<h2 id="c7">WHAT A LITTLE MOUSE SAID.</h2>
<p>I am only a little mouse; my name is
Wee Wee.</p>
<p>I live in a big house away out in California.
My mother has made a very cozy
home for us between the walls where it
is nice and dark. We do not mind the
dark, you know, for we can see even better
then, with our little bright eyes.</p>
<p>Our bed is soft and warm and is made
of tiny bits of paper which we children
helped our mother to tear up and it is
lined with some nice soft cotton which
she picked out of a comforter one night
when every-one had gone to church.</p>
<p>We have never been out very much but
now, our mother says, we are big enough
to help get the living. When she told us
this, we all said: “Squeak, squeak,
squeak,” which, in mouse language,
meant that we were glad and thought it
would be fine fun to leave our nest and
go out into the big world.</p>
<p>But mother said: “Children, before you
go I want to tell you something; listen
well to what I shall say.”</p>
<p>And so we six little mice sat very solemnly
in a row, on our hind legs and
pricked up our ears and listened quietly
while she went on. “You go through a
narrow passage till you come to a little
round hole and when you have squeezed
through this you will find yourself in a
big room called a kitchen. You must
then run quickly across the floor and into
the door of a bathroom. There is also a
hole behind the bathroom door which
you may need to jump into if anything
happens. Next comes a nice, large pantry
and in there you will find everything
that we mice like to eat. Bring what you
can carry, after you have eaten all you
can, but do not eat too much or you will
never be able to squeeze through the hole
again. Now you must never go in the
daytime, but wait until night.”</p>
<p>After telling us this, my mother left
the nest saying that she was going to call
on one of our neighbors who lived in an
old felt hat, very near us. She said she
might be gone some time, so, while my
brothers and sisters were taking a nap,
I thought to myself: “I don’t see why
mother told me not to go in daylight. I
am sure everything seems perfectly quiet
now and I don’t think anything could
hurt me; and I do feel so hungry. I
guess I will go on a little trip, and ‘we
shall see what we shall see.’” With that
I crept out of the nest without making
the least bit of noise and followed the directions
my mother had given me.</p>
<p>Soon I found myself in the pantry and
O! how good everything did smell. I
found some cheese and I ate a very big
hole in a white cake with icing on it and
was just thinking what I could carry
home as a surprise for the children when
I heard a rushing noise like the patter of
feet and I jumped behind some glass jars
that were on the floor in the corner.</p>
<p>To my horror I saw very near me, for
I could see right through the glass jar, a
funny thing with long white wool and
sharp teeth, a long, pointed nose and a
terrible big red tongue hanging out of its
mouth and little sharp black eyes that
seemed to be looking clear through me.
Oh! how I trembled and oh! how I
wished then that I had obeyed my
mother.</p>
<p>I saw now, when it was too late, that
she knew best. Just then a big giant with
dresses on came into the pantry and I
heard her say: “That dog thinks there is
a mouse in here.” So it was a dog and I
remembered now that my mother had
said one day that there was a spitz dog in
that house.</p>
<p>The lady went out but the dog smelled
me and was determined not to give me
up so he ran to the big giant with dresses
on and whined and whined until she came
in again and said: “Well, Zip, I guess
there must be a mouse here since you insist
on it.” So she went out and got a
long stick with a lot of straws on the end
of it (she called it a broom), and with
that she poked around all over the pantry,
and the funny thing with long, white wool
and sharp teeth kept smelling around and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
clawing at the glass jars till I thought I
should die of fright. “It must be behind
those jars, the way Zip acts,” she said;
and she took the broom and knocked over
all the jars with a crash. Well! I thought
my time had surely come. My eyes filled
with tears and my heart almost broke
as I thought of my dear mother and all
my sisters and brothers so happy at
home.</p>
<p>But just in that terrible moment I happened
to remember what my mother had
said about running into that other hole
in case anything should happen, so with
one bound I was on the floor and the
funny thing with long, white wool and
sharp teeth made a grab for me. I could
feel his hot breath close upon me and I
could almost feel his sharp teeth when I
heard the big giant with dresses on say:
“Catch him, Zip.”</p>
<p>But surely a kind fate must have been
with me for I was too quick for them.
I never ran so fast in my life. I fairly
flew till I found the hole behind the door
and jumped in and ran along till I found
myself once more at home, where all the
family were frightened almost to death at
my absence.</p>
<p>After that terrible experience I shall always
do what my mother tells me to, for
after all, she knows best.</p>
<p><span class="lr">Jessie Juliet Knox.</span></p>
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