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English
author and illustrator of picture books for the very young, creator
of the characters Peter Rabbit, Jeremy Fisher, Jemima Puddle-Duck,
Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle, and others. Potter's popularity has shown no
sign of diminishing since she created the timeless children's books.
"Once upon a time there were four little Rabbits, and their
names were - Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail, and Peter. They lived
with their Mother in a sand-bank, underneath the root of a very
big tree"
(from The Tale of Peter Rabbit, 1902)
Beatrix Potter was born in South Kensington, London, the only daughter
of Rupert Potter, a wealthy rentier. Potter spent a sheltered
childhood with her brother Bertram, who was five years younger.
She amused herself by painting, using specimens from the Natural
History Museum or sketching in the Lake District, where the family
spent summer holidays. She never went to school, but was taught
at home by a governess. As a young woman she still lived at her
parent's house. From the age of fifteen until she was past thirty,
she recorded her everyday life in her own secret code writing.
As a writer and artist Potter made her debut in the 1890s when
she sent a sick child illustrated animal stories, these found their
way to the publisher (Frederick Warne & Company) and made her famous.
In 1890 she published A HAPPY PAIR, a small book of animal drawings
with accompanying verse by Frederic Weatherley, under the signature
H.B.P.
In 1893 Potter wrote a letter to a young friend, Noël Moore, which
was illustrated with drawings of animals and contained the first
version of THE TALE OF PETER RABBIT. The book was privately printed
in 1901, and then published by Frederick Warne and Co. Potter and
one of the publishers, Norman Warne, became engaged in 1905, but
he died of leukaemia only a month later. Potter turned back to her
books as the one creative impulse left to her.
"If it were not impertinent to lecture one's publisher - you
are a great deal too much afraid of the public, for whom I have
never cared one tuppenny button. I am sure that it is that attitude
of mind, which has enabled me to keep up the series. Most people,
after one success, are so cringingly afraid of doing less well
that they rub all the edge off their subsequent work."
(from The Magic Years of Beatrix Potter by Margaret Lane, 1978)
From
1905 she spent her time on a farm in Sawrey in the Lake District.
The following years,( until 1913), were Potter's most productive.
She published a number of children's books with watercolour illustrations,
and oversaw the production and design. Later her works created an
entire industry : pottery, tea towels, soft toys, and cartoon films.
Her illustrations usually showed animal characters wearing human
clothes but otherwise Potter treated her characters without sentimentality.
It was important for her to write stories that were both simple
and direct, with no attempt to write down to the young listener
or reader. When an attempt to issue THE PIE AND THE PATTY PAN and
THE ROLY-POLY PUDDING in a larger format did not gain success, the
original small format of the book was found best and suitable for
small hands.
LITTLE Benjamin said,
"It spoils people's clothes
to squeeze under a gate;
the proper way to get in,
is to climb down a pear tree."
(from 'The Tale of Benjamin Bunny')
At the age of 47 Potter married the solicitor William Heelis and
gradually stopped writing. They met when she bought Castle Farm,
as the purchase had been made through W. Heelis and Sons, an old-established
family business. While engaged she purchased a larger farmhouse
in Sawrey. In 1923 she bought a substantial sheep farm and spent
her last 30 years raising Herdwick sheep. Potter's marriage was
happy. She continued the life she loved best as a conservative landowner,
solicitor's wife, and farmer. Her literary work deteriorated with
her eyesight after 1918, diminishing gradually by 1930s. THE TALE
OF LITTLE PIG ROBINSON (1930) was the only story of note to appear
in her declining years. Potter told her husband little about her
life before her marriage. In a letter to a friend a few years before
she died, Potter wrote, "I am exceedingly sorry for my husband.
You may have noticed I am the stronger half of the pair..."
Potter
died in Sawrey, Lancashire on December 22, 1943. Her home in the
Lake District is open to the public. She left several thousand acres
of land, including Hill Top Farm, the setting of several of her
books, to the National Trust. Potter's journal, which she kept from
the age of fifteen and which was written in an elaborated code,
was deciphered and published in 1964.
For further reading: The Tale of Beatrix Potter by Margaret
Lane (1946); Beatrix Potter by Marcus Crouch (1960); The Magic
Years of Beatrix Potter by Margaret Lane (1978); Cousin Beatie
by Ulla Hyde Parker (1981); Beatrix Potter: Artist, Storyteller
and Countrywoman by Judy Taylor (1986); Beatrix Potter by Ruth
MacDonaldson (1986); Beatrix Potter's Derwentwater by Wynne Bartlett
and Joyce Irene Whalley (1988) - NOTE: ballet film Tales
of Beatrix Potter (1971), dir. by Reginald Mills, one of the most
successful films of its kind - Bryan Talbot's graphic novel The
Tale of One Bad Rat (1995) used Potter's settings. - Talking
animals - see Kenneth Grahame, Rudyard Kipling
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Selected works:
- A HAPPY PAIR, 1890 (with F. Weatherly)
- THE TALE OF PETER
RABBIT, 1900
- THE TAILOR OF GLOUCESTER, 1902
- THE TALE OF SQUIRREL
NUTKIN, 1903
- THE TAYLOR OF GLOUCHESTER, 1903
- THE TALE OF TWO
BAD MICE, 1904 THE TALE OF BENJAMIN BUNNY, 1904
- THE TALE OF
MRS. TIGGY-WINKLE, 1905
- THE PIE AND THE PATTY-PAN, 1905
- THE
TALE OF MR. JEREMY FISHER, 1906
- THE STORY OF A FIERCE BAD RABBIT,
1906
- THE STORY OF MISS MOPPET, 1906
- THE TALE OF TOM KITTEN,
1907
- THE TALE OF JEMIMA PUDDLE-DUCK, 1908
- THE ROLY-POLY PUDDING,
1908
- THE TALE OF GINGER AND PICLES, 1909
- THE TALE OF THE FLOPSY
BUNNIES, 1909
- GINGER AND PICLES, 1909
- THE TALE OF MRS TITTLEMOUSE,
1910
- THE TALE OF TIMMY TIPTOES, 1911
- PETER RABBITR'S PAINTING
BOOK, 1911
- THE TALE OF MR TOD, 1912
- THE TALE OF PIGLIND BLAND,
1913
- JOHNNY TOWNMOUSE, 1914
- TOM KITTEN'S PAINTING BOOK, 1917
- APPLEY DAPPLY'S NURSERY RHYMES, 1917
- THE TALE OF JOHNNY TOWN-MOUSE,
1918
- CECIL PARSLEY'S NURSERY RHYMES, 1922
- JEMIMA PUDDLE-DUCK'S
PAINTING BOOK, 1925
- PETER RABBIT'S ALMANAC, 1929
- THE FAIRY
CARAVAN, 1929
- THE TALE OF LITTLE PIG ROBINSON, 1930
- SISTER
ANNE, 1932
- WAG-BY-WALL, 1944
- THE TALE OF THE FAITHFUL DOVE,
1955
- THE ART OF BEATRIX POTTER, 1955
- THE JOURNAL OF BEATRIX
POTTER, 1881-1897, 1966 (ed. L. Linder, rev. 1989)
- LETTERS TO
CHILDREN, 1967
- THE SLY OLD CAT, 1971
- A HISTORY OF THE WRITINGS
OF BEATRIX POTTER, 1971 (ed. by L. Linder)
- THE TALE OF TUPPENNY,
1973
- BEATRIX POTTER'S BIRTHDAY BOOK, 1974
- DEAR IVY, DEAR JUNE,
1977
- BEATRIX POTTER'S AMERICANS, 1982
- YOURS AFFECTIONATELY,
PETER RABBIT, 1983
- BEATRIX POTER'S NURSERY RHYME BOOK, 1984
- BEATRIX POTTER'S LETTERS, 1989 (ed. J. Taylor)
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This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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