"LET us write a book," they said;
“but what shall it be about ?"
"A fairy story," said the elder sister.
" A book about kings and queens," said the other.
"Oh, no," said the brother, "let's write about animals."
"We will write about them all," they
cried together. So they put the paper, and pens, and ink ready. The
elder sister took up a fairy story and looked at it, and put it down
again.
"I have never known any fairies," she
said, "except in books; but, of course, it would not do to put one book
inside another anyone could do that."
"I shall not begin to-day," the little
one said, “for I must know a few kings and queens before I write about
them, or I may say something foolish."
"I shall write about the pig, and the
pony, and the white rabbit," said the brother; "but first I must think a
bit. It would never do to write a book without thinking."
Then the elder sister took up the fairy
story again, to see how many things were left out, for those, she
thought, would do to go into her book.
The little one said to herself, "Really,
it is no good thinking about kings and queens until I have known some,
so I must wait;" and while the brother was considering about the pig,
and the pony, and the white rabbit, he fell asleep.
So the book is not written yet, but when it is we shall know a great deal.
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