NEW YORK E. P. DUTTON & CO., INC.
NOW WE ARE SIX, COPYRIGHT, 1927,
BY E. P. DUTTON & CO., INC.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
First Printing | Sept., 1927 |
Tenth Printing | Sept., 1927 |
Twentieth Printing | Sept., 1927 |
Thirtieth Printing | Sept., 1927 |
Thirty-third Printing | Sept., 1927 |
Thirty-fifth Printing | Nov., 1927 |
Fortieth Printing | Nov., 1927 |
Forty-fifth Printing | Nov., 1927 |
Fiftieth Printing | Nov., 1927 |
Fifty-fifth Printing | Dec., 1927 |
Sixtieth Printing | Dec., 1927 |
Sixty-fifth Printing | Dec., 1927 |
Seventieth Printing | Dec., 1927 |
Seventy-fourth Printing | Dec., 1928 |
Seventy-eighth Printing | Sept., 1929 |
Eightieth Printing | May, 1930 |
Eighty-fourth Printing | May, 1931 |
Eighty-sixth Printing | July, 1932 |
Eighty-ninth Printing | July, 1933 |
New Edition | Aug., 1935 |
Ninety-first Printing | Aug., 1935 |
Ninety-fourth Printing | Aug., 1935 |
TO
ANNE DARLINGTON
NOW SHE IS SEVEN
AND
BECAUSE SHE IS
SO
SPESHAL
When you are reciting poetry, which is a thing we never do, you find sometimes, just as you are beginning, that Uncle John is still telling Aunt Rose that if he can't find his spectacles he won't be able to hear properly, and does she know where they are; and by the time everybody has stopped looking for them, you are at the last verse, and in another minute they will be saying, "Thank-you, thank-you," without really knowing what it was all about. So, next time, you are more careful; and, just before you begin you say, "Er-h'r'm!" very loudly, which means, "Now then, here we are"; and everybody stops talking and looks at you: which is what you want. So then you get in the way of saying it whenever you are asked to recite ... and sometimes it is just as well, and sometimes it isn't.... And by and by you find yourself saying it without thinking. Well, this bit which I am writing now, called Introduction, is really the er-h'r'm of the book, and I have put it in, partly so as not to take you by surprise, and partly because I can't do without it now. There are some very clever writers who say that it is quite easy not to have an er-h'r'm, but I don't agree with them. I think it is much easier not to have all the rest of the book.
What I want to explain in the Introduction is this. We have been nearly three years writing this book. We began it when we were very young ... and now we are six. So, of course, bits of it seem rather baby-ish to us, almost as if they had slipped out of some other book by mistake. On page whatever-it-is there is a thing which is simply three-ish, and when we read it to ourselves just now we said, "Well, well, well," and turned over rather quickly. So we want you to know that the name of the book doesn't mean that this is us being six all the time, but that it is about as far as we've got at present, and we half think of stopping there.
A. A. M.
P.S.—Pooh wants us to say that he thought it was a different book; and he hopes you won't mind, but he walked through it one day, looking for his friend Piglet, and sat down on some of the pages by mistake.
These inimitable and imperishable Milne classics with the Shepard drawings are now available, for the first time, in a new edition, uniform with this volume.
The most popular book of child-verse of modern times.
A companion volume of verse to When We Were Very Young
Pooh and Christopher Robin are among the most treasured characters of story-land.
There just had to be another story about Christopher Robin and his seven friends—Pooh, Piglet, Owl, Tigger, etc.
By A. A. MILNE
Fully illustrated by E. H. SHEPARD, with 12 plates in color
Illustrated by E. H. SHEPARD
Illustrated by E. H. SHEPARD
Collected by A. A. MILNE from his four books of poetry and prose, including selections recommended by the New York City Board of Education.
With Music by H. FRASER-SIMSON and Decorations by E. H. SHEPARD
FOURTEEN SONGS
TEDDY BEAR AND OTHER SONGS
SONGS FROM "NOW WE ARE SIX"
THE KING'S BREAKFAST
MORE "VERY YOUNG" SONGS
THE HUMS OF POOH