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The Tale of Pigling Bland

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by Beatrix Potter




  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.

  The Tale of Pigling Bland was published in 1913, the year Beatrix Potter married and settled down to farming life for good. But she had already been keeping pigs and she sketched them for this story, using her own farmyard as the setting. One little black pig was a household pet and features as the “perfectly lovely” Pig-wig who runs away with Pigling Bland.

  www.peterrabbit.com

  for cecily and charlie

  a tale of the christmas pig

  Once upon a time there was an old pig called Aunt Pettitoes. She had eight of a family: four little girl pigs, called Cross-patch, Suck-suck, Yock-yock and Spot; and four little boy pigs, called Alexander, Pigling Bland, Chin-chin and Stumpy.

  Stumpy had had an accident to his tail.

  The eight little pigs had very fine appetites — “Yus, yus, yus! they eat and indeed they do eat!” said Aunt Pettitoes, looking at her family with pride.

  Suddenly there were fearful squeals; Alexander had squeezed inside the hoops of the pig trough and stuck.

  Aunt Pettitoes and I dragged him out by the hind legs.

  Chin-chin was already in disgrace; it was washing day, and he had eaten a piece of soap. And presently in a basket of clean clothes, we found another dirty little pig — “Tchut, tut, tut! whichever is this?” grunted Aunt Pettitoes.

  Now all the pig family are pink, or pink with black spots, but this pig child was smutty black all over; when it had been popped into a tub, it proved to be Yock-yock.

  I went into the garden; there I found Cross-patch and Suck-suck rooting up carrots. I whipped them myself and led them out by the ears. Cross-patch tried to bite me.

  “Aunt Pettitoes, Aunt Pettitoes! you are a worthy person, but your family is not well brought up. Every one of them has been in mischief except Spot and Pigling Bland.”

  “Yus, yus!” sighed Aunt Pettitoes. “And they drink bucketfuls of milk; I shall have to get another cow! Good little Spot shall stay at home to do the housework; but the others must go. Four little boy pigs and four little girl pigs are too many altogether.

  “Yus, yus, yus,” said Aunt Pettitoes, “there will be more to eat without them.”

  So Chin-chin and Suck-suck went away in a wheelbarrow, and Stumpy, Yock-yock and Cross-patch rode away in a cart.

  And the other two little boy pigs, Pigling Bland and Alexander, went to market.

  We brushed their coats, we curled their tails and washed their little faces, and wished them good-bye in the yard.

  Aunt Pettitoes wiped her eyes with a large pocket handkerchief, then she wiped Pigling Bland’s nose and shed tears; then she wiped Alexander’s nose and shed tears; then she passed the handkerchief to Spot. Aunt Pettitoes sighed and grunted, and addressed those little pigs as follows —

  “Now Pigling Bland, son Pigling Bland, you must go to market. Take your brother Alexander by the hand. Mind your Sunday clothes, and remember to blow your nose” —

  (Aunt Pettitoes passed round the handkerchief again) — “beware of traps, hen roosts, bacon and eggs; always walk upon your hind legs.” Pigling Bland, who was a sedate little pig, looked solemnly at his mother, a tear trickled down his cheek.

  Aunt Pettitoes turned to the other — “Now son Alexander take the hand” — “Wee, wee, wee!” giggled Alexander — “take the hand of your brother Pigling Bland, you must go to market. Mind —” “Wee, wee, wee!” interrupted Alexander again. “You put me out,” said Aunt Pettitoes —

  “Observe sign-posts and milestones; do not gobble herring bones —” “And remember,” said I impressively, “if you once cross the county boundary you cannot come back. Alexander,

  you are not attending. Here are two licences permitting two pigs to go to market in Lancashire. Attend, Alexander. I have had no end of trouble in getting these papers from the policeman.”

  Pigling Bland listened gravely; Alexander was hopelessly volatile.

  I pinned the papers, for safety, inside their waistcoat pockets;

  Aunt Pettitoes gave to each a little bundle, and eight conversation peppermints with appropriate moral sentiments in screws of paper. Then they started.

  Pigling Bland and Alexander trotted along steadily for a mile; at least Pigling Bland did. Alexander made the road half as long again by skipping from side to side. He danced about and pinched his brother, singing —

  “This pig went to market, this pig stayed at home,

  This pig had a bit of meat —”

  “Let’s see what they have given us for dinner, Pigling?”

  Pigling Bland and Alexander sat down and untied their bundles. Alexander gobbled up his dinner in no time; he had already eaten all his own peppermints — “Give me one of yours, please, Pigling?”

  “But I wish to preserve them for emergencies,” said Pigling Bland doubtfully. Alexander went into squeals of laughter. Then he pricked Pigling with the pin that had fastened his pig paper; and when Pigling slapped him he dropped the pin, and tried to take Pigling’s pin, and the papers got mixed up. Pigling Bland reproved Alexander.

  But presently they made it up again, and trotted away together, singing —

  “Tom, Tom, the piper’s son,

  stole a pig and away he ran!

  But all the tune that he could play,

  was ‘Over the hills and far away!’”

  “What’s that, young sirs? Stole a pig? Where are your licences?” said the policeman. They had nearly run against him round a corner. Pigling Bland pulled out his paper; Alexander, after fumbling, handed over something scrumply —

  “To 2½oz. conversation sweeties at three farthings — What’s this? This ain’t a licence?” Alexander’s nose lengthened visibly, he had lost it. “I had one, indeed I had, Mr. Policeman!”

  “It’s not likely they let you start without. I am passing the farm. You may walk with me.” “Can I come back too?” inquired Pigling Bland. “I see no reason, young sir; your paper is all right.” Pigling Bland did not like going on alone, and it was beginning to rain. But it is unwise to argue with the police; he gave his brother a peppermint, and watched him out of sight.

  To conclude the adventures of Alexander — the policeman sauntered up to the house about tea-time, followed by a damp subdued little pig. I disposed of Alexander in the neighbourhood; he did fairly well when he had settled down.

  Pigling Bland went on alone dejectedly; he came to cross-roads and a sign-post — “To Market Town, 5 miles”, “Over the Hills, 4 miles”, “To Pettitoes Farm, 3 miles”.

  Pigling Bland was shocked, there was little hope of sleeping in Market Town, and tomorrow was the hiring fair; it was deplorable to think how much time had been wasted by the frivolity of Alexander.

  He glanced wistfully along the road towards the hills, and then set off walking obediently the other way, buttoning up his coat against the rain.

  He had never wanted to go; and the idea of standing all by himself in a crowded market, to be stared at, pushed, and hired by some big strange farmer was very disagreeable —

  “I wish I could have a little garden and grow potatoes,” said Pigling Bland.

  He put his cold hand in his pocket and felt his paper, he put his other hand in his other pocket and felt another paper — Alexander’s! Pigling squealed; then ran back frantically, hoping to overtake Alexander and the policeman.

 
He took a wrong turn — several wrong turns, and was quite lost.

  It grew dark, the wind whistled, the trees creaked and groaned.

  Pigling Bland became frightened and cried “Wee, wee, wee! I can’t find my way home!”

  After an hour’s wandering he got out of the wood; the moon shone through the clouds, and Pigling Bland saw a country that was new to him.

  The road crossed a moor; below was a wide valley with a river twinkling in the moonlight, and beyond — in misty distance — lay the hills.

  He saw a small wooden hut, made his way to it, and crept inside — “I am afraid it is a hen house, but what can I do?” said Pigling Bland, wet and cold and quite tired out.

  “Bacon and eggs, bacon and eggs!” clucked a hen on a perch.

  “Trap, trap, trap! cackle, cackle, cackle!” scolded the disturbed cockerel. “To market, to market! jiggetty jig!” clucked a broody white hen roosting next to him. Pigling Bland, much alarmed, determined to leave at daybreak. In the meantime, he and the hens fell asleep.

  In less than an hour they were all awakened. The owner, Mr. Peter Thomas Piperson, came with a lantern and a hamper to catch six fowls to take to market in the morning.

  He grabbed the white hen roosting next to the cock; then his eye fell upon Pigling Bland, squeezed up in a corner. He made a singular remark — “Hallo, here’s another!” — seized Pigling by the scruff of the neck, and dropped him into the hamper. Then he dropped in five more dirty, kicking, cackling hens upon the top of Pigling Bland.

  The hamper containing six fowls and a young pig was no light weight; it was taken down hill, unsteadily, with jerks. Pigling, although nearly scratched to pieces, contrived to hide the papers and peppermints inside his clothes.

  At last the hamper was bumped down upon a kitchen floor, the lid was opened, and Pigling was lifted out. He looked up, blinking, and saw an offensively ugly elderly man, grinning from ear to ear.

  “This one’s come of himself, whatever,” said Mr. Piperson, turning Pigling’s pockets inside out. He pushed the hamper into a corner, threw a sack over it to keep the hens quiet, put a pot on the fire, and unlaced his boots.

  Pigling Bland drew forward a coppy stool, and sat on the edge of it, shyly warming his hands. Mr. Piperson pulled off a boot and threw it against the wainscot at the further end of the kitchen. There was a smothered noise — “Shut up!” said Mr. Piperson. Pigling Bland warmed his hands, and eyed him.

  Mr. Piperson pulled off the other boot and flung it after the first, there was again a curious noise — “Be quiet, will ye?” said Mr. Piperson. Pigling Bland sat on the very edge of the coppy stool.

  Mr. Piperson fetched meal from a chest and made porridge. It seemed to Pigling that something at the further end of the kitchen was taking a suppressed interest in the cooking, but he was too hungry to be troubled by noises.

  Mr. Piperson poured out three platefuls: for himself, for Pigling, and a third — after glaring at Pigling — he put away with much scuffling, and locked up. Pigling Bland ate his supper discreetly.

  After supper Mr. Piperson consulted an almanac, and felt Pigling’s ribs; it was too late in the season for curing bacon, and he grudged his meal. Besides, the hens had seen this pig.

  He looked at the small remains of a flitch, and then looked undecidedly at Pigling. “You may sleep on the rug,” said Mr. Peter Thomas Piperson.

  Pigling Bland slept like a top. In the morning Mr. Piperson made more porridge; the weather was warmer. He looked to see how much meal was left in the chest, and seemed dissatisfied — “You’ll likely be moving on again?” said he to Pigling Bland.

  Before Pigling could reply, a neighbour, who was giving Mr. Piperson and the hens a lift, whistled from the gate. Mr. Piperson hurried out with the hamper, enjoining Pigling to shut the door behind him and not meddle with nought; or “I’ll come back and skin ye!” said Mr. Piperson.

  It crossed Pigling’s mind that if he had asked for a lift, too, he might still have been in time for market.

  But he distrusted Peter Thomas.

  After finishing breakfast at his leisure, Pigling had a look round the cottage; everything was locked up. He found some potato peelings in a bucket in the back kitchen. Pigling ate the peel, and washed up the porridge plates in the bucket. He sang while he worked —

  “Tom with his pipe made such a noise,

  He called up all the girls and boys —

  And they all ran to hear him play,

  ‘Over the hills and far away!’ ”

  Suddenly a little smothered voice chimed in —

  “Over the hills and a great way off,

  The wind shall blow my top knot off!”

  Pigling Bland put down a plate which he was wiping, and listened.

  After a long pause, Pigling went on tip-toe and peeped round the door into the front kitchen. There was nobody there.

  After another pause, Pigling approached the door of the locked cupboard, and snuffed at the keyhole. It was quite quiet.

  After another long pause, Pigling pushed a peppermint under the door. It was sucked in immediately.

  In the course of the day Pigling pushed in all his remaining six peppermints.

  When Mr. Piperson returned, he found Pigling sitting before the fire; he had brushed up the hearth and put on the pot to boil; the meal was not get-at-able.

  Mr. Piperson was very affable; he slapped Pigling on the back, made lots of porridge and forgot to lock the meal chest. He did lock the cupboard door; but without properly shutting it. He went to bed early, and told Pigling upon no account to disturb him next day before twelve o’clock.

  Pigling Bland sat by the fire, eating his supper.

  All at once at his elbow, a little voice spoke — “My name is Pig-wig. Make me more porridge, please!” Pigling Bland jumped, and looked round.

  A perfectly lovely little black Berkshire pig stood smiling beside him. She had twinkly little screwed up eyes, a double chin, and a short turned up nose.

  She pointed at Pigling’s plate; he hastily gave it to her, and fled to the meal chest — “How did you come here?” asked Pigling Bland.

  “Stolen,” replied Pig-wig, with her mouth full. Pigling helped himself to meal without scruple. “What for?” “Bacon, hams,” replied Pig-wig cheerfully. “Why on earth don’t you run away?” exclaimed the horrified Pigling.

  “I shall after supper,” said Pig-wig decidedly.

  Pigling Bland made more porridge and watched her shyly.

  She finished a second plate, got up, and looked about her, as though she were going to start.

  “You can’t go in the dark,” said Pigling Bland.

  Pig-wig looked anxious.

  “Do you know your way by daylight?”

  “I know we can see this little white house from the hills across the river. Which way are you going, Mr. Pig?”

  “To market — I have two pig papers. I might take you to the bridge; if you have no objection,” said Pigling, much confused and sitting on the edge of his coppy stool. Pig-wig’s gratitude was such and she asked so many questions that it became embarrassing to Pigling Bland.

  He was obliged to shut his eyes and pretend to sleep. She became quiet, and there was a smell of peppermint.

  “I thought you had eaten them,” said Pigling, waking suddenly.

  “Only the corners,” replied Pig-wig, studying the sentiments with much interest by the firelight.

  “I wish you wouldn’t; he might smell them through the ceiling,” said the alarmed Pigling.

  Pig-wig put back the sticky peppermints into her pocket. “Sing something,” she demanded.

  “I am sorry… I have toothache,” said Pigling, much dismayed.

  “Then I will sing,” replied Pig-wig. “You will not mind if I say iddy tidditty? I have forgotten some of the words.”

  Pigling Bland made no objection; he sat with his eyes half shut, and watched her.

  She wagged her head and rocked about, clapping time and singin
g in a sweet little grunty voice —

  “A funny old mother pig lived in a stye,

  and three little piggies had she;

  (Ti idditty idditty) umph, umph, umph!

  and the little pigs said, wee, wee!”

  She sang successfully through three or four verses, only at every verse her head nodded a little lower, and her little twinkly eyes closed up —

  “Those three little piggies grew

  peaky and lean,

  and lean they might very well be;

  For somehow they couldn’t say

  umph, umph, umph!

  and they wouldn’t say wee, wee, wee!

  For somehow they couldn’t say —”

  Pig-wig’s head bobbed lower and lower, until she rolled over, a little round ball, fast asleep on the hearth-rug.

  Pigling Bland, on tip-toe, covered her up with an antimacassar.

 

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