97 4 4 Catherine Sinclair Holiday House, 1839 George MacDonald At the Back of the North Wind, 1870 Lucy Lane Clifford The New Mother, 1882 Philip Pullman Clockwork: or All Wound Up, 1996 1
98 Uncle David s Nonsensical Story about Giants and Fairies 3 119 the moral Master No-book Teach-all Do-nothing Castle Needless 129 2 11 123
99 223 223 2 North Wind the country at the back of the north wind 1 Little Daylight 322 understand
100 take what he or she can get; 257 352 2 2 383 1 2
101 367 458 49 456 456 143
102 3 2 2 Blue-Eyes The Turkey 1 1 naughty peardrum 197 198 198 2 201 5 4
103 208 1 1 a new mother, with glass eyes and wooden tail; 201 202 The things that people say are most singular and amusing. There is an endless variety in language; 205 1 3 The pleasure of goodness centres in itself; the pleasures of naughtiness are many and varied; 203
104 They are there still, my children; 212 4 3 35 38 62 106
105 107 3 2 1 10 7
106 4 4 2 2007 8 IRSCL 18 1996. 1998 1871. 2005 Clifford, Lucy Lane. The New Mother. 1882. The Oxford Book of Children's Stories. Ed. Jan Mark. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993. pp. 193 213.
107 MacDonald, George. At the Back of the North Wind. 1870. Whitethorn, CA: Johannesen, 1997. Pullman, Philip. Clockwork: or All Wound Up. 1996. London: Corgi Yearling, 1997. Sinclair, Catherine. Holiday House: A Book for the Young. 1839. London: Blackie, n.d.. 22 9 30