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IT rained and it rained and it
rained. Piglet told himself that never in all his life, and he was goodness
knows
how old--three, was it, or four?--never had he seen so much rain. Days
and days and days.
"If only," he thought, as he looked out of the window, "I
had been in Pooh's house, or Christopher Robin's house, or
Rabbit's house
when it began to rain, then I should have had Company all this time, instead of
being
here all alone, with nothing to do except wonder when it will stop."
And he imagined himself with Pooh, saying, "Did you ever see such rain,
Pooh?"
and Pooh saying, "Isn't it awful, Piglet?" and
Piglet saying, "I
wonder how it is over Christopher Robin's way,"
and Pooh saying, "I should
think poor old Rabbit is about flooded out by this time."
It would have been
jolly to talk like this, and really, it wasn't much good having anything
exciting like floods,
if you couldn't share them with somebody. For it was
rather exciting. The little dry ditches in which Piglet had
nosed about so
often had become streams, the little streams across which he had splashed were
rivers,
and the river, between whose steep banks they had played so happily,
had sprawled out of its own bed and was
taking up so much room everywhere,
that Piglet was beginning to wonder whether it would be
coming into his bed
soon.
"It's a little Anxious," he said
to himself,
"to be a Very Small Animal Entirely Surrounded by Water.
Christopher Robin and Pooh could escape by Climbing Trees,
and Kanga
could escape by Jumping,
and Rabbit could escape by Burrowing,
and Owl
could escape by Flying,
and Eeyore could escape by--by Making a Loud Noise
Until Rescued,
and here am I, surrounded by water and I can't do
anything."
It went on raining, and every day the water got a little higher,
until now it was nearly up to Piglet's window
. . . and still he hadn't
done anything.
"There's Pooh," he thought to himself. "Pooh hasn't
much Brain, but he never comes to any harm.
He does silly things and they
turn out right. There's Owl. Owl hasn't exactly got Brain, but he Knows
Things.
He would know the Right Thing to Do when Surrounded by Water. There's
Rabbit. He hasn't Learnt in Books
but he can always Think of a Clever Plan.
There's Kanga. She isn't Clever, Kanga isn't, but she would be so anxious
about Roo that she would do a Good Thing to Do without thinking about it.
And then there's Eeyore
And Eeyore is so miserable anyhow that he wouldn't
mind about this.
But I wonder what Christopher Robin would do?"
Then
suddenly he remembered a story which Christopher Robin had told him about a man
on a desert island
who had written something in a bottle and thrown it in the
sea; and Piglet thought that if he wrote something
in a bottle and threw it
in the water, perhaps somebody would come and rescue him!
He left the window
and began to search his house, all of it that wasn't under water, and at last he
found a pencil and a
small piece of dry paper, and a bottle with a cork to
it. And he wrote on one side of the paper:
Then he put the
paper in the bottle,
and he corked the bottle up as tightly as he
could
and he leant out of his window
as far as he could lean without
falling in
and he threw the bottle as far as he could throw
--splash!--and
in a little while it bobbed up again on the water;
and he
watched it floating slowly away in the distance
until his eyes ached with
looking, and sometimes he thought it was the bottle
and sometimes he thought
it was just a ripple on the water which he was
following, and then suddenly
he knew that he would never see it again
and that he had done all that he
could do to save himself.
"So now," he thought, "somebody else will have to
do something
and I hope they will do it soon, because if they don't
I
shall have to swim, which I can't, so I hope they do it soon."
And then he
gave a very long sigh and said, "I wish Pooh were here. It's so much more
friendly with two."
When the rain began Pooh was asleep. It rained, and
it rained, and it rained, and he slept and he slept and he slept.
He had had
a tiring day. You remember how he discovered the North Pole; well, he was so
proud of
this that he asked Christopher Robin if there were any other Poles
such as a Bear of Little Brain might discover.
"There's a South Pole," said
Christopher Robin, "and I expect there's an East Pole and a West Pole
though
people don't like talking about them."
Pooh was very excited when he heard
this, and suggested that they should have an Expotition to discover the East
Pole, but Christopher Robin had thought of something else to do with Kanga;
so Pooh went out to discover
the East Pole by himself. Whether he discovered
it or not, I forget; but he was so tired when he got home that, in the
very
middle of his supper, after he had been eating for little more than
half-an-hour, he fell fast asleep
in his chair, and slept and slept and
slept.
Then suddenly he was dreaming. He was at the East Pole, and it was a
very cold pole with the coldest sort of snow
and ice all over it. He had
found a bee-hive to sleep in, but there wasn't room for his legs, so he had
left
them outside. And Wild Woozles, such as inhabit the East Pole, came and
nibbled all the fur off his legs to make
Nests for their Young. And the more
they nibbled, the colder his legs got, until suddenly he woke up with
an
Ow!--and there he was, sitting in his chair with his feet in the water, and
water all round him!
He splashed to his door and looked out....
"This is
Serious," said Pooh. "I must have an Escape."
So he took his largest pot of
honey and escaped with it to a broad branch of his tree, well above the
water
and then he climbed down again and escaped with another pot . . . and
when the whole Escape was finished
there was Pooh sitting on his branch
dangling his legs, and there, beside him, were ten pots of honey....

Two days later, there was Pooh, sitting on his branch, dangling his legs, and there, beside him, were four pots of honey.... Three days later, there was Pooh, sitting on his branch, dangling his legs, and there beside him, was one pot of honey. Four days later, there was Pooh . . . And it was on the morning of the fourth day that Piglet's bottle came floating past him, and with one loud cry of "Honey!"
Pooh plunged into the water, seized the bottle
and
struggled back to his tree again.
"Bother!" said Pooh, as he opened
it.
"All that wet for nothing. What's that bit of paper doing?"
He took it
out and looked at it. "It's a Missage,"
he said to himself, "that's what it
is. And that letter
is a 'P,' and so is that, and so is that, and 'P' means
'Pooh,' so it's a very important Missage to me,
and I can't read it. I must
find Christopher Robin or Owl or Piglet, one of those Clever Readers who can
read things
and they will tell me what this missage means. Only I can't
swim. Bother!"
Then he had an idea, and I think that for a Bear of Very
Little Brain, it was a good idea. He said to himself: "If a bottle can float,
then a jar can float, and if a jar floats, I can sit on the top of it, if it's a
very big jar."
So he took his biggest jar, and corked it up. "All boats
have to have a name," he said, "so I shall call mine The Floating Bear."
And
with these words he dropped his boat into the water and jumped in after
it.
For a little while Pooh and The Floating Bear were uncertain as to which
of them was meant to be on the top,
but after trying one or two different
positions, they settled down with The Floating Bear underneath and
Pooh
triumphantly astride it, paddling vigorously with his
feet.
Christopher Robin lived at the very top of the Forest. It rained,
and it rained, and it rained, but the water
couldn't come up to his house.
It was rather jolly to look down into the valleys and see the water all round
him
but it rained so hard that he stayed indoors most of the time, and
thought about things.
Every morning he went out with his umbrella and put a
stick in the place where the water came up to
and every next morning he went
out and couldn't see his stick any more, so he put another stick in the
place
where the water came up to, and then he walked home again, and each
morning he had a shorter way to walk than he
had had the morning before. On
the morning of the fifth day he saw the water all round him, and he new
that
for the first time in his life he was on a real island. Which is very
exciting. It was on this morning that Owl came
flying over the water to
say
"How do you do?" to his friend Christopher Robin.
"I say, Owl," said
Christopher Robin, "isn't this fun? I'm on an island!"
"The atmospheric
conditions have been very unfavourable lately," said Owl.
"The what?"
"It
has been raining," explained Owl.
"Yes," said Christopher Robin. "It
has."
"The flood-level has reached an unprecedented height."
"The
who?"
"There's a lot of water about," explained Owl.
"Yes," said
Christopher Robin, "there is."
"However, the prospects are rapidly becoming
more favourable. At any moment--"
"Have you seen Pooh?"
"No. At any
moment--"
"I hope he's all right," said Christopher Robin. "I've been
wondering about him. I expect Piglet's with him.
Do you think they're all
right, Owl?"
"I expect so. You see, at any moment--"
"Do go and see, Owl.
Because Pooh hasn't got very much brain, and he might do something silly,
and I do love him so, Owl. Do you see, Owl?"
"That's all right," said
Owl. "I'll go. Back directly." And he flew off.
In a little while he was
back again. Pooh isn't there," he said.
"Not there?"
"He's been there.
He's been sitting on a branch of his tree outside his house with nine pots of
honey.
But he isn't there now."
"Oh, Pooh!" cried Christopher Robin.
"Where are you?"
"Here I am," said a growly voice behind
him.
"Pooh!"
They rushed into each other's arms.
"How did you
get here, Pooh?" asked Christopher Robin
when he was ready to talk
again.
"On my boat," said Pooh proudly.
"I had a Very Important Missage
sent me in a bottle, and owing to having
got some water in my eyes, I
couldn't read it, so I brought it to you. On my boat."
With these proud words
he gave Christopher Robin the missage.
"But it's from Piglet!" cried
Christopher Robin when he had read it.
"Isn't there anything about Pooh in
it?" asked Bear, looking over his shoulder.
Christopher Robin read the
message aloud.
"Oh, are those 'P's' piglets? I thought they were
poohs."
"We must rescue him at once! I thought he was with you,
Pooh.
Owl, could you rescue him on your back?"
"I don't think so," said Owl, after
grave thought.
"It is doubtful if the necessary dorsal muscles--"
"Then
would you fly to him at once and say that Rescue is Coming?
And Pooh and I
will think of a Rescue
and come as quick as ever we can. Oh, don't talk,
Owl, go on quick!"
And, still thinking of something to say, Owl flew
off.
"Now then, Pooh," said Christopher Robin, "where's your boat?"
"I
ought to say," explained Pooh as they walked down to the shore of the
island
"that it isn't just an ordinary sort of boat. Sometimes it's a Boat,
and sometimes it's more of an Accident.
It all depends."
"Depends on what?"
"On whether I'm on top of it or underneath it."
"Oh! Well, where is it?"
"There!" said Pooh, pointing proudly to The Floating Bear.
It wasn't what Christopher Robin expected, and the more he looked at it, the more he thought what a Brave
and Clever Bear Pooh was, and the more Christopher Robin
thought this, the more Pooh looked modestly
down his nose and tried to
pretend he wasn't.
"But it's too small for two of us," said Christopher Robin
sadly.
"Three of us with Piglet."
"That makes it smaller still Oh, Pooh Bear, what shall we do?"
And then this Bear, Pooh Bear, Winnie-the-Pooh,
F.O.P. (Friend of Piglet's), R.C. (Rabbit's Companion)
P.D. (Pole Discoverer), E.C. and T.F. (Eeyore's Comforter and Tail-finder)--in fact, Pooh himself--said something so clever that Christopher Robin could only look at
him with mouth open and eyes staring, wondering if this was
really the Bear
of Very Little Brain whom he had know and loved so long.
"We might go in your umbrella," said Pooh.
"?"
"We might go in your umbrella," said Pooh.
"??"
"We might go in your umbrella," said Pooh.
"!!!!!!"
For suddenly Christopher Robin saw that they might.
He opened his umbrella and put it point downwards
in the water. It floated but wobbled. Pooh got in.
He was just beginning
to say that it was all right now, when
he found that it wasn't, so after a
short drink
which he didn't really want, he waded back to Christopher Robin.
Then they both got in together, and it wobbled no longer.
"I shall call
this boat The Brain of Pooh," said Christopher Robin, and The Brain of Pooh
set sail forthwith in
a south-westerly direction, revolving
gracefully.
You can imagine Piglet's joy when at last the ship
came in
sight of him. In after-years he liked to think that he had
been in Very
Great Danger during the Terrible Flood
but the only danger he had really
been in was the last
half-hour of his imprisonment, when Owl, who had just
flown up
sat on a branch of his tree to comfort him,
and told him a very
long story about an aunt who
had once laid a seagull's egg by mistake, and
the story went on
and on, rather like this sentence, until Piglet who
was
listening out of his window without much hope
went to sleep quietly
and naturally, slipping slowly out of the window towards the water until he was
only hanging on
by his toes, at which moment, luckily, a sudden loud squawk
from Owl, which was really part of the story,
being what his aunt said, woke
the Piglet up and just gave him time to jerk himself back into safety and say,
"How interesting, and did she?" when--well, you can imagine his joy when at
last he saw the good ship,
Brain of Pooh (Captain, C. Robin; Ist Mate, P.
Bear) coming over the sea to rescue him.. ..
And as that is really the end of
the story, and I am very tired after that last sentence, I think I shall stop
there.
All the stories written and copyrighted by A.A. Milne