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EEYORE, the old grey Donkey, stood by the side of the stream,
and looked at
himself in the water. "Pathetic," he said. s' That's what it is.
Pathetic."
He turned and walked slowly down the stream for twenty yards,
splashed across it, and walked slowly
back on the other side. Then
he looked at himself in the water again.
"As I thought," he said. "No better
from this side. But nobody minds.
Nobody cares. Pathetic, that's what it
is."
There was a crackling noise in the bracken behind him, and out came
Pooh.
"Good morning, Eeyore," said Pooh.
"Good morning, Pooh Bear," said
Eeyore gloomily.
"If it is a good morning," he said. "Which I doubt," said
he.
"Why, what's the matter?"
"Nothing, Pooh Bear, nothing. We can't all, and some of us don't.
That'sall there is to it."
"Can't all what?" said
Pooh, rubbing his nose.
"Gaiety. Song-and-dance. Here we go round the
mulberry bush."
"Oh!" said Pooh. He thought for a long time, and then asked,
"What mulberrybush is that?"
"Bon-hommy," went on Eeyore gloomily. "French
word meaning bonhommy," he explained.
"I'm not complaining, but There It
Is."
Pooh sat down on a large stone, and tried to think this out. It sounded
to him like a riddle,
and he was never much good at riddles, being a Bear of
Very Little Brain.
So he sang Cottleston Pie instead:
This was too much for Pooh. "Stay
there!" he called to Eeyore, as he turned and hurried back home
as quick as
he could; for he felt that he must get poor Eeyore a present of some sort at
once,
and he could always think of a proper one afterwards.
Outside his
house he found Piglet, jumping up and down trying to reach the
knocker.
"Let me do it for you," said Pooh kindly.
So he reached up and
knocked at the door.
"I have just seen Eeyore is in a Very Sad
Condition,
because it's his birthday, and nobody has taken any
notice of
it, and he's very Gloomy--you know what Eeyore
is--and there he was,
and----
What a long time whoever lives here is answering this door."
And he knocked again.
"But Pooh," said Piglet, "it's your own
house!"
"Oh!" said Pooh. "So it is," he said. "Well, let's go
in."
So in they went. The first thing Pooh did was to go to the
cupboard to see if he had quite a small jar
of honey left; and he had, so he
took it down.
"I'm giving this to Eeyore," he explained, "as a present. What
are you going to give?"
"Couldn't I give it too?" said Piglet. "From both of
us?"
"No," said Pooh. "That would not be a good plan."
"All right, then,
I'll give him a balloon. I've got one left from my party. I'll go and get it
now, shall I?"
"That, Piglet, is a very good idea. It is just what Eeyore
wants to cheer him up.
Nobody can be uncheered with a balloon."
So off
Piglet trotted; and in the other direction went Pooh, with his jar of
honey.
It was a warm day, and he had a long way to go. He hadn't gone more
than half-way when a sort of funny
feeling began to creep all over him. It
began at the tip of his nose and trickled all through him
and out at the
soles of his feet. It was just as if somebody inside him were saying,
"Now
then, Pooh, time for a little something."
"Dear, dear," said Pooh, "I didn't
know it was as late as that."
So he sat down and took the top off his jar of
honey. "Lucky I brought this with me,"
he thought. "Many a bear going out on
a warm day like this would never have thought of bringing a little
something
with him." And he began to eat. "Now let me see," he thought! as he took his
last lick
of the inside of the jar, "Where was I going? Ah, yes,
Eeyore."
He got up slowly.
And then, suddenly, he remembered. He had eaten
Eeyore's birthday present!
"Bother!" said Pooh. "What shall I do? I must give
him something."
For a little while he couldn't think of anything. Then he
thought: "Well, it's a very nice pot,
even if there's no honey in it, and if
I washed it clean, and got somebody to write
'A Happy Birthday' on it, Eeyore
could keep things in it, which might be Useful."
So, as he was just passing
the Hundred Acre Wood, he went inside to call on Owl,
who lived there. "Good
morning, Owl," he said.
"Good morning, Pooh," said Owl.
"Many happy
returns of Eeyore's birthday," said Pooh.
"Oh, is that what it is?"
"What
are you giving him, Owl?"
"What are you giving him, Pooh?"
"I'm giving him
a Useful Pot to Keep Things In, and I wanted to ask you "
"Is this it?" said
Owl, taking it out of Pooh's paw.
"Yes, and I wanted to ask
you--"
"Somebody has been keeping honey in it," said Owl.
"You can keep
anything in it," said Pooh earnestly. "It's Very Useful like that. And I wanted
to ask you----"
"You ought to write 'A Happy Birthday' on it."
"That was
what I wanted to ask you," said Pooh. "Because my spelling is Wobbly.
It's
good spelling but it Wobbles, and the letters get in the wrong places.
Would
you write 'A Happy Birthday' on it for me?"
"It's a nice pot," said Owl,
looking at it all round. "Couldn't I give it too? From both of us?"
"No,"
said Pooh. "That would not be a good plan. Now I'll just wash it first, and then
you can write on it."
Well, he washed the pot out, and dried it, while Owl
licked the end of his pencil,
and wondered how to spell "birthday."
"Can
you read, Pooh?" he asked a little anxiously. "There's a notice about knocking
and ringing
outside my door, which Christopher Robin wrote. Could you read
it?"
"Christopher Robin told me what it said, and then I could."
"Well,
I'll tell you what this says, and then you'll be able to."
So Owl wrote . . .
and this is what he wrote:
While all this was happening, Piglet had gone back to his own house
to get
Eeyore's balloon. He held it very tightly against himself, so that it
shouldn't blow away,
and he ran as fast as he could so as to get to Eeyore
before Pooh did;
for he thought that he would like to be the first one to
give a present,
just as if he had thought of it without being told by
anybody.
And running along, and thinking how pleased
Eeyore would be, he
didn't look where he was going . . .
and suddenly he put his foot in a rabbit
hole, and fell down flat on his face.

BANG!!!???***!!!
Piglet lay there, wondering what had happened. At first he
thoughtthat the whole world had blown up;
and then he thought that perhaps
only the Forest part of it had; and then he thought that perhaps
only he
had, and he was now alone in the moon or somewhere, and would never see
Christopher Robin
or Pooh or Eeyore again. And then he thought, "Well, even
if I'm in the moon, I needn't be face downwards
all the time," so he got
cautiously up and looked about him.
He was still in the Forest! "Well, that's
funny," he thought. "I wonder what that bang was.
I couldn't have made such a
noise just falling down. And where's my balloon?
And what's that small piece
of damp rag doing?"
It was the balloon!
"Oh, dear!" said Piglet. "Oh,
dear, oh, dearie, dearie, dear! Well, it's too late now. I can't go back,
and I haven't another balloon, and perhaps Eeyore doesn't like balloons so
very much."
So he trotted on, rather sadly now, and down he came to the side
of the stream where Eeyore was,
and called out to him.
"Good morning,
Eeyore," shouted Piglet.
"Good morning, Little Piglet," said Eeyore. "If it
is a good morning," he said. "Which I doubt," said he. "Not that it
matters," he said.
"Many happy returns of the day," said Piglet, having now
got closer.
Eeyore stopped looking at himself in the stream, and turned to
stare at Piglet.
"Just say that again," he said.
"Many hap--"
"Wait a
moment."
Balancing on three legs, he began to bring his fourth leg very
cautiously up to his ear.
"I did this yesterday," he explained, as he fell
down for the third time.
"It's quite easy. It's so as I can hear better. ...
There, that's done it! Now then, what were you saying?"
He pushed his ear
forward with his hoof.
"Many happy returns of the day," said Piglet
again.
"Meaning me?"
"Of course, Eeyore."
"My
birthday?"
"Yes."
"Me having a real birthday?"
"Yes, Eeyore, and I've
brought you a present."
Eeyore took down his
right hoof from his right ear, turned round, and with great
difficulty put up
his left hoof. "I must have that in the other ear,"
he said. "Now
then."
"A present," said Piglet very loudly.
"Meaning me
again?"
"Yes."
"My birthday still?"
"Of course, Eeyore."
"Me going
on having a real birthday?"
"Yes, Eeyore, and I brought you a
balloon."
"Balloon?" said Eeyore. "You did say balloon? One of those big
coloured things you blow up?
Gaiety, song-and-dance, here we are and there we
are?"
"Yes, but I'm afraid--I'm very sorry, Eeyore-- but when I was running
along to bring it you, I fell down."
"Dear, dear, how unlucky! You ran too
fast, I expect. You didn't hurt yourself, Little Piglet?"
"No, but I--I--oh,
Eeyore, I burst the balloon!"
There was a very long silence.
"My balloon?"
said Eeyore at last.
Piglet nodded.
"My birthday balloon?"
"Yes,
Eeyore," said Piglet sniffing a little. "Here it is. With--with many happy
returns of the day."
And he gave Eeyore the small piece of damp rag.
"Is
this it?" said Eeyore, a little surprised.
Piglet nodded.
"My
present?"
Piglet nodded again.
"The balloon?"
"Yes."
"Thank you,
Piglet," said Eeyore. "You don't mind my asking," he went on, "but what colour
was
this balloon when it--when it was a balloon?"
"Red."
"I just
wondered. ... Red," he murmured to himself. "My favourite colour.... How big was
it?"
"About as big as me."
"I just wondered. ... About as big as Piglet,"
he said to himself sadly. "My favourite size. Well, well."
Piglet felt very
miserable, and didn't know what to say. He was still opening his mouth to begin
something,
and then deciding that it wasn't any good saying that, when he
heard a shout from the other side of the river,
and there was Pooh.
"Many
happy returns of the day," called out Pooh, forgetting that he had said it
already.
"Thank you, Pooh, I'm having them," said Eeyore gloomily.
"I've
brought you a little present," said Pooh excitedly.
"I've had it," said
Eeyore.
Pooh had now splashed across the stream to Eeyore, and Piglet was
sitting a little way off,
his head in his paws, snuffling to
himself.
"It's a Useful Pot," said Pooh. "Here it is. And it's got 'A Very
Happy Birthday with love from Pooh'
written on it. That's what all that
writing is. And it's for putting things in. There!"
When Eeyore saw the pot,
he became quite excited.
"Why!" he said. "I believe my Balloon will just go
into that Pot!"
"Oh, no, Eeyore," said Pooh. "Balloons are much too big to go
into Pots.
What you do with a balloon is, you hold the balloon. "
"Not
mine," said Eeyore proudly. "Look, Piglet!" And as Piglet looked sorrowfully
round, Eeyore picked the
balloon up with his teeth, and placed it carefully in the pot;
picked it out
and put it on the ground; and then picked it up again and put it carefully
back.
"So it does!" said Pooh. "It goes in!"
"So it does!" said Piglet.
"And it comes out!"
"Doesn't it?" said Eeyore. "It goes in and out like
anything."
"I'm very glad," said Pooh happily,
"that I thought of giving
you a Useful Pot to put things in."
"I'm very glad," said Piglet happily,
"that thought of giving you something to put in a Useful Pot."
But Eeyore
wasn't listening. He was taking the balloon out, and putting it back
again,
as happy as could be....
"And didn't
I give him anything?"
asked Christopher Robin sadly.
"Of course you did,"
I said.
"You gave him don't you remember--a little--a little "
"I gave
him a box of paints to paint things with."
"That was it."
"Why didn't I
give it to him in the morning?"
"You were so busy getting his party ready for
him.
He had a cake with icing on the top, and three candles,
and his
name in pink sugar? and "
"Yes, I remember," said Christopher Robin?
All the stories written and copyrighted by A.A. Milne