February 27, 1897, page 1

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Beatrix Potter
1866–1943

Autograph letter signed, London, to Noel Moore, February 27, 1897

February 27, 1897

Gift of Colonel David McC. McKell, 1959

MA 2009.9
Description: 

Potter adored Edward Lear's nonsense rhymes and particularly this prime example, which she first saw at age four and a half in a copy of Lear's Nonsense Songs, a Christmas present from her father. She retold the story of the Owl and the Pussy-Cat with her own illustrations in two letters to Noel Moore—this one and another in the collection of the Cotsen Children's Library at Princeton University. They contain an abridged version of Lear's text but a larger selection of pictures, some based on Lear, others invented by Potter.



It was during a holiday visit to Falmouth harbor that Potter glimpsed a pig on board a ship and wondered what its fate might be on a sea voyage ("when the sailors get hungry they eat it"). In the picture letter in the Cotsen Collection she imagined how it might escape in the ship's dinghy and go off to live on an island like Robinson Crusoe. Even better, she succeeded in linking one children's classic with another by supposing that the escapee might row off to safety in the island "where the Bong-tree grows" and become the "Piggy-wig" who assisted in the nuptials of the Owl and the Pussy-Cat.

Potter would later turn the pig-on-board theme into a book, The Tale of Little Pig Robinson (1930).

Transcription: 

My dear Noël,

Thank you for your nice little letter, I am so sorry to hear what a bad time you have been having, you must get better now. I should have come to see you this week if I had not been prevented. I am sure your Mamma is quite tired of cooking and medecine [sic] bottles; tell her it was a little hood we wanted, I will come for it some day soon. Here is the rest of the Owl and the Pussy cat.

I remain dear Noël yours affectionately
Beatrix Potter