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<br/>
<h2> THE TALE OF MRS. TITTLEMOUSE </h2>
<p>[Nellie's<br/>
Little Book]<br/>
<br/>
Once upon a time there was<br/>
a woodmouse, and her name<br/>
was Mrs. Tittlemouse.<br/>
<br/>
She lived in a bank under a hedge.<br/>
<br/>
Such a funny house! There<br/>
were yards and yards of sandy<br/>
passages, leading to store-<br/>
rooms and nut cellars and<br/>
seed cellars, all amongst the<br/>
roots of the hedge.<br/></p>
<p>There was a kitchen, a parlor,<br/>
a pantry, and a larder.<br/>
<br/>
Also, there was Mrs. Tittle-<br/>
mouse's bedroom, where she<br/>
slept in a little box bed!<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse was a most<br/>
terribly tidy particular little<br/>
mouse, always sweeping and<br/>
dusting the soft sandy floors.<br/>
<br/>
Sometimes a beetle lost its way<br/>
in the passages.<br/>
<br/>
"Shuh! shuh! little dirty feet!"<br/>
said Mrs. Tittlemouse, clattering<br/>
her dustpan.<br/></p>
<p>And one day a little old woman<br/>
ran up and down in a red spotty<br/>
cloak.<br/>
<br/>
"Your house is on fire, Mother<br/>
Ladybird! Fly away home to your<br/>
children!"<br/>
<br/>
Another day, a big fat spider<br/>
came in to shelter from the rain.<br/>
<br/>
"Beg pardon, is this not Miss<br/>
Muffet's?"<br/>
<br/>
"Go away, you bold bad spider!<br/>
Leaving ends of cobweb all over<br/>
my nice clean house!"<br/>
<br/>
She bundled the spider out at a<br/>
window.<br/>
<br/>
He let himself down the hedge<br/>
with a long thin bit of string.<br/></p>
<p>Mrs. Tittlemouse went on her<br/>
way to a distant storeroom, to<br/>
fetch cherrystones and thistle-<br/>
down seed for dinner.<br/>
<br/>
All along the passage she<br/>
sniffed, and looked at the floor.<br/>
<br/>
"I smell a smell of honey; is it<br/>
the cowslips outside, in the hedge?<br/>
I am sure I can see the marks of<br/>
little dirty feet."<br/>
<br/>
Suddenly round a corner, she<br/>
met Babbitty Bumble—"Zizz,<br/>
Bizz, Bizzz!" said the bumble bee.<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse looked at her<br/>
severely. She wished that she had<br/>
a broom.<br/>
<br/>
"Good-day, Babbitty Bumble; I<br/>
should be glad to buy some bees-<br/>
wax. But what are you doing<br/>
down here? Why do you always<br/>
come in at a window, and say,<br/>
Zizz, Bizz, Bizzz?" Mrs. Tittle-<br/>
mouse began to get cross.<br/></p>
<p>"Zizz, Wizz, Wizzz!" replied<br/>
Babbitty Bumble in a peevish<br/>
squeak. She sidled down a passage,<br/>
and disappeared into a<br/>
storeroom which had been used<br/>
for acorns.<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse had eaten the<br/>
acorns before Christmas; the<br/>
storeroom ought to have been<br/>
empty.<br/>
<br/>
But it was full of untidy dry<br/>
moss.<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse began to pull out the<br/>
moss. Three or four other bees put<br/>
their heads out, and buzzed fiercely.<br/>
<br/>
"I am not in the habit of letting<br/>
lodgings; this is an intrusion!"<br/>
said Mrs. Tittlemouse.<br/>
"I will have them turned out<br/>
—" "Buzz! Buzz! Buzzz!"—"I<br/>
wonder who would help me?"<br/>
"Bizz, Wizz, Wizzz!"<br/>
<br/>
—"I will not have Mr. Jackson;<br/>
he never wipes his feet."<br/></p>
<p>Mrs. Tittlemouse decided to<br/>
leave the bees till after dinner.<br/>
<br/>
When she got back to the parlor,<br/>
she heard some one coughing<br/>
in a fat voice; and there sat Mr.<br/>
Jackson himself.<br/>
<br/>
He was sitting all over a<br/>
small rocking chair, twiddling his<br/>
thumbs and smiling, with his feet<br/>
on the fender.<br/>
<br/>
He lived in a drain below the<br/>
hedge, in a very dirty wet ditch.<br/>
<br/>
"How do you do, Mr. Jackson?<br/>
Deary me, you have got<br/>
very wet!"<br/>
<br/>
"Thank you, thank you,<br/>
thank you, Mrs. Tittlemouse!<br/>
I'll sit awhile and dry myself,"<br/>
said Mr. Jackson.<br/>
<br/>
He sat and smiled, and the<br/>
water dripped off his coat<br/>
tails. Mrs. Tittlemouse went<br/>
round with a mop.<br/></p>
<p>He sat such a while that he had<br/>
to be asked if he would take some<br/>
dinner?<br/>
<br/>
First she offered him cherry-<br/>
stones. "Thank you, thank you,<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse! No teeth, no<br/>
teeth, no teeth!" said Mr. Jackson.<br/>
<br/>
He opened his mouth most<br/>
unnecessarily wide; he certainly had<br/>
not a tooth in his head.<br/>
<br/>
Then she offered him thistle-<br/>
down seed—"Tiddly, widdly,<br/>
widdly! Pouff, pouff, puff." said<br/>
Mr. Jackson. He blew the thistle-<br/>
down all over the room.<br/>
<br/>
"Thank you, thank you, thank<br/>
you, Mrs. Tittlemouse! Now what<br/>
I really—REALLY should like—<br/>
would be a little dish of honey!"<br/></p>
<p>"I am afraid I have not got<br/>
any, Mr. Jackson!" said Mrs.<br/>
Tittlemouse.<br/>
<br/>
"Tiddly, widdly, widdly,<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse!" said the<br/>
smiling Mr. Jackson, "I can SMELL it;<br/>
that is why I came to call."<br/>
<br/>
Mr. Jackson rose ponderously<br/>
from the table, and began<br/>
to look into the cupboards.<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Tittlemouse followed him with<br/>
a dishcloth, to wipe his large<br/>
wet footmarks off the parlor floor.<br/>
<br/>
When he had convinced himself<br/>
that there was no honey in the<br/>
cupboards, he began to walk<br/>
down the passage.<br/>
<br/>
"Indeed, indeed, you will stick<br/>
fast, Mr. Jackson!"<br/>
<br/>
"Tiddly, widdly, widdly, Mrs.<br/>
Tittlemouse!"<br/></p>
<p>First he squeezed into the pantry.<br/>
<br/>
"Tiddly, widdly, widdly? No<br/>
honey? No honey, Mrs. Tittlemouse?"<br/>
<br/>
There were three creepy-crawly<br/>
people hiding in the plate rack.<br/>
Two of them got away; but the<br/>
littlest one he caught.<br/>
<br/>
Then he squeezed into the larder.<br/>
Miss Butterfly was tasting the<br/>
sugar; but she flew away out of<br/>
the window.<br/>
<br/>
"Tiddly, widdly, widdly, Mrs.<br/>
Tittlemouse; you seem to have<br/>
plenty of visitors!"<br/>
<br/>
"And without any invitation!"<br/>
said Mrs. Thomasina Tittlemouse.<br/></p>
<p>They went along the sandy<br/>
passage—"Tiddly, widdly—" "Buzz!<br/>
Wizz! Wizz!"<br/>
<br/>
He met Babbitty round a corner,<br/>
and snapped her up, and put<br/>
her down again.<br/>
<br/>
"I do not like bumble bees. They<br/>
are all over bristles," said Mr.<br/>
Jackson, wiping his mouth with<br/>
his coat sleeve.<br/>
<br/>
"Get out, you nasty old toad!" shrieked Babbitty Bumble.<br/>
<br/>
"I shall go distracted!" scolded Mrs. Tittlemouse.<br/>
<br/>
She shut herself up in the nut<br/>
cellar while Mr. Jackson pulled out<br/>
the bees-nest. He seemed to have<br/>
no objection to stings.<br/>
<br/>
When Mrs. Tittlemouse ventured<br/>
to come out—everybody<br/>
had gone away.<br/>
<br/>
But the untidiness was something<br/>
dreadful—"Never did I see<br/>
such a mess—smears of honey;<br/>
and moss, and thistledown—and<br/>
marks of big and little dirty feet—<br/>
all over my nice clean house!"<br/></p>
<p>She gathered up the moss<br/>
and the remains of the bees-<br/>
wax.<br/>
<br/>
Then she went out and<br/>
fetched some twigs, to partly<br/>
close up the front door.<br/>
<br/>
"I will make it too small for<br/>
Mr. Jackson!"<br/>
<br/>
She fetched soft soap, and<br/>
flannel, and a new scrubbing<br/>
brush from the storeroom.<br/>
But she was too tired to do any<br/>
more. First she fell asleep in<br/>
her chair, and then she went<br/>
to bed.<br/>
<br/>
"Will it ever be tidy again?"<br/>
said poor Mrs. Tittlemouse.<br/></p>
<p>Next morning she got up<br/>
very early and began a spring<br/>
cleaning which lasted a fort-<br/>
night.<br/>
<br/>
She swept, and scrubbed,<br/>
and dusted; and she rubbed<br/>
up the furniture with bees-<br/>
wax, and polished her little tin<br/>
spoons.<br/>
<br/>
When it was all beautifully<br/>
neat and clean, she gave a<br/>
party to five other little mice,<br/>
without Mr. Jackson.<br/>
<br/>
He smelt the party and<br/>
came up the bank, but he<br/>
could not squeeze in at the<br/>
door.<br/></p>
<p>So they handed him out acorn cupfuls of<br/>
honeydew through the window,<br/>
and he was not at all offended.<br/>
<br/>
He sat outside in the sun, and said—<br/>
"Tiddly, widdly, widdly! Your very<br/>
good health, Mrs. Tittlemouse!"<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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