2 Read this passage from "Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens" and answer the
questions.
Kensington Gardens are a very big place, with millions and hundreds of trees.
We are now in the Broad Walk, and it is as much bigger than the other walks
as your father is bigger than you. In the Broad Walk you meet a lot of children.
There is usully a nurse with them to keep them from going on the damp grass,
and to make them stand at the corner of a bench if they have been mad-dog or
Mary-Annish. To be Mary-Annish is to behave like a girl, crying because the
nurse doesn't want to carry you, and it is a hateful quality. But to be mad-dog
is to kick at everything and there is some satisfaction in that.
1. How big is the Broad Walk?
2. When do children stand at the corner of a bench?
3. What do children do when they are Mary-Annish?
4. What do children do when they are mad-dog?
5. Were you sometimes Mary-Annish or mad-dog when you were little?