50 years after the publication of Roald Dahl's beloved children's book, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Guardian has posted online a never-before-published draft of the book's fifth chapter. It was cut from the first printed editions of Dahl's classic, writes The Guardian, because it was considered "too wild, subversive and insufficiently moral for the tender minds of British children." You, the reader living in 2014, will likely have a hard time figuring out what the fuss was about.

The lost chapter, appropriately illustrated by Sir Quentin Blake, begins:

The remaining eight children, together with their mothers and fathers, were ushered out into the long white corridor once again.

"I wonder how Augustus Pottle and Miranda Grope are feeling now?" Charlie Bucket asked his mother.

"Not too cocky, I shouldn't think" Mrs Bucket answered. "Here – hold on to my hand, will you, darling. That's right. Hold on tight and try not to let go. And don't you go doing anything silly in here, either, you understand, or you might get sucked up into one of those dreadful pipes yourself, or something even worse maybe. Who knows?"

Little Charlie took a tighter hold of Mrs Bucket's hand as they walked down the long corridor. Soon they came to a door on which it said:

THE VANILLA FUDGE ROOM

"Hey, this is where Augustus Pottle went to, isn't it?" Charlie Bucket said.

"No", Mr Wonka told him. "Augustus Pottle is in Chocolate Fudge. This is Vanilla. Come inside, everybody, and take a peek."