These are excerpts of anything and everything that
means something to me. What they were meant to mean
and what it means to you, are seperate questions...
CHAPTER IV~~ In Which Eeyore Loses a Tail
and Pooh Finds One
THE OLD GREY DONKEY, Eeyore, stood by himself in
a thistly corner of the forest, his front feet well apart,
his head on one side, and thought about things. Sometimes
he thought sadly to himself, "Why?" and sometimes he
thought,"Wherefore?" and sometimes he thought, "Inasmuch
as which?" -- and sometimes he didn't quite know what he
was thinking about. So when Winnie-the-Pooh came
stumping along, Eeyore was very glad to be able to stop
thinking for a little, in order to say "How do you do?"
in a gloomy manner to him.
"And how are you?" said Winnie-the-Pooh.
Eeyore shook his head from side to side.
"Not very how," he said. "I don't seem to have
felt at all how for a long time."
"Dear, dear," said Pooh, "I'm sorry about that.
Let's have a look at you."
So Eeyore stood there, gazing sadly at the ground,
and Winnie-the-Pooh walked all round him once.
"Why, what's happened to you tail?" he said in
surprise.
"What has happened to it?" said Eeyore.
"It isn't there!"
"Are you sure?"
"Well, either a tail is there or it isn't there.
You can't make a mistake about it. And yours isn't there!"
"Then what is?"
"Nothing."
"Let's have a look," said Eeyore, and he turned slowly
round to the place where his tail had been a little while ago, and then,
finding that he couldn't catch it up, he turned round the other way,
until he came back to where he was at first, and then he put his head down
and looked between his front legs, and at last he said, with a long, sad sigh,
"I believe you're right."
"Of course I'm right," said Pooh.
"That Accounts for a Good Deal," said Eeyore gloomily.
"It Explains Everything. No Wonder."
"You must have left it somewhere," said Winnie-the-Pooh.
"Somebody must have taken it," said Eeyore. "How Like Them,"
he added, after a long silence.
Pooh felt that he ought to say something helpful about it,
but didn't quite know what. So he decided to do something helpful instead.
"Eeyore," he said solemnly,"I, Winnie-the-Pooh,
will find your tail for you."
"Thank you, Pooh," answered Eeyore.
"You're a real friend," said he. "Not like Some," he said.
So Winnie-the-Pooh went off to find Eeyore's
tail.
It was a fine spring morning in the
forest as he started out. Little soft clouds played happily in a blue sky,
skipping from time to time in front of the sun as if they had come to put it
out, and then sliding away suddenly so that the next might have his turn.
Through them and betwen them the sun shone bravely; and a copse which
had worn its firs all the year round seemed old and dowdy now
beside the new green lace which the beeches had put on so
prettily. Through copse and spinney marched Bear; down open
slopes of gorse and heather, over rocky beds of streams, up steep
banks of sandstone into the heather again; and so at last, tired
and hungry,to the Hundred Acre Wood. For it was in the Hundred
Acre Wood that Owl lived.
"And if anyone knows anything about anything,"
said Bear to himself, "it's Owl who knows something about something," he said,
"or my name's not Winnie-the-Pooh," he said. "Which it is," he added. "So
there you are."
Owl lived at The Chestnuts, an old-world residence
of great charm, which was grander than anybody else's, or seemed so to Bear,
because it had both a knocker and a bell-pull. Underneath the knocker
there was a notice which said:
PLES RING IF AN RNSER IS REQIRD.
Underneath the bell-pull there was a notice which said:
PLEZ CNOKE IF AN RNSR IS NOT REQID.
These notices had been written by Christopher
Robin, who was the only one in the forest who could spell; for Owl,
wise though he was in many ways, able to read and write and spell his own
name WOL, yet somehow went all to pieces over delicate words like MEASLES
and BUTTERED TOAST.
Winnie-the-Pooh read the two notices very
carefully, first from left to right, and afterwards, in case he had missed
some of it, from right to left. Then to make quite sure, he knocked
and pulled the knocker, and he pulled an knocked the bell-rope, and
he called out in a very loud voice, "Owl! I require an answer!
It's Bear speaking." And the door opened and Owl looked out.
"Hallo, Pooh," he said.
"How's things?"
Winnie-The-Pooh
, by A.A. Milne
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