by one ear, and
put him into the Boy's arms.
That night, and for many nights
after, the Velveteen Rabbit slept in the Boy's bed. At
first he found it uncomfortable, for the Boy hugged him
very tight, and sometimes he rolled over on him, and
sometimes he pushed him so far under the pillow that the
Rabbit could scarcely breathe. And he missed, too, those
long moonlight hours in the nursery, when all the house
was silent, and his talks with the Skin Horse. But very
soon he grew to like it, for the Boy used to talk to him,
and made nice tunnels for him under the bedclothes that
he said were like the burrow the real rabbits lived in.
And they had splendid games together, in whispers, when
Nana had gone away to her supper and left the night-light
burning on the mantelpiece. And when the Boy dropped off
to sleep, the Rabbit would snuggle down close under his
little warm chin and dream, with the Boy's hands clasped
close round him all night long.
And so time went on, and the
little Rabbit was very happy -- so happy that he never
noticed how his beautiful velveteen fur was getting
shabbier and shabbier, and his tail becoming unsewn, and
all the pink rubbed off his nose where the Boy had kissed
him.
Spring came, and they had long
days in the garden, for wherever the Boy went the Rabbit
went too. He had rides in the wheelbarrow, and picnics on
the grass, and lovely fairy huts built for him under the
raspberry canes behind the flower border. And once, when
the Boy was called away suddenly to go to tea, the Rabbit
was left out on the lawn until long after dusk, and Nana
had to come and look for him with the candle because the
Boy couldn't go to sleep unless he was there. He was wet
through with the dew and quite earthy from diving into
the burrows the Boy had made for him in the flower bed,
and Nana grumbled as she rubbed him off with a corner of
her apron.
"You must have your old
Bunny!" she said. "Fancy all that fuss for a
toy!"
"Give me my Bunny!"
he said. "You mustn't say that. He isn't a toy. He's
REAL!"
When the little Rabbit heard
that he was happy, for he knew what the Skin Horse had
said was true at last. The nursery magic had happened to
him, and he was a toy no longer. He was Real. The Boy
himself had said it.
That night he was almost too
happy to sleep, and so much love stirred in his little
sawdust heart that it almost burst. And into his
boot-button eyes, that had long ago lost their polish,
there came a look of wisdom and beauty, so that even Nana
noticed it next morning when she picked him up, and said,
"I declare if that old Bunny hasn't got quite a
knowing expression!"
That was a wonderful Summer!
Near the house where they lived
there was a wood, and in the long June evening the Boy
liked to go there after tea to play. He took the
Velveteen Rabbit with him, and before he wandered off to
pick flowers, or play at brigands among the trees, he
always made the Rabbit a little nest somewhere among the
bracken, where he would be quite cosy, for he was a
kind-hearted little boy and he liked Bunny to be
comfortable. One evening, while the Rabbit was lying
there alone, watching the ants that ran to and fro
between his velvet paws in the grass, he saw two strange
beings creep out of the tall bracken near him.
They were rabbits like himself,
but quite furry and brand-new. They must have been very
well made, for their seams didn't show at all, and they
changed shape in a queer way when they moved; one minute
they were long and thin and the next minute fat and
bunchy, instead of always staying the same like he did.
Their feet padded softly on the ground, and they crept
quite close to him, twitching their noses, while the
Rabbit stared hard to see which side the clockwork stuck
out, for he knew that people who jump generally have
something to wind them up. But he couldn't see it. They
were evidently a new kind of rabbit altogether.
They stared at him, and the
little Rabbit stared back. And all the time their noses
twitched.
"Why don't you get up and
play with us?" one of them asked.
"I don't feel like
it," said the Rabbit, for he didn't want to explain
that he had no clockwork.
"Ho!" said the furry
rabbit. "It's as easy as anything," And he gave
a big hop sideways and stood on his hind legs.
"I don't believe you
can!" he said.
"I can!" said the
little Rabbit. "I can jump higher than
anything" He meant when the Boy threw him, but of
course he didn't want to say so.
"Can you hop on your hind
legs?" asked the furry rabbit?
That was a dreadful question,
for the Velveteen rabbit had no hind legs at all! The
back of him was made all in one piece, like a pincushion.
He sat still in the bracken, and hoped that the other
rabbit wouldn't notice.
"I don't want to!" he
said again.
But the wild rabbits have very
sharp eyes. And this one stretched out his neck and
looked.
"He hasn't got any hind
legs" he called out. "Fancy a rabbit without
any hind legs" And he began to laugh.
"I have!" cried the
little Rabbit. "I have got hind legs! I am sitting
on them"
"Then stretch them out and
show me, like this!" said the wild rabbit. And he
began to whirl around and dance, till the little Rabbit
got quite dizzy.
"I don't like
dancing," he said. "I'd rather sit still!"
But all the while he was
longing to dance, for a funny new tickly feeling ran
through him, and he felt he would give anything in the
world to be able to jump about like these rabbits did.
The strange rabbit stopped
dancing, and came quite close. He came so close this time
that his long whiskers brushed the Velveteen Rabbit's
ear, and then he wrinkled his nose suddenly and flattened
his ears and jumped backwards.
"He doesn't smell
right!" he exclaimed. "He isn't a rabbit at
all! He isn't real!"
"I am
Real!" said the little Rabbit. "I am Real! The
Boy said so!" And he nearly began to cry.
Just then there was a sound of
footsteps, and the Boy ran past near them, and with a
stamp of feet and a flash of white tails the two strange
rabbits disappeared.
"Come back and play with
me!" called the little Rabbit. "Oh, do come
back! I know I
am Real!"
But there was no answer, only
the little ants ran to and fro, and the bracken swayed
gently where the two strangers had passed. The Velveteen
Rabbit was all alone.
"Oh, dear!" he
thought. "Why did they run away like that? Why
couldn't they stop and talk to me?"
For a long time he lay very
still, watching the bracken, and hoping that they would
come back. But they never returned, and presently the sun
sank lower and the little white moths fluttered out, and
the Boy came and carried him home.
Weeks passed, and the little
Rabbit grew very old and shabby, but the Boy loved him
just as much. He loved him so hard that he loved all his
whiskers off, and the pink lining to his ears turned
grey, and his brown spots faded. He even began to lose
his shape, and he scarcely looked like a rabbit any more,
except to the Boy. To him he was always beautiful, and
that was all that the little Rabbit cared about. He
didn't mind how he looked to other people, because the
nursery magic had made him Real, and when you are Real
shabbiness doesn't matter.
And then, one day, the Boy was
ill.
His face grew very flushed, and
he talked in his sleep, and his little body was so hot
that it burned the Rabbit when he held him lose.
Strange people came and went in
the nursery, and a light burned all night and through it
all the little Velveteen Rabbit lay there, hidden from
sight under the bedclothes, and he never stirred, for he
was afraid that if they found him some one might take him
away, and he knew that the Boy needed him.
It was a long weary time, for
the Boy was too ill to play, and the little Rabbit found
it rather dull with nothing to do all day long. But he
snuggled down patiently, and looked forward to the time
when the Boy should be well again, and they would go out
in the garden amongst the flowers and the butterflies and
play splendid games in the raspberry thicket like they
used to. All sorts of delightful things he planned, and
while the Boy lay half asleep he crept up close to the
pillow and whispered them in his ear. And presently the
fever turned, and the Boy got better. He was able to sit
up in bed and look at picture-books, while the little
Rabbit cuddled close at his side. And one day, they let
him get up and dress.
It was a bright, sunny morning,
and the windows stood wide open. They had carried the Boy
out on the balcony, wrapped in a shawl, and the little
Rabbit lay tangled up among the bedclothes, thinking.
The Boy was going to the
seaside to-morrow. Everything was arranged, and now it
only remained to carry out the doctor's orders. They
talked about it all, while the little Rabbit lay under
the bedclothes, with just his head peeping out, and
listened. The room was to be disinfected, and all the
books and toys that the Boy had played with in bed must
be burnt.
"Hurrah!" thought the
little Rabbit. "To-morrow we shall go to the
seaside!" For the boy had often talked of the
seaside, and he wanted very much to see the big waves
coming in, and the tiny crabs, and the sand castles.
Just then Nana caught sight of
him.
"How about his old
Bunny?" she asked.
"That?"
said the doctor. "Why, it's a mass of scarlet fever
germs! -- Burn it at once. What? Nonsense! Get him a new
one. He mustn't have that any more!"
And so the little Rabbit was
put into a sack with the old picture-books and a lot of
rubbish, and carried out to the end of the garden behind
the fowl-house. That was a fine place to make a bonfire,
only the gardener was too busy just then to attend to it.
He had the potatoes to dig and the green peas to gather,
but next morning he promised to come early and burn the
whole lot.
That night the Boy slept in a
different bedroom, and he had a new bunny to sleep with
him. It was a splendid bunny, all white plush with real
glass eyes, but the Boy was too excited to care very much
about it. For to-morrow he was going to the seaside, and
that in itself was such a wonderful thing that he could
think of nothing else.
And while the Boy was asleep,
dreaming of the seaside, the little Rabbit lay among the
old picture-books in the corner behind the fowl-house,
and he felt very lonely. The sack had been left untied,
and so by wriggling a bit he was able to get his head
through the opening and look out. He was shivering a
little, for he had always been used to sleeping in a
proper bed, and by this time his coat had worn so thin
and threadbare from hugging that it was no longer any
protection to him. Near by he could see the thicket of
raspberry canes, growing tall and close like a tropical
jungle, in whose shadow he had played with the Boy on
bygone mornings. He thought of those long sunlit hours in
the garden -- how happy they were -- and a great sadness
came over him. He seemed to see them all pass before him,
each more beautiful than the other, the fairy huts in the
flower-bed, the quiet evenings in the wood when he lay in
the bracken and the little ants ran over his paws; the
wonderful day when he first knew that he was Real. He
thought of the Skin Horse, so wise and gentle, and all
that he had told him. Of what use was it to be loved and
lose one's beauty and become Real if it all ended like
this? And a tear, a real tear, trickled down his little
shabby velvet nose and fell to the ground.
And then a strange thing
happened. For where the tear had fallen a flower grew out
of the ground, a mysterious flower, not at all like any
that grew in the garden. It had slender green leaves the
colour of emeralds, and in the centre of the leaves a
blossom like a golden cup. It was so beautiful that the
little Rabbit forgot to cry, and just lay there watching
it. And presently the blossom opened, and out of it there
stepped a fairy.
She was quite the loveliest
fairy in the whole world. Her dress was of pearl and
dew-drops, and there were flowers round her neck and in
her hair, and her face was like the most perfect flower
of all. And she came close to the little Rabbit and
gathered him up in her arms and kissed him on his
velveteen nose that was all damp from crying.
"Little Rabbit," she
said, "don't you know who I am?"
The Rabbit looked up at her,
and it seemed to him that he had seen her face before,
but he couldn't think where.
"I am the nursery magic
Fairy," she said. "I take care of all the
playthings that the children have loved. When they are
old and worn out, and the children don't need them any
more, then I come and take them away with me and turn
them into Real."
"Wasn't I Real
before?" asked the little Rabbit.
"You were Real to the
Boy," the Fairy said, "because he loved you.
Now you shall be Real to every one."
And she held the little Rabbit
close in her arms and flew with him into the wood.
It was light now, for the moon
had risen. All the forest was beautiful, and the fronds
of the bracken shone like frosted silver. In the open
glade between the tree-trunks the wild rabbits danced
with their shadows on the velvet grass, but when they saw
the Fairy they all stopped dancing and stood round in a
ring to stare at her.
"I've brought you a new
playfellow," the Fairy said. "You must be very
kind to him and teach him all he needs to know in
Rabbit-land, for he is going to live with you for ever
and ever!"
And she kissed the little
Rabbit again and put him down on the grass.
"Run and play, little
Rabbit!" she said.
But the little Rabbit sat quite
still for a moment and never moved. For when he saw all
the wild rabbits dancing around him he suddenly
remembered about his hind legs, and he didn't want them
to see that he was made all in one piece. He did not know
that when the Fairy kissed him that last time she had
changed him altogether. And he might have sat there a
long time, too shy to move, if just then something hadn't
tickled his nose, and before he thought what he was doing
he lifted his hind toe to scratch it.
And he found that he actually
had hind legs! Instead of dingy velveteen he had brown
fur, soft and shiny, his ears twitched by themselves, and
his whiskers were so long that they brushed the grass. He
gave one leap and the joy of using those hind legs was so
great that he went springing about the turf with them,
jumping sideways and whirling round as the other did, and
he grew so excited that when at last he did stop to look
for the Fairy she had gone.
He was a Real Rabbit at last,
at home with the other rabbits.
Autumn passed and Winter, and
in the Spring, when the days grew warm and sunny, the Boy
went out to play in the wood behind the house. And while
he was playing, two rabbits crept out from the bracken
and peeped at him. One of them was brown all over, but
the other had strange markings under his fur, as though
long ago he had been spotted, and the spots still showed
through. And about his little soft nose and his round
back eyes there was something familiar, so that the Boy
thought to himself:
"Why, he looks just like
my old Bunny that was lost when I had scarlet
fever!"
But he never knew that it
really was his own Bunny, come back to look at the child
who had first helped him to be Real.
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Margery
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