THE TALE OF JOHNNY TOWN-MOUSE
BY
BEATRIX POTTER
Johnny Town-mouse was born in a cupboard.
Timmy Willie was born in a garden. Timmy Willie
was a little country mouse who went to town by mistake
in a hamper. The gardener sent vegetables to town
once a week by carrier; he packed them in a big hamper.
The gardener left the hamper by the
garden gate, so that the carrier could pick it up
when he passed. Timmy Willie crept in through
a hole in the wicker-work, and after eating some peas Timmy
Willie fell fast asleep.
He awoke in a fright, while the hamper
was being lifted into the carrier’s cart.
Then there was a jolting, and a clattering of horse’s
feet; other packages were thrown in; for miles and
miles jolt jolt jolt!
and Timmy Willie trembled amongst the jumbled up vegetables.
At last the cart stopped at a house,
where the hamper was taken out, carried in, and set
down. The cook gave the carrier sixpence; the
back door banged, and the cart rumbled away.
But there was no quiet; there seemed to be hundreds
of carts passing. Dogs barked; boys whistled in
the street; the cook laughed, the parlour maid ran
up and down-stairs; and a canary sang like a steam
engine.
Timmy Willie, who had lived all his
life in a garden, was almost frightened to death.
Presently the cook opened the hamper and began to
unpack the vegetables. Out sprang the terrified
Timmy Willie.
Up jumped the cook on a chair, exclaiming
“A mouse! a mouse! Call the cat! Fetch
me the poker, Sarah!” Timmy Willie did not wait
for Sarah with the poker; he rushed along the skirting
board till he came to a little hole, and in he popped.
He dropped half a foot, and crashed
into the middle of a mouse dinner party, breaking
three glasses. “Who in the world is
this?” inquired Johnny Town-mouse. But
after the first exclamation of surprise he instantly
recovered his manners.
With the utmost politeness he introduced
Timmy Willie to nine other mice, all with long tails
and white neckties. Timmy Willie’s own tail
was insignificant. Johnny Town-mouse and his friends
noticed it; but they were too well bred to make personal
remarks; only one of them asked Timmy Willie if he
had ever been in a trap?
The dinner was of eight courses; not
much of anything, but truly elegant. All the
dishes were unknown to Timmy Willie, who would have
been a little afraid of tasting them; only he was very
hungry, and very anxious to behave with company manners.
The continual noise upstairs made him so nervous,
that he dropped a plate. “Never mind, they
don’t belong to us,” said Johnny.
“Why don’t those youngsters
come back with the dessert?” It should be explained
that two young mice, who were waiting on the others,
went skirmishing upstairs to the kitchen between courses.
Several times they had come tumbling in, squeaking
and laughing; Timmy Willie learnt with horror that
they were being chased by the cat. His appetite
failed, he felt faint. “Try some jelly?”
said Johnny Town-mouse.
“No? Would you rather go
to bed? I will show you a most comfortable sofa
pillow.”
The sofa pillow had a hole in it.
Johnny Town-mouse quite honestly recommended it as
the best bed, kept exclusively for visitors. But
the sofa smelt of cat. Timmy Willie preferred
to spend a miserable night under the fender.
It was just the same next day.
An excellent breakfast was provided for
mice accustomed to eat bacon; but Timmy Willie had
been reared on roots and salad. Johnny Town-mouse
and his friends racketted about under the floors,
and came boldly out all over the house in the evening.
One particularly loud crash had been caused by Sarah
tumbling downstairs with the tea-tray; there were
crumbs and sugar and smears of jam to be collected,
in spite of the cat.
Timmy Willie longed to be at home
in his peaceful nest in a sunny bank. The food
disagreed with him; the noise prevented him from sleeping.
In a few days he grew so thin that Johnny Town-mouse
noticed it, and questioned him. He listened to
Timmy Willie’s story and inquired about the
garden. “It sounds rather a dull place?
What do you do when it rains?”
“When it rains, I sit in my
little sandy burrow and shell corn and seeds from
my Autumn store. I peep out at the throstles and
blackbirds on the lawn, and my friend Cock Robin.
And when the sun comes out again, you should see my
garden and the flowers roses and pinks and
pansies no noise except the birds and bees,
and the lambs in the meadows.”
“There goes that cat again!”
exclaimed Johnny Town-mouse. When they had taken
refuge in the coal-cellar he resumed the conversation;
“I confess I am a little disappointed; we have
endeavoured to entertain you, Timothy William.”
“Oh yes, yes, you have been
most kind; but I do feel so ill,” said Timmy
Willie.
“It may be that your teeth and
digestion are unaccustomed to our food; perhaps it
might be wiser for you to return in the hamper.”
“Oh? Oh!” cried Timmy Willie.
“Why of course for the matter
of that we could have sent you back last week,”
said Johnny rather huffily “did you
not know that the hamper goes back empty on Saturdays?”
So Timmy Willie said good-bye to his
new friends, and hid in the hamper with a crumb of
cake and a withered cabbage leaf; and after much jolting,
he was set down safely in his own garden.
Sometimes on Saturdays he went to
look at the hamper lying by the gate, but he knew
better than to get in again. And nobody got out,
though Johnny Town-mouse had half promised a visit.
The winter passed; the sun came out
again; Timmy Willie sat by his burrow warming his
little fur coat and sniffing the smell of violets and
spring grass. He had nearly forgotten his visit
to town. When up the sandy path all spick and
span with a brown leather bag came Johnny Town-mouse!
Timmy Willie received him with open
arms. “You have come at the best of all
the year, we will have herb pudding and sit in the
sun.”
“H’m’m! it is a
little damp,” said Johnny Town-mouse, who was
carrying his tail under his arm, out of the mud.
“What is that fearful noise?” he started
violently.
“That?” said Timmy Willie,
“that is only a cow; I will beg a little milk,
they are quite harmless, unless they happen to lie
down upon you. How are all our friends?”
Johnny’s account was rather
middling. He explained why he was paying his
visit so early in the season; the family had gone to
the sea-side for Easter; the cook was doing spring
cleaning, on board wages, with particular instructions
to clear out the mice. There were four kittens,
and the cat had killed the canary.
“They say we did it; but I know
better,” said Johnny Town-mouse. “Whatever
is that fearful racket?”
“That is only the lawn-mower;
I will fetch some of the grass clippings presently
to make your bed. I am sure you had better settle
in the country, Johnny.”
“H’m’m we
shall see by Tuesday week; the hamper is stopped while
they are at the sea-side.”
“I am sure you will never want
to live in town again,” said Timmy Willie.
But he did. He went back in the
very next hamper of vegetables; he said it was too
quiet!!
One place suits one person, another
place suits another person. For my part I prefer
to live in the country, like Timmy Willie.