The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Little Princess, by Frances Hodgson Burnett
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Title: A Little Princess
Being the whole story of Sara Crewe now told for the first time
Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
Illustrator: Ethel Franklin Betts
Release Date: September 7, 2011 [EBook #37332]
Language: English
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, eagkw and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
“I am not—I am not dreaming!”
A LITTLE PRINCESS
BEING THE WHOLE STORY OF SARA CREWE
NOW TOLD FOR THE FIRST TIME
BY
FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLORS BY
ETHEL FRANKLIN BETTS
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
NEW YORK . . . . . 1937
Copyright, 1888 and 1905, by
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
Copyright, 1916, by
FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
Printed in the United States of America
All rights reserved. No part of this book
may be reproduced in any form without
the permission of Charles Scribner’s Sons
THE WHOLE OF THE STORY
I do not know whether many people realize how much more than is ever written there really is in a story—how many parts of it are never told—how much more really happened than there is in the book one holds in one’s hand and pores over. Stories are something like letters. When a letter is written, how often one remembers things omitted and says, “Ah, why did I not tell them that” In writing a book one relates all that one remembers at the time, and if one told all that really happened perhaps the book would never end. Between the lines of every story there is another story, and that is one that is never heard and can only be guessed at by the people who are good at guessing. The person who writes the story may never know all of it, but sometimes he does and wishes he had the chance to begin again.
When I wrote the story of “Sara Crewe” I guessed that a great deal more had happened at Miss Minchin’s than I had had time to find out just then. I knew, of course, that there must have been chapters full of things going on all the time; and when I began to make a play out of the book and called it “A Little Princess,” I discovered three acts full of things. What interested me most was that I found that there had been girls at the school whose names I had not even known before. There was a little girl whose name was Lottie, who was an amusing little person; there was a hungry scullery-maid who was Sara’s adoring friend; Ermengarde was much more entertaining than she had seemed at first; things happened in the garret which had never been hinted at in the book; and a certain gentleman whose name was Melchisedec was an intimate friend of Sara’s who should never have been left out of the story if he had only walked into it in time. He and Becky and Lottie lived at Miss Minchin’s, and I cannot understand why they did not mention themselves to me at first. They were as real as Sara, and it was careless of them not to come out of the story shadowland and say, “Here I am—tell about me.” But they did not—which was their fault and not mine. People who live in the story one is writing ought to come forward at the beginning and tap the writing person on the shoulder and say, “Hallo, what about me?” If they don’t, no one can be blamed but themselves and their slouching, idle ways.