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Activity 1: As a group, proofread and edit this passage from Peter Pan.
 
Nana also him in another way. He sometimes has a feeling that she  did not admire him. "I know she admires you tremendously,  George,"  Mrs. Darling would insure him, and then she would sign to  the children  to  be  specialy nice to father. Lovely dances followed,  in which the  only other servant, Liza, was sometimes alloud to join.  Such a sdfsdfsdfsdfshe looked in her long skirt and maid's cap, though she  had sworn,  when   engaged, that she would never see ten again. The  gaiety of those  romps!   And gayest of all was mrs. Darling, who wood  pirouette so  wildly that   all you can see of her was the Kiss, and  than if you had  dashed at her   you mite have gotten it. There never  were a simpler  happier family  until  the coming of Peter Pan. 
 
Mrs.Darling first heard of Peter when she was tidying up her children's  minds. It is the nightly custom of every good mother after her   children   are asleep to rumage in their minds and put things straight  for  next   morning, repacking into there proper places the many  articles  that have   wondered during the day. If you could keep awake  (but of  course you can't) you would sea your own mother doing this,  and you  would find it   very intresting to watch her. It is quite like  tidying up  drawers. You   would see her on her knees, I expect,  lingering  humorously over some of  your contents, wandering where on  earth you  had picked this thing up,   making discoveries sweet and not  so sweet,  pressing this to her chek  as  if it were as nice as a  kitten, and  hurriedly stowing that out of  site.  When you wake in the  morning, the  naughtiness and evil pashuns  with  which you went to bed  have been  folded up small and placed at the  bottom  of your mind and  on the top,  beautifully aired, are spread out your  pretter thoughts, ready for  you to put on.