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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/29447-h.zip b/29447-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..013a637 --- /dev/null +++ b/29447-h.zip diff --git a/29447-h/29447-h.htm b/29447-h/29447-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..855781f --- /dev/null +++ b/29447-h/29447-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1502 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> +<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Perez the Mouse, by Luis Coloma</title> +<style type = "text/css"> + + +body {color: #210; background-color: #FED; +margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 120%;} + +div.pg {color: #000; background-color: #FFF; padding: 1em; border: 2px solid #CA6;} + +/* revert to white background, standard typesize */ + +div.titlepage, div.maintext {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em;} +div.maintext {max-width: 30em;} + +hr {width: 80%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: center;} +hr.mid {width: 40%;} + +table.toc a {text-decoration: none;} +table.toc a:link {color: #C00; background-color: inherit;} +table.toc a:visited {color: #600; background-color: inherit;} + +h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {text-align: center; font-style: normal; +font-weight: normal; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: .5em; +margin-bottom: .5em; } + +h1 {font-size: 250%;} +h2 {font-size: 175%;} +h3 {font-size: 150%;} +div.maintext h3 {margin-top: 3em;} +h4 {font-size: 120%;} +h5 {font-size: 100%;} +h6 {font-size: 75%;} +h1.pg {text-align: center; font-style: normal; +font-weight: bold; line-height: 1; margin-top: 0em; +margin-bottom: 0em; font-size: 190%; } +h4.pg {text-align: center; font-style: normal; +font-weight: bold; line-height: 1; margin-top: 0em; +margin-bottom: 0em; font-size: 80%; } + + +p {margin-top: .5em; margin-bottom: 0em; line-height: 1.5;} + +p.illustration {text-align: center; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;} +p.caption {text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2em; font-size: 75%;} + +p.chapter {margin-top: 4em;} +p.chapter:first-letter {float: left; margin-top: -0.1em; +margin-bottom: -.33em; font-size: 750%; line-height: normal;} + +p.margin {margin-left: -6%;} + +div.verse {margin: .5em 2em;} +div.verse p {margin-top: 0; margin-left: 4em; text-indent: -4em; +font-size: 88%;} + +p.center {text-align: center;} +p.right {text-align: right;} + +span.figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-right: 1em; +margin-left: -2em; width: auto;} +span.figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-right: -2em; +margin-left: .5em; width: auto;} + +/* tables */ + +table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; margin-top: 1em; +margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: inherit; font-family: inherit;} + +td {vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding: .1em;} + +td.right {text-align: right;} + +table.illustration {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em;} +table.illustration td {width: 33%;} + +table.toc {font-size: 88%; margin-right: 10%; margin-left: 10%;} +table.toc td {padding: 0 .5em;} +table.toc td.number {text-align: right; vertical-align: bottom;} + + +table p {margin-top: 0em; margin-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em;} + + + +/* text formatting */ + +.smallcaps {font-variant: small-caps;} +.smallest {font-size: 75%;} + +span.firstword {text-transform: uppercase;} + +span.para {vertical-align: -.3em; line-height: 10%; letter-spacing: 1em; +margin-left: -.25em;} + + + +/* correction popup */ + +ins.correction {text-decoration: none; border-bottom: thin dotted red;} + +/* page number */ + +span.pagenum {position: absolute; right: 2%; font-size: 80%; +font-weight: normal; font-style: normal; text-align: right; +text-indent: 0em;} +span.pagenum.plate {font-style: italic;} +span.pagenum.plate:before {content: "opp. ";} + +/* Transcriber's Note */ + +.mynote {background-color: #EEC; color: #000; +font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 80%; border: 2px solid #A96;} + +p.mynote {margin: 1em 5%; padding: .5em .75em;} + +div.endnote {padding: .5em 1em 1em; margin: 1em; border: 3px ridge #A96; +color: #000; background-color: #FFF; font-family: sans-serif; +font-size: 88%;} + + pre { font-size: 75%; } + hr.full { width: 100%; + height: 5px; } +</style> +</head> +<body> +<div class="pg"> +<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Perez the Mouse, by Luis Coloma, Translated +by Lady Moreton, Illustrated by George Howard Vyse</h1> +<pre> +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p class="smallest">Title: Perez the Mouse</p> +<p class="smallest">Author: Luis Coloma</p> +<p class="smallest">Release Date: July 18, 2009 [eBook #29447]</p> +<p class="smallest">Language: English</p> +<p class="smallest">Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p class="smallest">***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEREZ THE MOUSE***</p> +<br><br><center><h4 class="pg">E-text prepared by Louise Hope, David Edwards,<br> + and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br> + (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net/c/">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br> + from page images generously made available by<br> + Internet Archive<br> + (<a href="http://www.archive.org">http://www.archive.org</a>)</h4></center><br><br> +<p> </p> +<table border=0 bgcolor="ccccff" cellpadding=10> + <tr> + <td valign="top"> + Note: + </td> + <td> + Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive. See + <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/perezmouse00colo2"> + http://www.archive.org/details/perezmouse00colo2</a> + </td> + </tr> +</table> +</div> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<p> </p> + +<!-- png 01--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/cover.jpg" width = "483" height = "658" +alt = "PEREZ the MOUSE / By PADRE LOUIS COLOMA / and LADY MORETON" +title = "PEREZ the MOUSE / By PADRE LOUIS COLOMA / and LADY MORETON"> +</p> + +<!-- png 02--> +<!-- png 03--> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td> +<img src = "images/silh_34.png" width = "95" height = "103" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +<td> </td> +<td class = "right"> +<img src = "images/silh_b2.png" width = "134" height = "94" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<!-- png 04--> + +<div class = "titlepage"> + +<!-- png 05--> +<h3>PEREZ THE MOUSE</h3> + +</div> + +<!-- png 06--> +<!-- png 07--> + +<!-- png 08--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "frontis" id = "frontis"> </a> +<img src = "images/frontis.jpg" width = "401" height = "228" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Perez the Mouse took off his hat and made a very low bow</p> + +<hr class = "mid"> + +<div class = "titlepage"> + +<!-- png 09--> +<h1>PEREZ THE MOUSE</h1> + +<h4><i>Adapted from the Spanish of<br> +Padre Luis Coloma</i></h4> + +<p> </p> + +<h4><span class = "smallest">BY</span><br> +LADY MORETON</h4> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/silh_33.png" width = "62" height = "63" +alt = "silhouette"></p> + +<h5><i>With Illustrations by George Howard Vyse</i></h5> + +<p> </p> + +<h5 class = "smallcaps"> +London: John Lane The Bodley Head<br> +New York: Dodd, Mead & Company</h5> + +</div> + +<hr class = "mid"> + +<!-- png 10--> +<h5>First published in 1914<br> +Reprinted   -   1918<br> +Reprinted   -   1927<br> +Reprinted   -   1929<br> +Reprinted   -   1935</h5> + +<p> <br> </p> + +<h6>PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN<br> +BY WESTERN PRINTING SERVICES LTD., BRISTOL</h6> + +<hr class = "mid"> + +<div class = "maintext"> + +<span class = "pagenum">v</span> +<!-- png 11--> +<h4>LIST OF COLOURED PLATES</h4> + +<p class = "mynote"> +Some illustrations have been moved slightly to avoid interrupting +paragraphs, but the order is unchanged.</p> + +<table class = "toc" summary = "list of illustrations"> +<tr> +<td> +<p>Perez the Mouse took off his hat and made a very low bow</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>King Bubi the First</p></td> +<td class = "number"><i>face p.</i> <a href = "#pagevi">vi</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The Oldest of <ins class = "correction" title = "missing word supplied to agree with figure caption">the</ins> Court Doctors</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page8">9</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Miss Stilton, the Governess</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page11">11</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>A tiny little mouse in a straw hat and slippers and big gold +spectacles</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page15">15</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Adolphus studying for Diplomacy</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page16">16</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Adelaide made tea</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page17">17</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The King sneezed very hard and turned into the most darling +little mouse you ever saw</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page18">18</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page22">22</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Mrs. Mouse was embroidering a beautiful smoking cap for her +husband</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page24">24</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> +<span class = "pagenum">vi</span> +<!-- png 12--> +<p>Adolphus playing cards at the Jockey Club</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page25">25</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The Guards silently formed up ready to fire</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page28">28</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Ferocious mice<ins class = "correction" title = "punctuation unchanged"> .. </ins>armed to the teeth</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page29">29</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The Order of the Golden Fleece</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page32">32</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The King and Perez knelt down too</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page33">33</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>The dreadful Don Pedro</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page36">36</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><p>Elvira recited</p></td> +<td class = "number"><a href = "#page40">40</a></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<!-- png 13--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "pagevi" id = "pagevi"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">vi</span> +<img src = "images/pic_vi.jpg" width = "386" height = "526" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +King <ins class = "correction" title = "text reads 'Rubi'">Bubi</ins> +the First</p> + + +<!-- png 14--> + + +<span class = "pagenum">7</span> +<!-- png 15--> +<h3>PEREZ THE MOUSE</h3> + +<span class = "pagenum">8</span> +<!-- png 16--> +<p class = "chapter"> +<span class = "firstword">Once</span> upon a time there lived a king +called Bubi the First, who was very kind to poor children and mice. For +the children he built a factory for making dolls and cardboard horses, +for the benefit of the mice he made wise laws to stop cats catching +them, and absolutely forbade the use of mouse-traps. +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_8.png" width = "60" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Bubi began to reign when he was only six years old, under the care of +his mother, who was very good and clever, and who watched over him and +guided his steps, as good children are guided by their Guardian +Angel.</p> + +<!-- png 17--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page8" id = "page8"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">8</span> +<img src = "images/pic_8.jpg" width = "363" height = "551" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The oldest of the Court Doctors</p> + +<!-- png 18--> + +<span class = "pagenum">9</span> +<!-- png 19--> +<p>Bubi was a darling little boy, and when on great days they put on his +gold crown and his embroidered robes, the gold of his crown was not +brighter than his hair nor the ermine of his robes softer than his +cheeks and hands. He was just like a little Dresden china figure which +had been put to sit on a throne instead of standing on the chimney +piece.</p> + +<p>One day while the King was eating his bread and milk, one of his +teeth began to wobble. There was a great fuss and the Court doctors +arrived in a hurry.<span class = "para"> *</span> +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_9.png" width = "137" height = "115" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +They were all agreed that His Majesty had begun to change his teeth, and +at +<span class = "pagenum">10</span> +<!-- png 20--> +length they settled to pull out the loose one. They wanted the King to +have laughing gas, as he did when his hair was cut, as he always +fidgeted so, but Bubi was a brave little boy and made up his mind to +have it out with nothing. The oldest of the Court doctors tied a bit of +red silk round the tooth, and then gave a tweak, and he pulled so +cleverly that, while the King was making a face, out came the tooth as +round and white as a little pearl.</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_21.png" width = "125" height = "117" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Then there was another fuss as to what was to be done with it, but +Bubi’s mother, who, as we have said was a very wise Queen and +<span class = "pagenum">11</span> +<!-- png 23--> +very loyal to old customs, +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_11.png" width = "74" height = "120" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +settled that the King should write a very polite letter and put it with +the tooth in an envelope under his pillow that night, which has always +been the proper thing to do ever since the world began, and no one has +ever known Perez the Mouse forget to come and fetch the tooth and leave +a lovely present in its place.</p> + +<!-- png 21--> + +<!-- png 22--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page11" id = "page11"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">11</span> +<img src = "images/pic_11.jpg" width = "387" height = "355" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Miss Stilton, the Governess</p> + +<p>King Bubi found writing that letter a dreadful task, but he managed +really quite well in the end, and only inked all his fingers, the tip of +his nose, his left ear, his right shoe and his bib.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_b2.png" width = "134" height = "94" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +He went to bed very early that +<span class = "pagenum">12</span> +<!-- png 24--> +evening, and ordered that all the lights should be left in his room. He +put the envelope under his pillow and sat up in bed, determined to keep +awake to see Perez the Mouse, even if he had to wait all night.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">13</span> +<!-- png 25--> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td> </td> +<td class = "right"> +<img src = "images/silh_25.png" width = "125" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +</tr> +</table> + + +<span class = "pagenum">14</span> +<!-- png 26--> +<p class = "chapter"><span class = "firstword">Perez</span> the Mouse +was a long time coming, +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_14a.png" width = "54" height = "30" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +so the little King began to make up a little speech to say to him when +he did arrive. After a bit Bubi began to open his eyes very wide, +fighting against the miller who was trying to make him shut them; but +they did shut at last, and the little boy slipped down into the warm +bed-clothes, his head on the pillow, with one arm over it, as a little +bird tucks its head under its wing when it goes to sleep.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_vi.png" width = "75" height = "55" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Suddenly he felt something very soft just tickling his forehead, and, +sitting up quickly, he saw in front +<span class = "pagenum">15</span> +<!-- png 29--> +of him, standing on the pillow, +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_15a.png" width = "92" height = "93" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +a tiny little mouse in a straw hat and slippers and big gold +spectacles; a red satchel was slung across his back.</p> + +<!-- png 27--> + +<!-- png 28--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page15" id = "page15"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">15</span> +<img src = "images/pic_15.jpg" width = "382" height = "503" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +A tiny little mouse in a straw hat and slippers<br> +and big gold spectacles</p> + +<p>King Bubi stared at him in astonishment, and Perez the Mouse, seeing +that His Majesty was awake, took off his hat and made a very low bow, +waiting to be spoken to. But the King said nothing, because he had quite +forgotten all he had made up to say, and after thinking and thinking he +faltered out at last ‘Good night.’<span class = +"para"> *</span> +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_15b.png" width = "123" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Perez answered with a low bow, ‘God give your Majesty a very good +one.’<span class = "para"> *</span>These civil speeches quite +broke the ice, +<span class = "pagenum">16</span> +<!-- png 30--> +and the King and the mouse became the greatest friends.<span class = +"para"> *</span>It was easy to see that Perez was a mouse who was +accustomed to polite society, and to run about on soft carpets, as he +had such very good manners.<span class = "para"> *</span>It was +wonderful what a lot of things he could talk about which made him a very +pleasant companion.<span class = "para"> *</span> +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_16.png" width = "122" height = "96" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +He had travelled through all the pipes and drains of the capital, and in +the Royal Library alone he had eaten up three books in less than a +week.<span class = "para"> *</span>He talked too about his family. +He had two quite grown-up daughters, Adelaide and Elvira, and a son, +nearly grown up, called Adolphus, +<span class = "pagenum">17</span> +<!-- png 35--> +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_17a.png" width = "58" height = "62" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +who was studying for diplomacy in the drawer where the Minister of State +kept his most secret notes. He did not say much about Mrs. Mouse, and +the little King somehow fancied that she was rather vulgar.</p> + +<!-- png 31--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page16" id = "page16"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">16</span> +<img src = "images/pic_16.jpg" width = "487" height = "353" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Adolphus studying for Diplomacy</p> + +<!-- png 32--> + +<p>His Majesty listened to all this with his mouth open, from time to +time he put out his hand to try and catch Perez by the tail.<span class += "para"> *</span>But each time the mouse gave a sort of whisk and +placed his tail out of reach, without being in the least rude.</p> + +<!-- png 33--> + +<!-- png 34--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page17" id = "page17"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">17</span> +<img src = "images/pic_17.jpg" width = "382" height = "467" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Adelaide made Tea</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_17b.png" width = "43" height = "38" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +It was getting late, and the King forgot to dismiss him; so Mr. Mouse +cleverly hinted that he had +<span class = "pagenum">18</span> +<!-- png 36--> +to go that same night to a street not far off to fetch the tooth of a +very poor little boy called Giles. It was rather a difficult, dangerous +journey, because near there lived a very wicked cat called Don Pedro. +The King at once wanted to go too, and begged Perez to take him. The +mouse stood thinking it over and twisting his whiskers; the +responsibility was very great, and moreover he was obliged to go back to +his own house to fetch the present for little Giles. +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_8.png" width = "60" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The King said he would like to go and see the mouse’s home, which +so much flattered Perez that he at once offered him a cup of tea and +agreed +<span class = "pagenum">19</span> +<!-- png 39--> +to take him to see little Giles. Perez the Mouse lived underneath a +grocer’s shop, near a big pile of Gruyere cheeses which supplied +the whole family with breakfast, dinner and tea. Overjoyed, King Bubi +jumped out of bed and began to dress himself, when all at once Perez the +Mouse sprang on his shoulder and put the tip of his tail into His +Majesty’s nose.<span class = "para"> *</span>Then a wonderful +thing happened, the King sneezed very hard and turned into the most +darling little mouse you ever saw. +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_15a.png" width = "92" height = "93" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +He was all soft and shiny, and had wee green eyes like emeralds.<span +class = "para"> *</span>Perez the Mouse took him by the paw and +disappeared +<span class = "pagenum">20</span> +<!-- png 40--> +with him down a tiny hole under the bed, which had been hidden by the +carpet.</p> + +<!-- png 37--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page18" id = "page18"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">18</span> +<img src = "images/pic_18.jpg" width = "387" height = "480" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The King sneezed very hard and turned into<br> +the most darling little mouse you ever saw</p> + +<!-- png 38--> + +<p>The way was dark and sticky, but they scampered along. Sometimes +Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway and looked about before going +on, which rather frightened the King and made him feel little shivers +right down to the tip of his tail, and he knew that he was afraid, but +he remembered that:</p> + +<div class = "verse"> +<p>‘Fear is natural to the prudent,</p> +<p>To conquer it is to be courageous,’</p> +</div> + +<p>so he would not let himself be frightened, which is being really +brave.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_16.png" width = "122" height = "96" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Once when he heard a tremendous +<span class = "pagenum">21</span> +<!-- png 41--> +noise, like dozens of motor omnibuses passing over his head, he +whispered to ask Perez if that was where Don Pedro lived, but Mr. Mouse +said no with his tail, and on they went.</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_21.png" width = "125" height = "117" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +After going down a gentle slope they came to a big cellar which felt +nice and warm and smelt very much of cheese; behind a pile of Gruyere +cheese they found themselves face to face with the Huntley and Palmer +biscuit tin which was the home of the Perez family. Here they lived as +happily as the rat of fable did in the Dutch cheese. Perez the Mouse +introduced the King as a foreign tourist who was +<span class = "pagenum">22</span> +<!-- png 42--> +on a visit to the capital, and the family welcomed him very cordially. +The two Miss Mouses were at work with their Governess, Miss Stilton, who +was a very learned English mouse, +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_22.png" width = "106" height = "118" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +and Mrs. Mouse was embroidering a beautiful smoking cap for her husband, +sitting by a bright fire made of raisin stalks.</p> + +<p>This happy family party delighted King Bubi.<span class = +"para"> *</span>Adelaide and Elvira made tea and poured out some +into lovely wee cups made out of the skins of white beans.<span class = +"para"> *</span>Then they had a little music. Adelaide sang +Desdemona’s song, ‘O Willow Willow,’ in a way +which much +<span class = "pagenum">23</span> +<!-- png 45--> +pleased the King, and Elvira recited about a little mouse who was ill of +fever, and a naughty kitten who wanted to pounce on it. After this +Adolphus came in from the Jockey Club where, to the sorrow of his father +and mother, he wasted all his time playing cards with the mice from the +foreign embassies.</p> + +<!-- png 43--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page22" id = "page22"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">22</span> +<img src = "images/pic_22.jpg" width = "384" height = "472" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway</p> + +<!-- png 44--> + +<p>King Bubi would willingly have stayed longer, but Perez, who had +slipped away, came back with his satchel on his back and said it was +time to start.<span class = "para"> *</span>So the King said +goodbye very politely, and Mrs. Mouse gave him a kiss on each cheek in +her homely way.<span class = "para"> *</span> +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_15a.png" width = "92" height = "93" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Adelaide put out a paw in a lackadaisical +<span class = "pagenum">24</span> +<!-- png 46--> +fashion, and Elvira shook hands like a pump handle, while Miss Stilton +made him a beautiful cheese of a curtsey, and then stared at him through +her eyeglass until he was out of sight.<span class = +"para"> *</span>Adolphus, too, was very gushing, and conducted him +as far as the lid of the tin, and offered to introduce him at the Polo +Club, for which the King thanked him very much, thinking all the time +that, though he might be a very smart young mouse, he was rather a bore. +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_11.png" width = "74" height = "120" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Then Bubi and Perez the Mouse again began their scamper with such a +quantity of precautions that the King was astonished.</p> + +<!-- png 47--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page24" id = "page24"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">24</span> +<img src = "images/pic_24.jpg" width = "366" height = "399" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Mrs. Mouse was embroidering a beautiful<br> +smoking cap for her husband</p> + +<!-- png 48--> + +<span class = "pagenum">25</span> +<!-- png 51--> +<p>In front of them went a regiment of ferocious mice, soldiers whose +bayonets made of fine needles gleamed in the darkness. Behind them came +a second regiment, also armed to the teeth.</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_25.png" width = "125" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Perez the Mouse then confessed that he would not have undertaken this +expedition without these soldiers to protect the person of the young +monarch.</p> + +<p>All of a sudden King Bubi saw the guard in front had disappeared down +a little hole, through which came a faint light.</p> + +<!-- png 49--> + +<!-- png 50--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page25" id = "page25"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">25</span> +<img src = "images/pic_25.jpg" width = "387" height = "446" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Adolphus playing cards at the Jockey Club</p> + +<p>This was the moment of danger. Perez the Mouse, slowly waggling his +tail from side to side, put his +<span class = "pagenum">26</span> +<!-- png 52--> +head very cautiously through the hole and looked around; he then went +back two steps, and finally, suddenly seizing the King’s paw, +dashed through the hole like an arrow, crossed a big kitchen, and +disappeared through another hole on the opposite side near the range. As +one sees telegraph posts out of the train so Bubi saw that kitchen. By +the hearth, in the glow of the fire, lay an enormous cat, the dreadful +Don Pedro, its great whiskers heaving up and down as it breathed.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_8.png" width = "60" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The guards silently formed up, from hole to hole, ready to fire, to +protect the King’s route from the +<span class = "pagenum">27</span> +<!-- png 53--> +sleeping cat. It was all very grand and imposing. An ugly old woman sat +in a chair, also asleep, with her knitting on her knee.</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_33.png" width = "62" height = "63" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Once through the hole the danger was over, and they had only to get +upstairs, as this was where little Giles lived. Everything was open in +his poor room, which was all cracks and draughts.</p> + +<p>King Bubi scrambled on to the arm of a seatless chair, the only one +in the room, and from there could see a picture of poverty such as he +had never dreamt of.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_37.png" width = "66" height = "38" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The sloping roof joined the floor, so that on one side a man could not +have stood upright, and through +<span class = "pagenum">28</span> +<!-- png 54--> +the holes the cold air of dawn was coming, while icicles hung from the +roof. The only furniture besides the chair was an empty bread basket +hanging up, and in a corner a bed of straw and rags, on which little +Giles and his mother were lying fast asleep.</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_25.png" width = "125" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Perez the Mouse drew nearer, taking the King by the paw, and they could +see how little Giles was huddled up in the rags, and how he was cuddled +up against his mother for warmth, and it made the King so unhappy that +he began to cry.</p> + +<!-- png 55--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page28" id = "page28"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">28</span> +<img src = "images/pic_28.jpg" width = "378" height = "476" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The Guards silently formed up ready to fire</p> + +<!-- png 56--> + +<p>Why had he never known that people were so poor? How was it that he +had never been told that +<span class = "pagenum">29</span> +<!-- png 59--> +children were hungry and had to sleep on horrid beds? He did not want +any blankets on his cot till every child in his kingdom had plenty of +bed-clothes to keep them warm.</p> + +<!-- png 57--> + +<!-- png 58--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page29" id = "page29"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">29</span> +<img src = "images/pic_29.jpg" width = "422" height = "363" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Ferocious mice<ins class = "correction" title = "punctuation unchanged"> +. . . . </ins>armed to the teeth</p> + +<p>Perez the Mouse brushed away a tear with his paw and then tried to +comfort the King by showing him the bright gold coin he was going to put +under little Giles’ pillow in exchange for his first tooth.</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_21.png" width = "125" height = "117" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +Just then Giles’ mother woke and sat up in bed and looked at her +little boy, who was still asleep. It was becoming light, and she had to +earn some money by washing clothes in the river.<span class = +"para"> *</span>She caught +<span class = "pagenum">30</span> +<!-- png 60--> +the sleeping Giles in her arms and made him kneel down under a picture +of the Infant Christ which was pinned to the wall near the bed.</p> + +<p>The King and Perez the Mouse knelt down too, and so did the soldier +mice who were waiting in the empty bread basket. +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_11.png" width = "74" height = "120" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The child began to pray, ‘Our Father which art in +Heaven.’</p> + +<p>Bubi started and looked at Perez the Mouse, who understood his +astonishment, and fixed his piercing eyes on him, but never said a +single word.</p> + +<span class = "pagenum">31</span> +<!-- png 61--> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td><img src = "images/silh_b2.png" width = "134" height = "94" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> + + +<span class = "pagenum">32</span> +<!-- png 62--> + +<p class = "chapter"><span class = "firstword">On</span> the return +journey they were silent and preoccupied, and half an hour later the +King was home in his nursery with Perez the Mouse, who again put the tip +of his tail into Bubi’s nose and made him sneeze. All at once he +found himself safely back again in his own warm little cot, with the +Queen’s arms round him, who woke him, as she always did, with a +kiss.</p> + +<!-- png 63--> + +<!-- png 64--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page32" id = "page32"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">32</span> +<img src = "images/pic_32.jpg" width = "384" height = "466" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The Order of the Golden Fleece</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_17b.png" width = "43" height = "38" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +At first he thought it had all been a dream; but when he looked for the +letter he had put under his pillow, he found it was gone, and in its +place was a case with the Order +<span class = "pagenum">33</span> +<!-- png 67--> +of the Golden Fleece in diamonds, a magnificent present from the +generous Perez the Mouse in exchange for his first tooth. +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_33.png" width = "62" height = "63" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +(Perhaps I had better explain to English children that in King +Bubi’s country the Order of the Golden Fleece is like our Order of +the Garter, the greatest honour the King can give.)</p> + +<!-- png 65--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page33" id = "page33"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">33</span> +<img src = "images/pic_33.jpg" width = "386" height = "532" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The King and Perez the Mouse knelt down too</p> + +<!-- png 66--> + +<p>The little King, however, paid no attention to his beautiful present, +and let it lie unnoticed on the bed, while, leaning on his elbow, he lay +very busy thinking.<span class = "para"> *</span>Then, suddenly, he +asked the Queen in a very solemn voice, ‘Mama! Why do poor +children say the same +<span class = "pagenum">34</span> +<!-- png 68--> +prayer as I do, “Our Father which art in Heaven”?’ The +Queen answered, ‘Because He is as much their Father as He is +yours.’ Then said the King thoughtfully, ‘We must be +brothers.’ ‘Yes, my darling, they are your brothers,’ +answered the Queen.<span class = "para"> *</span>Bubi’s eyes +were filled with astonishment, and, in a choky voice, he asked, +‘Then why am I a King and have everything I want, while they are +poor and have nothing?’</p> + +<p><span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_34.png" width = "95" height = "103" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The Queen gave him a squeeze, and, kissing him again on his forehead, +said, ‘Because you are the eldest brother, which is what being +King really means.<span class = "para"> *</span>You understand, +<span class = "pagenum">35</span> +<!-- png 69--> +darling? God has given you everything in order that your younger +brothers should want for nothing.’ ‘I never knew this +before,’ said Bubi, shaking his head, and, without thinking any +more about his present, he began to say his prayers, as he did every +morning; and, as he prayed, it seemed to him that all the poor little +boys in the kingdom came round him with their hands clasped, and that +he, the eldest brother, spoke for them all when he prayed ‘Our +Father which art in Heaven.’</p> + +<p><span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_16.png" width = "122" height = "96" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +King Bubi grew up to be a great ruler.<span class = +"para"> *</span>He always asked God’s help in all he did, and +returned +<span class = "pagenum">36</span> +<!-- png 70--> +thanks for his happiness, ever saying, speaking for all his subjects, +poor and rich, good and bad, ‘Our Father which art in +Heaven’; and when he died, a very old man, and his good soul +arrived at the gates of Heaven, he knelt down and prayed as usual, +‘Our Father.’ +<span class = "figleft"> +<img src = "images/silh_b2.png" width = "134" height = "94" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +And, as he prayed, the gates were opened wide by thousands of poor +little children to whom he had been King, that is to say, eldest brother +here on earth.</p> + +<!-- png 71--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page36" id = "page36"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">36</span> +<img src = "images/pic_36.jpg" width = "388" height = "508" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +The dreadful Don Pedro</p> + +<!-- png 72--> +<span class = "pagenum">37</span> +<!-- png 73--> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td> </td> +<td class = "right"> +<img src = "images/silh_37.png" width = "66" height = "38" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +</tr> +</table> + + + +<span class = "pagenum">38</span> +<!-- png 74--> +<p class = "margin">P.S.</p> + + +<p class = "chapter"><span class = "firstword">The</span> Spanish story +which was written, once upon a time, to amuse a real little boy King, +ends here; but I cannot help adding that it does seem a pity not to try +and get Perez the Mouse to come to England.<span class = +"para"> *</span> +<span class = "figright"> +<img src = "images/silh_8.png" width = "60" height = "92" +alt = "silhouette"></span> +The only way to manage this will be to take great pains over your copies +and spelling, so that when your first tooth comes out you will be able +to write a nice, tidy, polite letter to him. If you put it under your +pillow at night I am nearly sure you will find it gone and a present +<span class = "pagenum">39</span> +<!-- png 75--> +in its place in the morning. Perhaps you may even feel the same little +soft tickle on your forehead that King Bubi did; but I do not promise +for certain that you will see kind Mr. Mouse, because he is rather +shy.</p> + +<p class = "right">A.M.M.</p> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td><img src = "images/silh_17b.png" width = "43" height = "38" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +<td> </td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<span class = "pagenum">40</span> +<!-- png 76--> + +<table class = "illustration"> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td> </td> +<td class = "right"> +<img src = "images/silh_33.png" width = "62" height = "63" +alt = "silhouette"></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<!-- png 77--> +<p class = "illustration"> +<a name = "page40" id = "page40"> </a> +<span class = "pagenum plate">40</span> +<img src = "images/pic_40.jpg" width = "386" height = "524" +alt = "see caption"></p> + +<p class = "caption"> +Elvira recited</p> + +</div> + +<div class = "endnote"> + +<p class = "center"> +Unretouched Cover:</p> + +<p class = "illustration"> +<img src = "images/cover_raw.jpg" width = "386" height = "526" +alt = "Perez the Mouse unprocessed cover"> +</p> + +<p>King “Bubi” was Alfonso XIII of Spain (1886-1941). The +story was written at his mother’s request in 1894.</p> + +</div> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<div class="pg"> +<p class="smallest">***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEREZ THE MOUSE***</p> +<p class="smallest">******* This file should be named 29447-h.txt or 29447-h.zip *******</p> +<p class="smallest">This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/9/4/4/29447">http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/4/4/29447</a></p> +<p class="smallest">Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p class="smallest">Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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+1,880 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Perez the Mouse, by Luis Coloma, Translated +by Lady Moreton, Illustrated by George Howard Vyse + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Perez the Mouse + + +Author: Luis Coloma + + + +Release Date: July 18, 2009 [eBook #29447] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEREZ THE MOUSE*** + + +E-text prepared by Louise Hope, David Edwards, and the Project Gutenberg +Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page +images generously made available by Internet Archive +(http://www.archive.org) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 29447-h.htm or 29447-h.zip: + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29447/29447-h/29447-h.htm) + or + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/29447/29447-h.zip) + + + Images of the original pages are available through + Internet Archive. See + http://www.archive.org/details/perezmouse00colo2 + + + + + +PEREZ THE MOUSE + +by + +PADRE LOUIS COLOMA and LADY MORETON + + +PEREZ THE MOUSE + + [Illustration: Perez the Mouse took off his hat + and made a very low bow] + + +PEREZ THE MOUSE + +Adapted from the Spanish of + +PADRE LUIS COLOMA + +by + +LADY MORETON + + [Silhouette] + +With Illustrations by George Howard Vyse + + + + + + + +London: John Lane The Bodley Head +New York: Dodd, Mead & Company + +First published in 1914 +Reprinted - 1918 +Reprinted - 1927 +Reprinted - 1929 +Reprinted - 1935 + +Printed in Great Britain +by Western Printing Services Ltd., Bristol + + + + +LIST OF COLOURED PLATES + + + Perez the Mouse took off his hat + and made a very low bow _Frontispiece_ + King Bubi the First _face p._ vi + The Oldest of Court Doctors 9 + Miss Stilton, the Governess 11 + A tiny little mouse in a straw hat + and slippers and big gold spectacles 15 + Adolphus studying for Diplomacy 16 + Adelaide made tea 17 + The King sneezed very hard and turned into + the most darling little mouse you ever saw 18 + Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway 22 + Mrs. Mouse was embroidering a beautiful + smoking cap for her husband 24 + Adolphus playing cards at the Jockey Club 25 + The Guards silently formed up ready to fire 28 + Ferocious mice .. armed to the teeth 29 + The Order of the Golden Fleece 32 + The King and Perez knelt down too 33 + The dreadful Don Pedro 36 + Elvira recited 40 + + + [Illustration: King Bubi the First] + + + + +PEREZ THE MOUSE + + + + +Once upon a time there lived a king called Bubi the First, who +was very kind to poor children and mice. For the children he +built a factory for making dolls and cardboard horses, for the +benefit of the mice he made wise laws to stop cats catching +them, and absolutely forbade the use of mouse-traps. Bubi began +to reign when he was only six years old, under the care of his +mother, who was very good and clever, and who watched over him +and guided his steps, as good children are guided by their +Guardian Angel. + + [Illustration: The oldest of the Court Doctors] + +Bubi was a darling little boy, and when on great days they put +on his gold crown and his embroidered robes, the gold of his +crown was not brighter than his hair nor the ermine of his robes +softer than his cheeks and hands. He was just like a little +Dresden china figure which had been put to sit on a throne +instead of standing on the chimney piece. + +One day while the King was eating his bread and milk, one of +his teeth began to wobble. There was a great fuss and the Court +doctors arrived in a hurry. * They were all agreed that His +Majesty had begun to change his teeth, and at length they +settled to pull out the loose one. They wanted the King to have +laughing gas, as he did when his hair was cut, as he always +fidgeted so, but Bubi was a brave little boy and made up his +mind to have it out with nothing. The oldest of the Court +doctors tied a bit of red silk round the tooth, and then gave a +tweak, and he pulled so cleverly that, while the King was making +a face, out came the tooth as round and white as a little pearl. + +Then there was another fuss as to what was to be done with it, +but Bubi's mother, who, as we have said was a very wise Queen +and very loyal to old customs, settled that the King should +write a very polite letter and put it with the tooth in an +envelope under his pillow that night, which has always been the +proper thing to do ever since the world began, and no one has +ever known Perez the Mouse forget to come and fetch the tooth +and leave a lovely present in its place. + + [Illustration: Miss Stilton, the Governess] + +King Bubi found writing that letter a dreadful task, but he +managed really quite well in the end, and only inked all his +fingers, the tip of his nose, his left ear, his right shoe and +his bib. + +He went to bed very early that evening, and ordered that all the +lights should be left in his room. He put the envelope under his +pillow and sat up in bed, determined to keep awake to see Perez +the Mouse, even if he had to wait all night. + + [Silhouette] + + + + +Perez the Mouse was a long time coming, so the little King began +to make up a little speech to say to him when he did arrive. +After a bit Bubi began to open his eyes very wide, fighting +against the miller who was trying to make him shut them; but +they did shut at last, and the little boy slipped down into the +warm bed-clothes, his head on the pillow, with one arm over it, +as a little bird tucks its head under its wing when it goes to +sleep. + +Suddenly he felt something very soft just tickling his forehead, +and, sitting up quickly, he saw in front of him, standing on the +pillow, a tiny little mouse in a straw hat and slippers and big +gold spectacles; a red satchel was slung across his back. + + [Illustration: A tiny little mouse in a straw hat + and slippers and big gold spectacles] + +King Bubi stared at him in astonishment, and Perez the Mouse, +seeing that His Majesty was awake, took off his hat and made +a very low bow, waiting to be spoken to. But the King said +nothing, because he had quite forgotten all he had made up to +say, and after thinking and thinking he faltered out at last +'Good night.' * Perez answered with a low bow, 'God give your +Majesty a very good one.' * These civil speeches quite broke +the ice, and the King and the mouse became the greatest friends. + * It was easy to see that Perez was a mouse who was accustomed +to polite society, and to run about on soft carpets, as he had +such very good manners. * It was wonderful what a lot of +things he could talk about which made him a very pleasant +companion. * He had travelled through all the pipes and drains +of the capital, and in the Royal Library alone he had eaten up +three books in less than a week. * He talked too about his +family. He had two quite grown-up daughters, Adelaide and +Elvira, and a son, nearly grown up, called Adolphus, who was +studying for diplomacy in the drawer where the Minister of State +kept his most secret notes. He did not say much about Mrs. +Mouse, and the little King somehow fancied that she was rather +vulgar. + + [Illustration: Adolphus studying for Diplomacy] + +His Majesty listened to all this with his mouth open, from time +to time he put out his hand to try and catch Perez by the tail. +* But each time the mouse gave a sort of whisk and placed his +tail out of reach, without being in the least rude. + + [Illustration: Adelaide made Tea] + +It was getting late, and the King forgot to dismiss him; so Mr. +Mouse cleverly hinted that he had to go that same night to a +street not far off to fetch the tooth of a very poor little boy +called Giles. It was rather a difficult, dangerous journey, +because near there lived a very wicked cat called Don Pedro. +The King at once wanted to go too, and begged Perez to take him. +The mouse stood thinking it over and twisting his whiskers; the +responsibility was very great, and moreover he was obliged to go +back to his own house to fetch the present for little Giles. The +King said he would like to go and see the mouse's home, which so +much flattered Perez that he at once offered him a cup of tea +and agreed to take him to see little Giles. Perez the Mouse +lived underneath a grocer's shop, near a big pile of Gruyere +cheeses which supplied the whole family with breakfast, dinner +and tea. Overjoyed, King Bubi jumped out of bed and began to +dress himself, when all at once Perez the Mouse sprang on his +shoulder and put the tip of his tail into His Majesty's nose. * +Then a wonderful thing happened, the King sneezed very hard and +turned into the most darling little mouse you ever saw. He was +all soft and shiny, and had wee green eyes like emeralds. * +Perez the Mouse took him by the paw and disappeared with him +down a tiny hole under the bed, which had been hidden by the +carpet. + + [Illustration: The King sneezed very hard and turned into + the most darling little mouse you ever saw] + +The way was dark and sticky, but they scampered along. Sometimes +Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway and looked about before +going on, which rather frightened the King and made him feel +little shivers right down to the tip of his tail, and he knew +that he was afraid, but he remembered that: + + 'Fear is natural to the prudent, + To conquer it is to be courageous,' + +so he would not let himself be frightened, which is being really +brave. + +Once when he heard a tremendous noise, like dozens of motor +omnibuses passing over his head, he whispered to ask Perez if +that was where Don Pedro lived, but Mr. Mouse said no with his +tail, and on they went. + +After going down a gentle slope they came to a big cellar which +felt nice and warm and smelt very much of cheese; behind a pile +of Gruyere cheese they found themselves face to face with the +Huntley and Palmer biscuit tin which was the home of the Perez +family. Here they lived as happily as the rat of fable did in +the Dutch cheese. Perez the Mouse introduced the King as a +foreign tourist who was on a visit to the capital, and the +family welcomed him very cordially. The two Miss Mouses were at +work with their Governess, Miss Stilton, who was a very learned +English mouse, and Mrs. Mouse was embroidering a beautiful +smoking cap for her husband, sitting by a bright fire made of +raisin stalks. + +This happy family party delighted King Bubi. * Adelaide and +Elvira made tea and poured out some into lovely wee cups made +out of the skins of white beans. * Then they had a little +music. Adelaide sang Desdemona's song, 'O Willow Willow,' in +a way which much pleased the King, and Elvira recited about a +little mouse who was ill of fever, and a naughty kitten who +wanted to pounce on it. After this Adolphus came in from the +Jockey Club where, to the sorrow of his father and mother, he +wasted all his time playing cards with the mice from the foreign +embassies. + + [Illustration: Perez the Mouse stopped at some crossway] + +King Bubi would willingly have stayed longer, but Perez, who had +slipped away, came back with his satchel on his back and said it +was time to start. * So the King said goodbye very politely, +and Mrs. Mouse gave him a kiss on each cheek in her homely way. +* Adelaide put out a paw in a lackadaisical fashion, and Elvira +shook hands like a pump handle, while Miss Stilton made him a +beautiful cheese of a curtsey, and then stared at him through +her eyeglass until he was out of sight. * Adolphus, too, was +very gushing, and conducted him as far as the lid of the tin, +and offered to introduce him at the Polo Club, for which the +King thanked him very much, thinking all the time that, though +he might be a very smart young mouse, he was rather a bore. Then +Bubi and Perez the Mouse again began their scamper with such a +quantity of precautions that the King was astonished. + + [Illustration: Mrs. Mouse was embroidering + a beautiful smoking cap for her husband] + +In front of them went a regiment of ferocious mice, soldiers +whose bayonets made of fine needles gleamed in the darkness. +Behind them came a second regiment, also armed to the teeth. + +Perez the Mouse then confessed that he would not have undertaken +this expedition without these soldiers to protect the person of +the young monarch. + +All of a sudden King Bubi saw the guard in front had disappeared +down a little hole, through which came a faint light. + + [Illustration: Adolphus playing cards at the Jockey Club] + +This was the moment of danger. Perez the Mouse, slowly waggling +his tail from side to side, put his head very cautiously through +the hole and looked around; he then went back two steps, and +finally, suddenly seizing the King's paw, dashed through the +hole like an arrow, crossed a big kitchen, and disappeared +through another hole on the opposite side near the range. As one +sees telegraph posts out of the train so Bubi saw that kitchen. +By the hearth, in the glow of the fire, lay an enormous cat, the +dreadful Don Pedro, its great whiskers heaving up and down as it +breathed. + +The guards silently formed up, from hole to hole, ready to fire, +to protect the King's route from the sleeping cat. It was all +very grand and imposing. An ugly old woman sat in a chair, also +asleep, with her knitting on her knee. + +Once through the hole the danger was over, and they had only to +get upstairs, as this was where little Giles lived. Everything +was open in his poor room, which was all cracks and draughts. + +King Bubi scrambled on to the arm of a seatless chair, the only +one in the room, and from there could see a picture of poverty +such as he had never dreamt of. + +The sloping roof joined the floor, so that on one side a man +could not have stood upright, and through the holes the cold air +of dawn was coming, while icicles hung from the roof. The only +furniture besides the chair was an empty bread basket hanging +up, and in a corner a bed of straw and rags, on which little +Giles and his mother were lying fast asleep. + +Perez the Mouse drew nearer, taking the King by the paw, and +they could see how little Giles was huddled up in the rags, and +how he was cuddled up against his mother for warmth, and it made +the King so unhappy that he began to cry. + + [Illustration: The Guards silently formed up ready to fire] + +Why had he never known that people were so poor? How was it that +he had never been told that children were hungry and had to +sleep on horrid beds? He did not want any blankets on his cot +till every child in his kingdom had plenty of bed-clothes to +keep them warm. + + [Illustration: Ferocious mice . . . . armed to the teeth] + +Perez the Mouse brushed away a tear with his paw and then tried +to comfort the King by showing him the bright gold coin he was +going to put under little Giles' pillow in exchange for his +first tooth. + +Just then Giles' mother woke and sat up in bed and looked at her +little boy, who was still asleep. It was becoming light, and she +had to earn some money by washing clothes in the river. * She +caught the sleeping Giles in her arms and made him kneel down +under a picture of the Infant Christ which was pinned to the +wall near the bed. + +The King and Perez the Mouse knelt down too, and so did the +soldier mice who were waiting in the empty bread basket. The +child began to pray, 'Our Father which art in Heaven.' + +Bubi started and looked at Perez the Mouse, who understood his +astonishment, and fixed his piercing eyes on him, but never said +a single word. + + [Silhouette] + + + + +On the return journey they were silent and preoccupied, and half +an hour later the King was home in his nursery with Perez the +Mouse, who again put the tip of his tail into Bubi's nose and +made him sneeze. All at once he found himself safely back again +in his own warm little cot, with the Queen's arms round him, who +woke him, as she always did, with a kiss. + + [Illustration: The Order of the Golden Fleece] + +At first he thought it had all been a dream; but when he looked +for the letter he had put under his pillow, he found it was +gone, and in its place was a case with the Order of the Golden +Fleece in diamonds, a magnificent present from the generous +Perez the Mouse in exchange for his first tooth. (Perhaps I had +better explain to English children that in King Bubi's country +the Order of the Golden Fleece is like our Order of the Garter, +the greatest honour the King can give.) + + [Illustration: The King and Perez the Mouse knelt down too] + +The little King, however, paid no attention to his beautiful +present, and let it lie unnoticed on the bed, while, leaning on +his elbow, he lay very busy thinking. * Then, suddenly, he +asked the Queen in a very solemn voice, 'Mama! Why do poor +children say the same prayer as I do, "Our Father which art +in Heaven"?' The Queen answered, 'Because He is as much their +Father as He is yours.' Then said the King thoughtfully, 'We +must be brothers.' 'Yes, my darling, they are your brothers,' +answered the Queen. * Bubi's eyes were filled with astonishment, +and, in a choky voice, he asked, 'Then why am I a King and have +everything I want, while they are poor and have nothing?' + +The Queen gave him a squeeze, and, kissing him again on his +forehead, said, 'Because you are the eldest brother, which is +what being King really means. * You understand, darling? God +has given you everything in order that your younger brothers +should want for nothing.' 'I never knew this before,' said Bubi, +shaking his head, and, without thinking any more about his +present, he began to say his prayers, as he did every morning; +and, as he prayed, it seemed to him that all the poor little +boys in the kingdom came round him with their hands clasped, and +that he, the eldest brother, spoke for them all when he prayed +'Our Father which art in Heaven.' + +King Bubi grew up to be a great ruler. * He always asked God's +help in all he did, and returned thanks for his happiness, ever +saying, speaking for all his subjects, poor and rich, good and +bad, 'Our Father which art in Heaven'; and when he died, a very +old man, and his good soul arrived at the gates of Heaven, he +knelt down and prayed as usual, 'Our Father.' And, as he prayed, +the gates were opened wide by thousands of poor little children +to whom he had been King, that is to say, eldest brother here on +earth. + + [Illustration: The dreadful Don Pedro] + + [Silhouette] + + + + +P.S. + + +The Spanish story which was written, once upon a time, to amuse +a real little boy King, ends here; but I cannot help adding that +it does seem a pity not to try and get Perez the Mouse to come +to England. * The only way to manage this will be to take +great pains over your copies and spelling, so that when your +first tooth comes out you will be able to write a nice, tidy, +polite letter to him. If you put it under your pillow at night I +am nearly sure you will find it gone and a present in its place +in the morning. Perhaps you may even feel the same little soft +tickle on your forehead that King Bubi did; but I do not promise +for certain that you will see kind Mr. Mouse, because he is +rather shy. + + A.M.M. + + [Silhouette] + + [Illustration: Elvira recited] + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Errata (noted by transcriber) + + [Illustration: King Bubi the First] [Rubi] + + [List of Plates:] + The Oldest of the Court Doctors + [_"the" supplied to agree with figure caption_] + +The punctuation of "Ferocious mice..." is unchanged. + +King "Bubi" was Alfonso XIII of Spain (1886-1941). The story was +written at his mother's request in 1894. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEREZ THE MOUSE*** + + +******* This file should be named 29447.txt or 29447.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/9/4/4/29447 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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