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The tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter
The tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter








the tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter

It is "all so convenient!" Tom Thumb discovers the food is plaster and loses his temper. They open the door, enter, and "squeak for joy" when they discover the dining table set for dinner. No one is in the nursery when Tom Thumb and Hunca Munca, two mice living under the skirting board, peep out and cross the hearthrug to the doll's-house.

the tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter

One morning the dolls leave the nursery for a drive in their perambulator. Though the food will not come off the plates, it is "extremely beautiful". Jane never cooks because the doll's-house food is made of plaster and was "bought ready-made, in a box full of shavings". The tale begins with "once upon a time" and a description of a "very beautiful doll's-house" belonging to a doll called Lucinda and her cook-doll Jane. Merchandise inspired by the tale includes Beswick Pottery porcelain figurines and Schmid music boxes. The tale was adapted to a segment in the 1971 Royal Ballet film The Tales of Beatrix Potter and to an animated episode in the BBC series The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends. The book was critically well received and brought Potter her first fan letter from America. The tale's themes of rebellion, insurrection, and individualism reflect not only Potter's desire to free herself of her domineering parents and build a home of her own, but her fears about independence and her frustrations with Victorian domesticity.

the tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter

The two mice atone for their crime spree by putting a crooked sixpence in the doll's stocking on Christmas Eve and sweeping the house every morning with a dust-pan and broom. When the little girl who owns the doll's house discovers the destruction, she positions a policeman doll outside the front door to ward off any future depredation.

the tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter

After finding the food on the dining room table made of plaster, they smash the dishes, throw the doll clothing out the window, tear the bolster, and carry off a number of articles to their mouse-hole. The tale is about two mice who vandalize a doll's house. While the tale was being developed, Potter and Warne fell in love and became engaged, much to the annoyance of Potter's parents, who were grooming their daughter to be a permanent resident and housekeeper in their London home. Potter took inspiration for the tale from two mice caught in a cage-trap in her cousin's home and a doll's house being constructed by her editor and publisher Norman Warne as a Christmas gift for his niece Winifred. The Tale of Two Bad Mice is a children's book written and illustrated by Beatrix Potter, and published by Frederick Warne & Co.










The tale of two bad mice by beatrix potter