Wings and the Child by E. Nesbit (1858 – 1924)
by LibriVox
January 1, 1970 10:00 am
“When this book first came to my mind it came as a history and theory of the building of Magic Cities on tables, with bricks and toys and little things such as a child may find and use. But as I kept the thought by me it grew and changed, as thoughts will do, until at last it took shape as an attempt to contribute something, however small and unworthy, to the science of building a magic city in the soul of a child, a city built of all things pure and fine and beautiful.” — E. Nesbit
“This lovely book describes the practicalities of building cities (or forts, secret bases and fairytale palaces) out of household odds-and-ends. It also goes much further to speak of the importance of developing a child’s imagination and other aspects of Education beyond simple instruction. Nesbit may not have realised how multicultural her own Britain was, let alone ours now, or that the wider world might be interested in this book, so please forgive some rather dated phrasing in places.” — Cori Samuel
Recent Episodes
01 - Part 1, Chapter 1 - Of Understanding
55 years ago02 - Part 1, Chapter 2 - New Ways
55 years ago03 - Part 1, Chapter 3 - Playthings
55 years ago04 - Part 1, Chapter 4 - Imagination
55 years ago05 - Part 1, Chapter 5 - Of Taking Root
55 years ago06 - Part 1, Chapter 6 - Beauty and Knowledge
55 years ago07 - Part 1, Chapter 7 - Of Building and Other Matters
55 years ago08 - Part 1, Chapter 8 - The Moral Code
55 years ago09 - Part 1, Chapter 9 - Praise and Punishment
55 years ago10 - Part 1, Chapter 10 - The One Thing Needful
55 years ago