The Tale Of Mrs. Tittlemouse By Beatrix Potter
Once
upon
a
time
there
was
a
wood
mouse,
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
storerooms
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.
Tittlemouse's
bedroom,
where
she
slept
in
a
little
box!
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
dust
pan.
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
cherry
stones
and
thistle
down
seed
for
supper.
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
beeswax.
But
what
are
you
doing
down
here?
Why
do
you
always
come
in
at
a
window,
and
say
Zizz,
Bizz,
Bizzz?"
Mrs.
Tittlemouse
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
someone
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
dish
cloth,
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're
all
over
the
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
beeswax.
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
fortnight.
She
swept,
and
scrubbed,
and
dusted;
and
she
rubbed
up
the
furniture
with
beeswax,
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
cupful
of
honey
dew
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!"
THE
END
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