The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck is a children's book written and illustrated
by Beatrix Potter. It was first published by Frederick Warne & Co. in July
1908. Potter composed the book at Hill Top, a working farm in the Lake District
she bought in 1905. Following the purchase, her works began to focus on country
and village life, incorporating large casts of animal characters and sinister
villains. Jemima Puddle-Duck was the first of her books set wholly at the farm
with background illustrations based on the farm buildings and yard, and nearby
locales.
Jemima is a domestic duck whose eggs are routinely confiscated by the
farmer's wife because she believes Jemima a poor sitter. Jemima searches for a
place away from the farm where she can hatch her eggs without human
interference, and naively confides her woes to a suave fox who invites her to
nest in a shed at his home. Jemima accepts his invitation, little realizing her
danger: the fox plans to kill and roast her. Kep, a collie on the farm,
discovers Jemima's whereabouts and rescues her just in time. Potter indicated
the tale was a revision of "Little Red Riding Hood" with Jemima, the
fox, and the dog parallels to the fairy tale's heroine, wolf, and woodcutter.
Jemima, Kep, the farmer's wife and her two children were all modelled on real
world individuals at Potter's Hill Top farm.
The book was hugely popular. Spinoff merchandise included a soft Jemima
doll in bonnet and shawl, a Jemima painting book in 1925, and illustrated
fabric placemats hand-fashioned by Potter and distributed to friends.
Critically, the book is considered one of Potter's best. In 1971, the tale
became a segment in the Royal Ballet film, The Tales of Beatrix Potter, and, in
1993, it was telecast as an episode on the animated BBC anthology series, The
World of Peter Rabbit and Friends.
Read the tale on line
Read the tale on line
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