‘Ratty,’ said the Mole
suddenly, one bright summer morning, ’if you
please, I want to ask you a favour.’
The Rat was sitting on the river bank,
singing a little song. He had just composed it
himself, so he was very taken up with it, and would
not pay proper attention to Mole or anything else.
Since early morning he had been swimming in the river,
in company with his friends the ducks. And when
the ducks stood on their heads suddenly, as ducks will,
he would dive down and tickle their necks, just under
where their chins would be if ducks had chins, till
they were forced to come to the surface again in a
hurry, spluttering and angry and shaking their feathers
at him, for it is impossible to say quite all
you feel when your head is under water. At last
they implored him to go away and attend to his own
affairs and leave them to mind theirs. So the
Rat went away, and sat on the river bank in the sun,
and made up a song about them, which he called
‘Ducks’Ditty.’
All along the backwater,
Through the rushes tall,
Ducks are a-dabbling,
Up tails all!
Ducks’ tails, drakes’ tails,
Yellow feet a-quiver,
Yellow bills all out of sight
Busy in the river!
Slushy
green undergrowth
Where
the roach swim
Here
we keep our larder,
Cool
and full and dim.
Everyone for what he likes! We
like to be Heads down, tails up, Dabbling
free!
High in the blue above Swifts
whirl and call We are
down a-dabbling Uptails all!
‘I don’t know that I think
so very much of that little song, Rat,’
observed the Mole cautiously. He was no poet himself
and didn’t care who knew it; and he had a candid
nature.
‘Nor don’t the ducks neither,’
replied the Rat cheerfully. ’They say,
“Why can’t fellows be allowed to do
what they like when they like and as they
like, instead of other fellows sitting on banks and
watching them all the time and making remarks and
poetry and things about them? What nonsense
it all is!” That’s what the ducks say.’
‘So it is, so it is,’
said the Mole, with great heartiness.
‘No, it isn’t!’ cried the Rat indignantly.
‘Well then, it isn’t,
it isn’t,’ replied the Mole soothingly.
’But what I wanted to ask you was, won’t
you take me to call on Mr. Toad? I’ve heard
so much about him, and I do so want to make his acquaintance.’
‘Why, certainly,’ said
the good-natured Rat, jumping to his feet and dismissing
poetry from his mind for the day. ’Get the
boat out, and we’ll paddle up there at once.
It’s never the wrong time to call on Toad.
Early or late he’s always the same fellow.
Always good-tempered, always glad to see you, always
sorry when you go!’
‘He must be a very nice animal,’
observed the Mole, as he got into the boat and took
the sculls, while the Rat settled himself comfortably
in the stern.
‘He is indeed the best of animals,’
replied Rat. ’So simple, so good-natured,
and so affectionate. Perhaps he’s not very
clever we can’t all be geniuses;
and it may be that he is both boastful and conceited.
But he has got some great qualities, has Toady.’
Rounding a bend in the river, they
came in sight of a handsome, dignified old house of
mellowed red brick, with well-kept lawns reaching
down to the water’s edge.
‘There’s Toad Hall,’
said the Rat; ’and that creek on the left, where
the notice-board says, “Private. No landing
allowed,” leads to his boat-house, where we’ll
leave the boat. The stables are over there to
the right. That’s the banqueting-hall you’re
looking at now very old, that is.
Toad is rather rich, you know, and this is really one
of the nicest houses in these parts, though we never
admit as much to Toad.’
They glided up the creek, and the
Mole slipped his sculls as they passed into the shadow
of a large boat-house. Here they saw many handsome
boats, slung from the cross beams or hauled up on a
slip, but none in the water; and the place had an
unused and a deserted air.
The Rat looked around him. ‘I
understand,’ said he. ’Boating is
played out. He’s tired of it, and done
with it. I wonder what new fad he has taken up
now? Come along and let’s look him up.
We shall hear all about it quite soon enough.’
They disembarked, and strolled across
the gay flower-decked lawns in search of Toad, whom
they presently happened upon resting in a wicker garden-chair,
with a pre-occupied expression of face, and a large
map spread out on his knees.
‘Hooray!’ he cried, jumping
up on seeing them, ‘this is splendid!’
He shook the paws of both of them warmly, never waiting
for an introduction to the Mole. ‘How kind
of you!’ he went on, dancing round them.
’I was just going to send a boat down the river
for you, Ratty, with strict orders that you were to
be fetched up here at once, whatever you were doing.
I want you badly both of you. Now what
will you take? Come inside and have something!
You don’t know how lucky it is, your turning
up just now!’
‘Let’s sit quiet a bit,
Toady!’ said the Rat, throwing himself into an
easy chair, while the Mole took another by the side
of him and made some civil remark about Toad’s
‘delightful residence.’
‘Finest house on the whole river,’
cried Toad boisterously. ’Or anywhere else,
for that matter,’ he could not help adding.
Here the Rat nudged the Mole.
Unfortunately the Toad saw him do it, and turned very
red. There was a moment’s painful silence.
Then Toad burst out laughing. ‘All right,
Ratty,’ he said. ’It’s only
my way, you know. And it’s not such a very
bad house, is it? You know you rather like it
yourself. Now, look here. Let’s be
sensible. You are the very animals I wanted.
You’ve got to help me. It’s most important!’
‘It’s about your rowing,
I suppose,’ said the Rat, with an innocent air.
’You’re getting on fairly well, though
you splash a good bit still. With a great deal
of patience, and any quantity of coaching, you may ’
‘O, pooh! boating!’ interrupted
the Toad, in great disgust. Silly boyish amusement.
I’ve given that up long ago. Sheer
waste of time, that’s what it is. It makes
me downright sorry to see you fellows, who ought to
know better, spending all your energies in that aimless
manner. No, I’ve discovered the real thing,
the only genuine occupation for a life time.
I propose to devote the remainder of mine to it, and
can only regret the wasted years that lie behind me,
squandered in trivialities. Come with me, dear
Ratty, and your amiable friend also, if he will be
so very good, just as far as the stable-yard, and
you shall see what you shall see!’
He led the way to the stable-yard
accordingly, the Rat following with a most mistrustful
expression; and there, drawn out of the coach house
into the open, they saw a gipsy caravan, shining with
newness, painted a canary-yellow picked out with green,
and red wheels.
‘There you are!’ cried
the Toad, straddling and expanding himself. ’There’s
real life for you, embodied in that little cart.
The open road, the dusty highway, the heath, the common,
the hedgerows, the rolling downs! Camps, villages,
towns, cities! Here to-day, up and off to somewhere
else to-morrow! Travel, change, interest, excitement!
The whole world before you, and a horizon that’s
always changing! And mind! this is the very finest
cart of its sort that was ever built, without any
exception. Come inside and look at the arrangements.
Planned ’em all myself, I did!’
The Mole was tremendously interested
and excited, and followed him eagerly up the steps
and into the interior of the caravan. The Rat
only snorted and thrust his hands deep into his pockets,
remaining where he was.
It was indeed very compact and comfortable.
Little sleeping bunks a little table that
folded up against the wall a cooking-stove,
lockers, bookshelves, a bird-cage with a bird in it;
and pots, pans, jugs and kettles of every size and
variety.
‘All complete!’ said the
Toad triumphantly, pulling open a locker. ’You
see biscuits, potted lobster, sardines everything
you can possibly want. Soda-water here baccy
there letter-paper, bacon, jam, cards and
dominoes you’ll find,’ he continued,
as they descended the steps again, ’you’ll
find that nothing what ever has been forgotten, when
we make our start this afternoon.’
‘I beg your pardon,’ said
the Rat slowly, as he chewed a straw, ’but did
I overhear you say something about “We,”
and “Start,” and “This
afternoon?"’
‘Now, you dear good old Ratty,’
said Toad, imploringly, ’don’t begin talking
in that stiff and sniffy sort of way, because you know
you’ve got to come. I can’t
possibly manage without you, so please consider it
settled, and don’t argue it’s
the one thing I can’t stand. You surely
don’t mean to stick to your dull fusty old river
all your life, and just live in a hole in a bank,
and boat? I want to show you the world!
I’m going to make an animal of you, my
boy!’
‘I don’t care,’
said the Rat, doggedly. ’I’m not coming,
and that’s flat. And I am going to
stick to my old river, and live in a hole, and
boat, as I’ve always done. And what’s
more, Mole’s going to stick me and do as I do,
aren’t you, Mole?’
‘Of course I am,’ said
the Mole, loyally. ’I’ll always stick
to you, Rat, and what you say is to be has
got to be. All the same, it sounds as if it might
have been well, rather fun, you know!’
he added, wistfully. Poor Mole! The Life
Adventurous was so new a thing to him, and so thrilling;
and this fresh aspect of it was so tempting; and he
had fallen in love at first sight with the canary-coloured
cart and all its little fitments.
The Rat saw what was passing in his
mind, and wavered. He hated disappointing people,
and he was fond of the Mole, and would do almost anything
to oblige him. Toad was watching both of them
closely.
‘Come along in, and have some
lunch,’ he said, diplomatically, ’and
we’ll talk it over. We needn’t decide
anything in a hurry. Of course, I don’t
really care. I only want to give pleasure to you
fellows. “Live for others!” That’s
my motto in life.’
During luncheon which was
excellent, of course, as everything at Toad Hall always
was the Toad simply let himself go.
Disregarding the Rat, he proceeded to play upon the
inexperienced Mole as on a harp. Naturally a
voluble animal, and always mastered by his imagination,
he painted the prospects of the trip and the joys
of the open life and the roadside in such glowing
colours that the Mole could hardly sit in his chair
for excitement. Somehow, it soon seemed taken
for granted by all three of them that the trip was
a settled thing; and the Rat, though still unconvinced
in his mind, allowed his good-nature to over-ride his
personal objections. He could not bear to disappoint
his two friends, who were already deep in schemes
and anticipations, planning out each day’s separate
occupation for several weeks ahead.
When they were quite ready, the now
triumphant Toad led his companions to the paddock
and set them to capture the old grey horse, who, without
having been consulted, and to his own extreme annoyance,
had been told off by Toad for the dustiest job in
this dusty expedition. He frankly preferred the
paddock, and took a deal of catching. Meantime
Toad packed the lockers still tighter with necessaries,
and hung nosebags, nets of onions, bundles of hay,
and baskets from the bottom of the cart. At last
the horse was caught and harnessed, and they set off,
all talking at once, each animal either trudging by
the side of the cart or sitting on the shaft, as the
humour took him. It was a golden afternoon.
The smell of the dust they kicked up was rich and
satisfying; out of thick orchards on either side the
road, birds called and whistled to them cheerily;
good-natured wayfarers, passing them, gave them ‘Good-day,’
or stopped to say nice things about their beautiful
cart; and rabbits, sitting at their front doors in
the hedgerows, held up their fore-paws, and said,
‘O my! O my! O my!’
Late in the evening, tired and happy
and miles from home, they drew up on a remote common
far from habitations, turned the horse loose to graze,
and ate their simple supper sitting on the grass by
the side of the cart. Toad talked big about all
he was going to do in the days to come, while stars
grew fuller and larger all around them, and a yellow
moon, appearing suddenly and silently from nowhere
in particular, came to keep them company and listen
to their talk. At last they turned in to their
little bunks in the cart; and Toad, kicking out his
legs, sleepily said, ’Well, good night, you
fellows! This is the real life for a gentleman!
Talk about your old river!’
‘I don’t talk about
my river,’ replied the patient Rat. ’You
know I don’t, Toad. But I think
about it,’ he added pathetically, in a lower
tone: ‘I think about it all the
time!’
The Mole reached out from under his
blanket, felt for the Rat’s paw in the darkness,
and gave it a squeeze. ‘I’ll do whatever
you like, Ratty,’ he whispered. ’Shall
we run away to-morrow morning, quite early very
early and go back to our dear old hole on
the river?’
‘No, no, we’ll see it
out,’ whispered back the Rat. ’Thanks
awfully, but I ought to stick by Toad till this trip
is ended. It wouldn’t be safe for him to
be left to himself. It won’t take very long.
His fads never do. Good night!’
The end was indeed nearer than even the Rat suspected.
After so much open air and excitement
the Toad slept very soundly, and no amount of shaking
could rouse him out of bed next morning. So the
Mole and Rat turned to, quietly and manfully, and while
the Rat saw to the horse, and lit a fire, and cleaned
last night’s cups and platters, and got things
ready for breakfast, the Mole trudged off to the nearest
village, a long way off, for milk and eggs and various
necessaries the Toad had, of course, forgotten to
provide. The hard work had all been done, and
the two animals were resting, thoroughly exhausted,
by the time Toad appeared on the scene, fresh and
gay, remarking what a pleasant easy life it was they
were all leading now, after the cares and worries
and fatigues of housekeeping at home.
They had a pleasant ramble that day
over grassy downs and along narrow by-lanes, and camped
as before, on a common, only this time the two guests
took care that Toad should do his fair share of work.
In consequence, when the time came for starting next
morning, Toad was by no means so rapturous about the
simplicity of the primitive life, and indeed attempted
to resume his place in his bunk, whence he was hauled
by force. Their way lay, as before, across country
by narrow lanes, and it was not till the afternoon
that they came out on the high-road, their first high-road;
and there disaster, fleet and unforeseen, sprang out
on them disaster momentous indeed to their
expedition, but simply overwhelming in its effect
on the after-career of Toad.
They were strolling along the high-road
easily, the Mole by the horse’s head, talking
to him, since the horse had complained that he was
being frightfully left out of it, and nobody considered
him in the least; the Toad and the Water Rat walking
behind the cart talking together at least
Toad was talking, and Rat was saying at intervals,
’Yes, precisely; and what did you say to
him?’ and thinking all the time
of something very different, when far behind them they
heard a faint warning hum; like the drone of a distant
bee. Glancing back, they saw a small cloud of
dust, with a dark centre of energy, advancing on them
at incredible speed, while from out the dust a faint
‘Poop-poop!’ wailed like an uneasy animal
in pain. Hardly regarding it, they turned to
resume their conversation, when in an instant (as it
seemed) the peaceful scene was changed, and with a
blast of wind and a whirl of sound that made them
jump for the nearest ditch, It was on them! The
‘Poop-poop’ rang with a brazen shout in
their ears, they had a moment’s glimpse of an
interior of glittering plate-glass and rich morocco,
and the magnificent motor-car, immense, breath-snatching,
passionate, with its pilot tense and hugging his wheel,
possessed all earth and air for the fraction of a
second, flung an enveloping cloud of dust that blinded
and enwrapped them utterly, and then dwindled to a
speck in the far distance, changed back into a droning
bee once more.
The old grey horse, dreaming, as he
plodded along, of his quiet paddock, in a new raw
situation such as this simply abandoned himself to
his natural emotions. Rearing, plunging, backing
steadily, in spite of all the Mole’s efforts
at his head, and all the Mole’s lively language
directed at his better feelings, he drove the cart
backwards towards the deep ditch at the side of the
road. It wavered an instant then there
was a heartrending crash and the canary-coloured
cart, their pride and their joy, lay on its side in
the ditch, an irredeemable wreck.
The Rat danced up and down in the
road, simply transported with passion. ‘You
villains!’ he shouted, shaking both fists, ’You
scoundrels, you highwaymen, you you roadhogs! I’ll
have the law of you! I’ll report you!
I’ll take you through all the Courts!’
His home-sickness had quite slipped away from him,
and for the moment he was the skipper of the canary-coloured
vessel driven on a shoal by the reckless jockeying
of rival mariners, and he was trying to recollect
all the fine and biting things he used to say to masters
of steam-launches when their wash, as they drove too
near the bank, used to flood his parlour-carpet at
home.
Toad sat straight down in the middle
of the dusty road, his legs stretched out before him,
and stared fixedly in the direction of the disappearing
motor-car. He breathed short, his face wore a
placid satisfied expression, and at intervals he faintly
murmured ‘Poop-poop!’
The Mole was busy trying to quiet
the horse, which he succeeded in doing after a time.
Then he went to look at the cart, on its side in the
ditch. It was indeed a sorry sight. Panels
and windows smashed, axles hopelessly bent, one wheel
off, sardine-tins scattered over the wide world, and
the bird in the bird-cage sobbing pitifully and calling
to be let out.
The Rat came to help him, but their
united efforts were not sufficient to right the cart.
‘Hi! Toad!’ they cried. ’Come
and bear a hand, can’t you!’
The Toad never answered a word, or
budged from his seat in the road; so they went to
see what was the matter with him. They found him
in a sort of a trance, a happy smile on his face,
his eyes still fixed on the dusty wake of their destroyer.
At intervals he was still heard to murmur ‘Poop-poop!’
The Rat shook him by the shoulder.
‘Are you coming to help us, Toad?’ he
demanded sternly.
‘Glorious, stirring sight!’
murmured Toad, never offering to move. ’The
poetry of motion! The real way to travel!
The only way to travel! Here to-day in
next week to-morrow! Villages skipped, towns and
cities jumped always somebody else’s
horizon! O bliss! O poop-poop! O my!
O my!’
‘O stop being an ass, Toad!’ cried
the Mole despairingly.
‘And to think I never knew!’
went on the Toad in a dreamy monotone. ’All
those wasted years that lie behind me, I never knew,
never even dreamt! But now but
now that I know, now that I fully realise! O what
a flowery track lies spread before me, henceforth!
What dust-clouds shall spring up behind me as I speed
on my reckless way! What carts I shall fling
carelessly into the ditch in the wake of my magnificent
onset! Horrid little carts common
carts canary-coloured carts!’
‘What are we to do with him?’
asked the Mole of the Water Rat.
‘Nothing at all,’ replied
the Rat firmly. ’Because there is really
nothing to be done. You see, I know him from of
old. He is now possessed. He has got a new
craze, and it always takes him that way, in its first
stage. He’ll continue like that for days
now, like an animal walking in a happy dream, quite
useless for all practical purposes. Never mind
him. Let’s go and see what there is to be
done about the cart.’
A careful inspection showed them that,
even if they succeeded in righting it by themselves,
the cart would travel no longer. The axles were
in a hopeless state, and the missing wheel was shattered
into pieces.
The Rat knotted the horse’s
reins over his back and took him by the head, carrying
the bird cage and its hysterical occupant in the other
hand. ‘Come on!’ he said grimly to
the Mole. ’It’s five or six miles
to the nearest town, and we shall just have to walk
it. The sooner we make a start the better.’
‘But what about Toad?’
asked the Mole anxiously, as they set off together.
’We can’t leave him here, sitting in the
middle of the road by himself, in the distracted state
he’s in! It’s not safe. Supposing
another Thing were to come along?’
‘O, bother Toad,’
said the Rat savagely; ‘I’ve done with
him!’
They had not proceeded very far on
their way, however, when there was a pattering of
feet behind them, and Toad caught them up and thrust
a paw inside the elbow of each of them; still breathing
short and staring into vacancy.
‘Now, look here, Toad!’
said the Rat sharply: ’as soon as we get
to the town, you’ll have to go straight to the
police-station, and see if they know anything about
that motor-car and who it belongs to, and lodge a
complaint against it. And then you’ll have
to go to a blacksmith’s or a wheelwright’s
and arrange for the cart to be fetched and mended and
put to rights. It’ll take time, but it’s
not quite a hopeless smash. Meanwhile, the Mole
and I will go to an inn and find comfortable rooms
where we can stay till the cart’s ready, and
till your nerves have recovered their shock.’
’Police-station! Complaint!’murmured
Toad dreamily. ’Me complain of that
beautiful, that heavenly vision that has been vouchsafed
me! Mend the cart! I’ve
done with carts for ever. I never want to see
the cart, or to hear of it, again. O, Ratty!
You can’t think how obliged I am to you for
consenting to come on this trip! I wouldn’t
have gone without you, and then I might never have
seen that that swan, that sunbeam, that
thunderbolt! I might never have heard that entrancing
sound, or smelt that bewitching smell! I owe
it all to you, my best of friends!’
The Rat turned from him in despair.
‘You see what it is?’ he said to the Mole,
addressing him across Toad’s head: ’He’s
quite hopeless. I give it up when
we get to the town we’ll go to the railway station,
and with luck we may pick up a train there that’ll
get us back to riverbank to-night. And if ever
you catch me going a-pleasuring with this provoking
animal again!’
He snorted, and during the rest of
that weary trudge addressed his remarks exclusively
to Mole.
On reaching the town they went straight
to the station and deposited Toad in the second-class
waiting-room, giving a porter twopence to keep a strict
eye on him. They then left the horse at an inn
stable, and gave what directions they could about
the cart and its contents. Eventually, a slow
train having landed them at a station not very far
from Toad Hall, they escorted the spell-bound, sleep-walking
Toad to his door, put him inside it, and instructed
his housekeeper to feed him, undress him, and put
him to bed. Then they got out their boat from
the boat-house, sculled down the river home, and at
a very late hour sat down to supper in their own cosy
riverside parlour, to the Rat’s great joy and
contentment.
The following evening the Mole, who
had risen late and taken things very easy all day,
was sitting on the bank fishing, when the Rat, who
had been looking up his friends and gossiping, came
strolling along to find him. ‘Heard the
news?’ he said. ’There’s nothing
else being talked about, all along the river bank.
Toad went up to Town by an early train this morning.
And he has ordered a large and very expensive motor-car.’