Age 9 |
Age 15 |
First edition |
After that, she convinced Frederick Warne & Company to print 8,000 copies of the book. This first edition came out in 1902, and the book has never been out of print since then. It has been translated into 36 languages, and 45 million copies have sold. Which makes it one of the best-selling books of all time.
So anyway, what happens in the book is that Peter lives with his mother and his sisters, Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cottontail. They walk upright and wear clothes, and they live in a rabbit-hole under a fir tree. Mrs. Rabbit tells her children never to go into Mr. MacGregor's garden because that is where their father met his sad fate and ended up as part of a pie.
But when Mrs. Rabbit goes shopping, and the girl bunnies go out to gather blackberries, Peter sneaks into Mr. MacGregor's garden. He finds lots of yummy veggies there, and he eats so many of them that he gets sick. Then Mr. MacGregor sees Peter and starts chasing him. Peter loses his jacket and shoes during the chase, and he has several close escapes from the farmer before he finally gets away.
Mr. MacGregor uses Peter's jacket and shoes to make a scarecrow, which seems like it would be a very small scarecrow, and not the kind of thing that would scare a big, black crow. But I am not a farm girl, so I don't know much about these subjects.
Meanwhile, Peter runs home and arrives there feeling all tired and sick. His mother puts him to bed with a dose of camomile tea. But Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cottontail get to have a nice supper of bread, milk, and blackberries because they have been such good little bunnies.
All together, Beatrix Potter published more than 23 books. The ones that people know best were published between 1902 and 1922. Ms. Potter used the money she got from her writing to buy a home in the Lake District of England. This area is in the northwest part of England, not too far from Scotland. When Ms. Potter and her brother were young, their parents used to take them to the Lake District and to Scotland for family vacations.
Hill Top Farm |
Oh, and here's something else that's interesting about Beatrix Potter. She figured out that she could make a Peter Rabbit doll and patent it, which she did in 1903. Then she came up with a Peter Rabbit board game. This meant that Peter Rabbit was the first licensed character ever, and over the years, many types of products have been made using him and other characters from Ms. Potter's books.
Ms. Potter at Hill Top Farm |
Ms. Potter and a dog named Kep, 1915 |
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