Or How Toys Become Real
By Margery Williams
Illustrations by William Nicholson
Originally published in 1922
Once upon a time, my Mother made me a cute little bright pink
rabbit out of corduroy. It was my own
little velveteen rabbit. I remember a homemade
felt carrot and cabbage for the rabbit to eat.
The fate of these toys is unknown to me now, but I still have my
childhood copy of The Velveteen Rabbit.
This magical story contains lessons important for all ages,
but my favorite lesson is one that the old Skin Horse gives to the brand new Velveteen Rabbit.
“When you are Real, you can’t be ugly, except to people who
don’t understand.”
Our outside appearances just don’t matter much. It’s
what is inside that counts. This is
a lesson I need to keep in mind when the way a person dresses, accessorizes, or
wears their hair impels me to judge them too quickly.
Take a lesson from the Skin Horse. It doesn’t matter if your joints are loose
and your hair has been rubbed off when the reason for your physical condition
is a life of loving and being loved.
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