'You see Wendy,' he said, '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.'
Illustrations by Mabel Lucie Attwell
They are the children who fall out of their perambulators
A Mermaid caught Wendy
The Never Bird
The House under the Ground
The Strange procession set off
When he had freed Wendy
When Wendy grew up
The Serpentine is a lovely lake, and there is a drowned forest at the bottom of it. If you peer over the edge you can see the trees all growing upside down, and they say that at night there are also drowned stars in it
Old Mr. Salford was a crab-apple of an old gentleman who wandered all day in the Gardens
Away he flew, right over the houses to the Gardens
A band of workmen, who were sawing down a toadstool, rushed away, leaving their tools behind them
There now arose a mighty storm, and he was tossed this way and that
When they think you are not looking they skip along pretty lively
These tricky fairies sometimes slyly change the board on a Ball night
The fairies sit round on mushrooms, and at first they are well behaved
Peter Pan is the fairies' orchestra
The little people weave their summer curtains from skeleton leaves
Fairies never say, 'We feel happy': what they say is, 'We feel dancey'