Public Domain Story Files - The Tale Of Mrs. Tittlemouse by Helen Beatrix Potter
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The Tale Of Mrs. Tittlemouse

    By Helen Beatrix Potter



   [Nellie's Little Book]




   Once upon a time there was
   a woodmouse, and her name
   was Mrs. Tittlemouse.

   She lived in a bank under a hedge.

   Such a funny house! There
   were yards and yards of sandy
   passages, leading to store-
   rooms and nut cellars and
   seed cellars, all amongst the
   roots of the hedge.


   There was a kitchen, a parlor,
   a pantry, and a larder.

   Also, there was Mrs. Tittle-
   mouse's bedroom, where she
   slept in a little box bed!

   Mrs. Tittlemouse was a most
   terribly tidy particular little
   mouse, always sweeping and
   dusting the soft sandy floors.

   Sometimes a beetle lost its way
   in the passages.

   "Shuh! shuh! little dirty feet!"
   said Mrs. Tittlemouse, clattering
   her dustpan.


   And one day a little old woman
   ran up and down in a red spotty
   cloak.

   "Your house is on fire, Mother
   Ladybird! Fly away home to your
   children!"

   Another day, a big fat spider
   came in to shelter from the rain.

   "Beg pardon, is this not Miss
   Muffet's?"

   "Go away, you bold bad spider!
   Leaving ends of cobweb all over
   my nice clean house!"

   She bundled the spider out at a
   window.

   He let himself down the hedge
   with a long thin bit of string.


   Mrs. Tittlemouse went on her
   way to a distant storeroom, to
   fetch cherrystones and thistle-
   down seed for dinner.

   All along the passage she
   sniffed, and looked at the floor.

   "I smell a smell of honey; is it
   the cowslips outside, in the hedge?
   I am sure I can see the marks of
   little dirty feet."

   Suddenly round a corner, she
   met Babbitty Bumble--"Zizz,
   Bizz, Bizzz!" said the bumble bee.

   Mrs. Tittlemouse looked at her
   severely. She wished that she had
   a broom.

   "Good-day, Babbitty Bumble; I
   should be glad to buy some bees-
   wax. But what are you doing
   down here? Why do you always
   come in at a window, and say,
   Zizz, Bizz, Bizzz?" Mrs. Tittle-
   mouse began to get cross.


   "Zizz, Wizz, Wizzz!" replied
   Babbitty Bumble in a peevish
   squeak. She sidled down a passage,
   and disappeared into a
   storeroom which had been used
   for acorns.

   Mrs. Tittlemouse had eaten the
   acorns before Christmas; the
   storeroom ought to have been
   empty.

   But it was full of untidy dry
   moss.

   Mrs. Tittlemouse began to pull out the
   moss. Three or four other bees put
   their heads out, and buzzed fiercely.

   "I am not in the habit of letting
   lodgings; this is an intrusion!"
   said Mrs. Tittlemouse.
   "I will have them turned out
   --" "Buzz! Buzz! Buzzz!"--"I
   wonder who would help me?"
   "Bizz, Wizz, Wizzz!"

   --"I will not have Mr. Jackson;
   he never wipes his feet."


   Mrs. Tittlemouse decided to
   leave the bees till after dinner.

   When she got back to the parlor,
   she heard some one coughing
   in a fat voice; and there sat Mr.
   Jackson himself.

   He was sitting all over a
   small rocking chair, twiddling his
   thumbs and smiling, with his feet
   on the fender.

   He lived in a drain below the
   hedge, in a very dirty wet ditch.

   "How do you do, Mr. Jackson?
   Deary me, you have got
   very wet!"

   "Thank you, thank you,
   thank you, Mrs. Tittlemouse!
   I'll sit awhile and dry myself,"
   said Mr. Jackson.

   He sat and smiled, and the
   water dripped off his coat
   tails. Mrs. Tittlemouse went
   round with a mop.


   He sat such a while that he had
   to be asked if he would take some
   dinner?

   First she offered him cherry-
   stones. "Thank you, thank you,
   Mrs. Tittlemouse! No teeth, no
   teeth, no teeth!" said Mr. Jackson.

   He opened his mouth most
   unnecessarily wide; he certainly had
   not a tooth in his head.

   Then she offered him thistle-
   down seed--"Tiddly, widdly,
   widdly! Pouff, pouff, puff." said
   Mr. Jackson. He blew the thistle-
   down all over the room.

   "Thank you, thank you, thank
   you, Mrs. Tittlemouse! Now what
   I really--REALLY should like--
   would be a little dish of honey!"


   "I am afraid I have not got
   any, Mr. Jackson!" said Mrs.
   Tittlemouse.

   "Tiddly, widdly, widdly,
   Mrs. Tittlemouse!" said the
   smiling Mr. Jackson, "I can SMELL it;
   that is why I came to call."

   Mr. Jackson rose ponderously
   from the table, and began
   to look into the cupboards.

   Mrs. Tittlemouse followed him with
   a dishcloth, to wipe his large
   wet footmarks off the parlor floor.

   When he had convinced himself
   that there was no honey in the
   cupboards, he began to walk
   down the passage.

   "Indeed, indeed, you will stick
   fast, Mr. Jackson!"

   "Tiddly, widdly, widdly, Mrs.
   Tittlemouse!"


   First he squeezed into the pantry.

   "Tiddly, widdly, widdly? No
   honey? No honey, Mrs. Tittlemouse?"

   There were three creepy-crawly
   people hiding in the plate rack.
   Two of them got away; but the
   littlest one he caught.

   Then he squeezed into the larder.
   Miss Butterfly was tasting the
   sugar; but she flew away out of
   the window.

   "Tiddly, widdly, widdly, Mrs.
   Tittlemouse; you seem to have
   plenty of visitors!"

   "And without any invitation!"
   said Mrs. Thomasina Tittlemouse.


   They went along the sandy
   passage--"Tiddly, widdly--" "Buzz!
   Wizz! Wizz!"

   He met Babbitty round a corner,
   and snapped her up, and put
   her down again.

   "I do not like bumble bees. They
   are all over bristles," said Mr.
   Jackson, wiping his mouth with
   his coat sleeve.

   "Get out, you nasty old toad!" shrieked Babbitty Bumble.

   "I shall go distracted!" scolded Mrs. Tittlemouse.

   She shut herself up in the nut
   cellar while Mr. Jackson pulled out
   the bees-nest. He seemed to have
   no objection to stings.

   When Mrs. Tittlemouse ventured
   to come out--everybody
   had gone away.

   But the untidiness was something
   dreadful--"Never did I see
   such a mess--smears of honey;
   and moss, and thistledown--and
   marks of big and little dirty feet--
   all over my nice clean house!"


   She gathered up the moss
   and the remains of the bees-
   wax.

   Then she went out and
   fetched some twigs, to partly
   close up the front door.

   "I will make it too small for
   Mr. Jackson!"

   She fetched soft soap, and
   flannel, and a new scrubbing
   brush from the storeroom.
   But she was too tired to do any
   more. First she fell asleep in
   her chair, and then she went
   to bed.

   "Will it ever be tidy again?"
   said poor Mrs. Tittlemouse.


   Next morning she got up
   very early and began a spring
   cleaning which lasted a fort-
   night.

   She swept, and scrubbed,
   and dusted; and she rubbed
   up the furniture with bees-
   wax, and polished her little tin
   spoons.

   When it was all beautifully
   neat and clean, she gave a
   party to five other little mice,
   without Mr. Jackson.

   He smelt the party and
   came up the bank, but he
   could not squeeze in at the
   door.


   So they handed him out acorn cupfuls of honeydew through the window,
   and he was not at all offended.

   He sat outside in the sun, and said--"Tiddly, widdly, widdly! Your very
   good health, Mrs. Tittlemouse!"



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