Read The Tale of Tom Kitten Page 1




  Beatrix Potter loved the countryside and she spent much of her otherwise conventional Victorian childhood drawing and studying animals. Her passion for the natural world lay behind the creation of her famous series of little books. A particular source of inspiration was the English Lake District where she lived for the last thirty years of her life as a farmer and land conservationist, working with the National Trust.

  Beatrix Potter had owned her first Lake District farm, Hill Top in the village of Near Sawrey, for a year when she began work on The Tale of Tom Kitten. She shows Tom and his sisters living in the farmhouse and getting into mischief amongst the flowers of the beautiful cottage garden that she had created herself.

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  dedicated to all

  PICKLES

  — especially to those that get

  upon my garden wall

  Once upon a time there were three little kittens, and their names were —

  Mittens,

  Tom Kitten,

  and Moppet.

  They had dear little fur coats of their own; and they tumbled about the doorstep and played in the dust.

  But one day their mother — Mrs. Tabitha Twitchit — expected friends to tea; so she fetched the kittens indoors, to wash and dress them, before the fine company arrived.

  First she scrubbed their faces (this one is Moppet).

  Then she brushed their fur (this one is Mittens).

  Then she combed their tails and whiskers (this is Tom Kitten).

  Tom was very naughty, and he scratched.

  Mrs. Tabitha dressed Moppet and Mittens in clean pinafores and tuckers; and then she took all sorts of elegant uncomfortable clothes out of a chest of drawers, in order to dress up her son Thomas.

  Tom Kitten was very fat, and he had grown; several buttons burst off. His mother sewed them on again.

  When the three kittens were ready, Mrs. Tabitha unwisely turned them out into the garden, to be out of the way while she made hot buttered toast.

  “Now keep your frocks clean, children! You must walk on your hind legs. Keep away from the dirty ash-pit, and from Sally Henny-penny, and from the pig-stye and the Puddle-ducks.”

  Moppet and Mittens walked down the garden path unsteadily. Presently they trod upon their pinafores and fell on their noses.

  When they stood up there were several green smears!

  “Let us climb up the rockery, and sit on the garden wall,” said Moppet.

  They turned their pinafores back to front, and went up with a skip and a jump; Moppet’s white tucker fell down into the road.

  Tom Kitten was quite unable to jump when walking upon his hind legs in trousers. He came up the rockery by degrees, breaking the ferns, and shedding buttons right and left.

  He was all in pieces when he reached the top of the wall.

  Moppet and Mittens tried to pull him together; his hat fell off, and the rest of his buttons burst.

  While they were in difficulties, there was a pit pat paddle pat! and the three Puddle-ducks came along the hard high road, marching one behind the other and doing the goose step — pit pat paddle pat! pit pat waddle pat!

  They stopped and stood in a row, and stared up at the kittens. They had very small eyes and looked surprised.

  Then the two duck-birds, Rebeccah and Jemima Puddle-duck, picked up the hat and tucker and put them on.

  Mittens laughed so that she fell off the wall. Moppet and Tom descended after her; the pinafores and all the rest of Tom’s clothes came off on the way down.

  “Come! Mr. Drake Puddle-duck,” said Moppet — “Come and help us to dress him! Come and button up Tom!”

  Mr. Drake Puddle-duck advanced in a slow sideways manner, and picked up the various articles.

  But he put them on himself! They fitted him even worse than Tom Kitten.

  “It’s a very fine morning!” said Mr. Drake Puddle-duck.

  And he and Jemima and Rebeccah Puddle-duck set off up the road, keeping step — pit pat, paddle pat! pit pat, waddle pat!

  Then Tabitha Twitchit came down the garden and found her kittens on the wall with no clothes on.

  She pulled them off the wall, smacked them, and took them back to the house.

  “My friends will arrive in a minute, and you are not fit to be seen; I am affronted,” said Mrs. Tabitha Twitchit.

  She sent them upstairs; and I am sorry to say she told her friends that they were in bed with the measles; which was not true.

  Quite the contrary; they were not in bed; not in the least.

  Somehow there were very extraordinary noises over-head, which disturbed the dignity and repose of the tea-party.

  And I think that some day I shall have to make another, larger, book, to tell you more about Tom Kitten!

  As for the Puddle-ducks — they went into a pond.

  The clothes all came off directly, because there were no buttons.

  And Mr. Drake Puddle-duck, and Jemima and Rebeccah, have been looking for them ever since.

  The End

  FREDERICK WARNE

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand,

  London WC2R 0RL, England

  Website: www.peterrabbit.com

  First published by Frederick Warne 1907

  This electronic edition first published 2010

  New reproductions copyright ©Frederick Warne & Co., 2002

  Original copyright in text and illustrations ©Frederick Warne & Co., 1907

  Frederick Warne & Co. is the owner of all rights, copyrights and trademarks in the Beatrix Potter character names and illustrations.

  All rights reserved.

  ISBN: 978-0-72-326567-2

 


 

  Beatrix Potter, The Tale of Tom Kitten

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