The Little Engine that Could, also known as The Pony Engine, is a moralistic children's story that appeared in the United States of America. The book is used to teach children the value of optimism. Some critics would contend that the book is a metaphor for the American dream.
The gist of the tale is that a long train must be pulled over a high mountain. Various larger engines, treated anthropomorphically, are asked to pull the train; for various reasons they refuse. The request is made of a small engine; the other engines mock the engine for trying. But by chugging on with its motto I-think-I-can, the engine succeeds in pulling the train over the mountain.
The best known incarnation of the story The Little Engine That Could is attributed to "Watty Piper," a pseudonym used by publishing house Platt & Munk. With illustrations by the esteemed Lois Lensky, this retelling of the tale The Pony Engine appeared in 1930; the first edition attributes Mabel C. Bragg as the originating author. However, Mabel C. Bragg, a school teacher in Boston, Massachusetts, never claimed to have originated the story. Indeed, The Pony Engine, which first appeared in the Kindergarten Review in 1910, was written by Mary C. Jacobs (1877-1970). In 1954, Platt & Munk published a now familiar version of The Little Engine That Could (pictured at right), with slightly revised language and new, more colorful illustrations by George and Doris Hauman.
But a much briefer, prior version of the tale appeared under the title Thinking One Can in 1906, in Wellsprings for Young People, a Sunday school publication. This version reappeared in a 1910 publication by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Its text reads:
In the very earliest versions of the story, the 1906 Thinking One Can and the 1910 The Pony Engine, all the engines are neuter. In the Watty Piper retellings, the Little Engine That Could is female, the bigger engines are male.
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It uses material from the
"The Little Engine That Could".
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