The Mole had long wanted to make the
acquaintance of the Badger. He seemed, by all
accounts, to be such an important personage and, though
rarely visible, to make his unseen influence felt by
everybody about the place. But whenever the Mole
mentioned his wish to the Water Rat he always found
himself put off. ‘It’s all right,’
the Rat would say. ’Badger’ll turn
up some day or other he’s always turning
up and then I’ll introduce you.
The best of fellows! But you must not only take
him as you find him, but when you find him.’
‘Couldn’t you ask him
here dinner or something?’ said the Mole.
‘He wouldn’t come,’
replied the Rat simply. ’Badger hates Society,
and invitations, and dinner, and all that sort of
thing.’
‘Well, then, supposing we go
and call on him?’ suggested the Mole.
‘O, I’m sure he wouldn’t
like that at all,’ said the Rat, quite alarmed.
’He’s so very shy, he’d be sure to
be offended. I’ve never even ventured to
call on him at his own home myself, though I know him
so well. Besides, we can’t. It’s
quite out of the question, because he lives in the
very middle of the Wild Wood.’
‘Well, supposing he does,’
said the Mole. ’You told me the Wild Wood
was all right, you know.’
‘O, I know, I know, so it is,’
replied the Rat evasively. ’But I think
we won’t go there just now. Not just
yet. It’s a long way, and he wouldn’t
be at home at this time of year anyhow, and he’ll
be coming along some day, if you’ll wait quietly.’
The Mole had to be content with this.
But the Badger never came along, and every day brought
its amusements, and it was not till summer was long
over, and cold and frost and miry ways kept them much
indoors, and the swollen river raced past outside
their windows with a speed that mocked at boating
of any sort or kind, that he found his thoughts dwelling
again with much persistence on the solitary grey Badger,
who lived his own life by himself, in his hole in
the middle of the Wild Wood.
In the winter time the Rat slept a
great deal, retiring early and rising late. During
his short day he sometimes scribbled poetry or did
other small domestic jobs about the house; and, of
course, there were always animals dropping in for
a chat, and consequently there was a good deal of
story-telling and comparing notes on the past summer
and all its doings.
Such a rich chapter it had been, when
one came to look back on it all! With illustrations
so numerous and so very highly coloured! The pageant
of the river bank had marched steadily along, unfolding
itself in scene-pictures that succeeded each other
in stately procession. Purple loosestrife arrived
early, shaking luxuriant tangled locks along the edge
of the mirror whence its own face laughed back at it.
Willow-herb, tender and wistful, like a pink sunset
cloud, was not slow to follow. Comfrey, the purple
hand-in-hand with the white, crept forth to take its
place in the line; and at last one morning the diffident
and delaying dog-rose stepped delicately on the stage,
and one knew, as if string-music had announced it
in stately chords that strayed into a gavotte, that
June at last was here. One member of the company
was still awaited; the shepherd-boy for the nymphs
to woo, the knight for whom the ladies waited at the
window, the prince that was to kiss the sleeping summer
back to life and love. But when meadow-sweet,
debonair and odorous in amber jerkin, moved graciously
to his place in the group, then the play was ready
to begin.
And what a play it had been!
Drowsy animals, snug in their holes while wind and
rain were battering at their doors, recalled still
keen mornings, an hour before sunrise, when the white
mist, as yet undispersed, clung closely along the
surface of the water; then the shock of the early
plunge, the scamper along the bank, and the radiant
transformation of earth, air, and water, when suddenly
the sun was with them again, and grey was gold and
colour was born and sprang out of the earth once more.
They recalled the languorous siesta of hot mid-day,
deep in green undergrowth, the sun striking through
in tiny golden shafts and spots; the boating and bathing
of the afternoon, the rambles along dusty lanes and
through yellow cornfields; and the long, cool evening
at last, when so many threads were gathered up, so
many friendships rounded, and so many adventures planned
for the morrow. There was plenty to talk about
on those short winter days when the animals found
themselves round the fire; still, the Mole had a good
deal of spare time on his hands, and so one afternoon,
when the Rat in his arm-chair before the blaze was
alternately dozing and trying over rhymes that wouldn’t
fit, he formed the resolution to go out by himself
and explore the Wild Wood, and perhaps strike up an
acquaintance with Mr. Badger.
It was a cold still afternoon with
a hard steely sky overhead, when he slipped out of
the warm parlour into the open air. The country
lay bare and entirely leafless around him, and he
thought that he had never seen so far and so intimately
into the insides of things as on that winter day when
Nature was deep in her annual slumber and seemed to
have kicked the clothes off. Copses, dells, quarries
and all hidden places, which had been mysterious mines
for exploration in leafy summer, now exposed themselves
and their secrets pathetically, and seemed to ask him
to overlook their shabby poverty for a while, till
they could riot in rich masquerade as before, and
trick and entice him with the old deceptions.
It was pitiful in a way, and yet cheering even
exhilarating. He was glad that he liked the country
undecorated, hard, and stripped of its finery.
He had got down to the bare bones of it, and they were
fine and strong and simple. He did not want the
warm clover and the play of seeding grasses; the screens
of quickset, the billowy drapery of beech and elm
seemed best away; and with great cheerfulness of spirit
he pushed on towards the Wild Wood, which lay before
him low and threatening, like a black reef in some
still southern sea.
There was nothing to alarm him at
first entry. Twigs crackled under his feet, logs
tripped him, funguses on stumps resembled caricatures,
and startled him for the moment by their likeness
to something familiar and far away; but that was all
fun, and exciting. It led him on, and he penetrated
to where the light was less, and trees crouched nearer
and nearer, and holes made ugly mouths at him on either
side.
Everything was very still now.
The dusk advanced on him steadily, rapidly, gathering
in behind and before; and the light seemed to be draining
away like flood-water.
Then the faces began.
It was over his shoulder, and indistinctly,
that he first thought he saw a face; a little evil
wedge-shaped face, looking out at him from a hole.
When he turned and confronted it, the thing had vanished.
He quickened his pace, telling himself
cheerfully not to begin imagining things, or there
would be simply no end to it. He passed another
hole, and another, and another; and then yes! no! yes!
certainly a little narrow face, with hard eyes, had
flashed up for an instant from a hole, and was gone.
He hesitated braced himself up for an effort
and strode on. Then suddenly, and as if it had
been so all the time, every hole, far and near, and
there were hundreds of them, seemed to possess its
face, coming and going rapidly, all fixing on him glances
of malice and hatred: all hard-eyed and evil
and sharp.
If he could only get away from the
holes in the banks, he thought, there would be no
more faces. He swung off the path and plunged
into the untrodden places of the wood.
Then the whistling began.
Very faint and shrill it was, and
far behind him, when first he heard it; but somehow
it made him hurry forward. Then, still very faint
and shrill, it sounded far ahead of him, and made
him hesitate and want to go back. As he halted
in indecision it broke out on either side, and seemed
to be caught up and passed on throughout the whole
length of the wood to its farthest limit. They
were up and alert and ready, evidently, whoever they
were! And he he was alone, and unarmed,
and far from any help; and the night was closing in.
Then the pattering began.
He thought it was only falling leaves
at first, so slight and delicate was the sound of
it. Then as it grew it took a regular rhythm,
and he knew it for nothing else but the pat-pat-pat
of little feet still a very long way off. Was
it in front or behind? It seemed to be first one,
and then the other, then both. It grew and it
multiplied, till from every quarter as he listened
anxiously, leaning this way and that, it seemed to
be closing in on him. As he stood still to hearken,
a rabbit came running hard towards him through the
trees. He waited, expecting it to slacken pace,
or to swerve from him into a different course.
Instead, the animal almost brushed him as it dashed
past, his face set and hard, his eyes staring.
‘Get out of this, you fool, get out!’ the
Mole heard him mutter as he swung round a stump and
disappeared down a friendly burrow.
The pattering increased till it sounded
like sudden hail on the dry leaf-carpet spread around
him. The whole wood seemed running now, running
hard, hunting, chasing, closing in round something
or somebody? In panic, he began to
run too, aimlessly, he knew not whither. He ran
up against things, he fell over things and into things,
he darted under things and dodged round things.
At last he took refuge in the deep dark hollow of
an old beech tree, which offered shelter, concealment perhaps
even safety, but who could tell? Anyhow, he was
too tired to run any further, and could only snuggle
down into the dry leaves which had drifted into the
hollow and hope he was safe for a time. And as
he lay there panting and trembling, and listened to
the whistlings and the patterings outside, he knew
it at last, in all its fullness, that dread thing
which other little dwellers in field and hedgerow had
encountered here, and known as their darkest moment that
thing which the Rat had vainly tried to shield him
from the Terror of the Wild Wood!
Meantime the Rat, warm and comfortable,
dozed by his fireside. His paper of half-finished
verses slipped from his knee, his head fell back, his
mouth opened, and he wandered by the verdant banks
of dream-rivers. Then a coal slipped, the fire
crackled and sent up a spurt of flame, and he woke
with a start. Remembering what he had been engaged
upon, he reached down to the floor for his verses,
pored over them for a minute, and then looked round
for the Mole to ask him if he knew a good rhyme for
something or other.
But the Mole was not there.
He listened for a time. The house seemed very
quiet.
Then he called ‘Moly!’
several times, and, receiving no answer, got up and
went out into the hall.
The Mole’s cap was missing from
its accustomed peg. His goloshes, which always
lay by the umbrella-stand, were also gone.
The Rat left the house, and carefully
examined the muddy surface of the ground outside,
hoping to find the Mole’s tracks. There
they were, sure enough. The goloshes were new,
just bought for the winter, and the pimples on their
soles were fresh and sharp. He could see the imprints
of them in the mud, running along straight and purposeful,
leading direct to the Wild Wood.
The Rat looked very grave, and stood
in deep thought for a minute or two. Then he
re-entered the house, strapped a belt round his waist,
shoved a brace of pistols into it, took up a stout
cudgel that stood in a corner of the hall, and set
off for the Wild Wood at a smart pace.
It was already getting towards dusk
when he reached the first fringe of trees and plunged
without hesitation into the wood, looking anxiously
on either side for any sign of his friend. Here
and there wicked little faces popped out of holes,
but vanished immediately at sight of the valorous
animal, his pistols, and the great ugly cudgel in his
grasp; and the whistling and pattering, which he had
heard quite plainly on his first entry, died away
and ceased, and all was very still. He made his
way manfully through the length of the wood, to its
furthest edge; then, forsaking all paths, he set himself
to traverse it, laboriously working over the whole
ground, and all the time calling out cheerfully, ’Moly,
Moly, Moly! Where are you? It’s me it’s
old Rat!’
He had patiently hunted through the
wood for an hour or more, when at last to his joy
he heard a little answering cry. Guiding himself
by the sound, he made his way through the gathering
darkness to the foot of an old beech tree, with a
hole in it, and from out of the hole came a feeble
voice, saying ‘Ratty! Is that really you?’
The Rat crept into the hollow, and
there he found the Mole, exhausted and still trembling.
‘O Rat!’ he cried, ’I’ve been
so frightened, you can’t think!’
‘O, I quite understand,’
said the Rat soothingly. ’You shouldn’t
really have gone and done it, Mole. I did my
best to keep you from it. We river-bankers, we
hardly ever come here by ourselves. If we have
to come, we come in couples, at least; then we’re
generally all right. Besides, there are a hundred
things one has to know, which we understand all about
and you don’t, as yet. I mean passwords,
and signs, and sayings which have power and effect,
and plants you carry in your pocket, and verses you
repeat, and dodges and tricks you practise; all simple
enough when you know them, but they’ve got to
be known if you’re small, or you’ll find
yourself in trouble. Of course if you were Badger
or Otter, it would be quite another matter.’
’Surely the brave Mr. Toad wouldn’t
mind coming here by himself, would he?’ inquired
the Mole.
‘Old Toad?’ said the Rat,
laughing heartily. ’He wouldn’t show
his face here alone, not for a whole hatful of golden
guineas, Toad wouldn’t.’
The Mole was greatly cheered by the
sound of the Rat’s careless laughter, as well
as by the sight of his stick and his gleaming pistols,
and he stopped shivering and began to feel bolder and
more himself again.
‘Now then,’ said the Rat
presently, ’we really must pull ourselves together
and make a start for home while there’s still
a little light left. It will never do to spend
the night here, you understand. Too cold, for
one thing.’
‘Dear Ratty,’ said the
poor Mole, ’I’m dreadfully sorry, but I’m
simply dead beat and that’s a solid fact.
You must let me rest here a while longer, and
get my strength back, if I’m to get home at all.’
‘O, all right,’ said the
good-natured Rat, ’rest away. It’s
pretty nearly pitch dark now, anyhow; and there ought
to be a bit of a moon later.’
So the Mole got well into the dry
leaves and stretched himself out, and presently dropped
off into sleep, though of a broken and troubled sort;
while the Rat covered himself up, too, as best he might,
for warmth, and lay patiently waiting, with a pistol
in his paw.
When at last the Mole woke up, much
refreshed and in his usual spirits, the Rat said,
’Now then! I’ll just take a look outside
and see if everything’s quiet, and then we really
must be off.’
He went to the entrance of their retreat
and put his head out. Then the Mole heard him
saying quietly to himself, ’Hullo! hullo! here is a go!’
‘What’s up, Ratty?’ asked the Mole.
‘Snow is up,’ replied
the Rat briefly; ’or rather, down.
It’s snowing hard.’
The Mole came and crouched beside
him, and, looking out, saw the wood that had been
so dreadful to him in quite a changed aspect.
Holes, hollows, pools, pitfalls, and other black menaces
to the wayfarer were vanishing fast, and a gleaming
carpet of faery was springing up everywhere, that
looked too delicate to be trodden upon by rough feet.
A fine powder filled the air and caressed the cheek
with a tingle in its touch, and the black boles of
the trees showed up in a light that seemed to come
from below.
‘Well, well, it can’t
be helped,’ said the Rat, after pondering.
’We must make a start, and take our chance,
I suppose. The worst of it is, I don’t
exactly know where we are. And now this snow makes
everything look so very different.’
It did indeed. The Mole would
not have known that it was the same wood. However,
they set out bravely, and took the line that seemed
most promising, holding on to each other and pretending
with invincible cheerfulness that they recognized
an old friend in every fresh tree that grimly and
silently greeted them, or saw openings, gaps, or paths
with a familiar turn in them, in the monotony of white
space and black tree-trunks that refused to vary.
An hour or two later they
had lost all count of time they pulled
up, dispirited, weary, and hopelessly at sea, and sat
down on a fallen tree-trunk to recover their breath
and consider what was to be done. They were aching
with fatigue and bruised with tumbles; they had fallen
into several holes and got wet through; the snow was
getting so deep that they could hardly drag their
little legs through it, and the trees were thicker
and more like each other than ever. There seemed
to be no end to this wood, and no beginning, and no
difference in it, and, worst of all, no way out.
‘We can’t sit here very
long,’ said the Rat. ’We shall have
to make another push for it, and do something or other.
The cold is too awful for anything, and the snow will
soon be too deep for us to wade through.’
He peered about him and considered. ‘Look
here,’ he went on, ’this is what occurs
to me. There’s a sort of dell down here
in front of us, where the ground seems all hilly and
humpy and hummocky. We’ll make our way
down into that, and try and find some sort of shelter,
a cave or hole with a dry floor to it, out of the
snow and the wind, and there we’ll have a good
rest before we try again, for we’re both of us
pretty dead beat. Besides, the snow may leave
off, or something may turn up.’
So once more they got on their feet,
and struggled down into the dell, where they hunted
about for a cave or some corner that was dry and a
protection from the keen wind and the whirling snow.
They were investigating one of the hummocky bits the
Rat had spoken of, when suddenly the Mole tripped
up and fell forward on his face with a squeal.
‘O my leg!’ he cried.
‘O my poor shin!’ and he sat up on the
snow and nursed his leg in both his front paws.
‘Poor old Mole!’ said the Rat kindly.
’You don’t seem to be
having much luck to-day, do you? Let’s have
a look at the leg. Yes,’ he went on, going
down on his knees to look, ’you’ve cut
your shin, sure enough. Wait till I get at my
handkerchief, and I’ll tie it up for you.’
‘I must have tripped over a
hidden branch or a stump,’ said the Mole miserably.
‘O, my! O, my!’
‘It’s a very clean cut,’
said the Rat, examining it again attentively.
’That was never done by a branch or a stump.
Looks as if it was made by a sharp edge of something
in metal. Funny!’ He pondered awhile, and
examined the humps and slopes that surrounded them.
‘Well, never mind what done
it,’ said the Mole, forgetting his grammar in
his pain. ‘It hurts just the same, whatever
done it.’
But the Rat, after carefully tying
up the leg with his handkerchief, had left him and
was busy scraping in the snow. He scratched and
shovelled and explored, all four legs working busily,
while the Mole waited impatiently, remarking at intervals,
‘O, come on, Rat!’
Suddenly the Rat cried ‘Hooray!’
and then ‘Hooray-oo-ray-oo-ray-oo-ray!’
and fell to executing a feeble jig in the snow.
‘What have you found, Ratty?’
asked the Mole, still nursing his leg.
‘Come and see!’ said the delighted Rat,
as he jigged on.
The Mole hobbled up to the spot and had a good look.
‘Well,’ he said at last,
slowly, ’I see it right enough. Seen
the same sort of thing before, lots of times.
Familiar object, I call it. A door-scraper!
Well, what of it? Why dance jigs around a door-scraper?’
‘But don’t you see what
it means, you you dull-witted animal?’
cried the Rat impatiently.
‘Of course I see what it means,’
replied the Mole. ’It simply means that
some very careless and forgetful person has left
his door-scraper lying about in the middle of the
Wild Wood, just where it’s sure to
trip everybody up. Very thoughtless of him,
I call it. When I get home I shall go and complain
about it to to somebody or other, see if
I don’t!’
‘O, dear! O, dear!’
cried the Rat, in despair at his obtuseness. ’Here,
stop arguing and come and scrape!’ And he set
to work again and made the snow fly in all directions
around him.
After some further toil his efforts
were rewarded, and a very shabby door-mat lay exposed
to view.
‘There, what did I tell you?’
exclaimed the Rat in great triumph.
‘Absolutely nothing whatever,’
replied the Mole, with perfect truthfulness.
‘Well now,’ he went on, ’you seem
to have found another piece of domestic litter, done
for and thrown away, and I suppose you’re perfectly
happy. Better go ahead and dance your jig round
that if you’ve got to, and get it over, and
then perhaps we can go on and not waste any more time
over rubbish-heaps. Can we eat a doormat?
or sleep under a door-mat? Or sit on a door-mat
and sledge home over the snow on it, you exasperating
rodent?’
‘Do you mean to say,’
cried the excited Rat, ’that this door-mat doesn’t
tell you anything?’
‘Really, Rat,’ said the
Mole, quite pettishly, ’I think we’d had
enough of this folly. Who ever heard of a door-mat
telling anyone anything? They simply don’t
do it. They are not that sort at all. Door-mats
know their place.’
‘Now look here, you you
thick-headed beast,’ replied the Rat, really
angry, ’this must stop. Not another word,
but scrape scrape and scratch and dig and
hunt round, especially on the sides of the hummocks,
if you want to sleep dry and warm to-night, for it’s
our last chance!’
The Rat attacked a snow-bank beside
them with ardour, probing with his cudgel everywhere
and then digging with fury; and the Mole scraped busily
too, more to oblige the Rat than for any other reason,
for his opinion was that his friend was getting light-headed.
Some ten minutes’ hard work,
and the point of the Rat’s cudgel struck something
that sounded hollow. He worked till he could get
a paw through and feel; then called the Mole to come
and help him. Hard at it went the two animals,
till at last the result of their labours stood full
in view of the astonished and hitherto incredulous
Mole.
In the side of what had seemed to
be a snow-bank stood a solid-looking little door,
painted a dark green. An iron bell-pull hung by
the side, and below it, on a small brass plate, neatly
engraved in square capital letters, they could read
by the aid of moonlight Mr. Badger.
The Mole fell backwards on the snow
from sheer surprise and delight. ‘Rat!’
he cried in penitence, ’you’re a wonder!
A real wonder, that’s what you are. I see
it all now! You argued it out, step by step, in
that wise head of yours, from the very moment that
I fell and cut my shin, and you looked at the cut,
and at once your majestic mind said to itself, “Door-scraper!”
And then you turned to and found the very door-scraper
that done it! Did you stop there? No.
Some people would have been quite satisfied; but not
you. Your intellect went on working. “Let
me only just find a door-mat,” says you to yourself,
“and my theory is proved!” And of course
you found your door-mat. You’re so clever,
I believe you could find anything you liked.
“Now,” says you, “that door exists,
as plain as if I saw it. There’s nothing
else remains to be done but to find it!” Well,
I’ve read about that sort of thing in books,
but I’ve never come across it before in real
life. You ought to go where you’ll be properly
appreciated. You’re simply wasted here,
among us fellows. If I only had your head, Ratty ’
‘But as you haven’t,’
interrupted the Rat, rather unkindly, ’I suppose
you’re going to sit on the snow all night and
talk Get up at once and hang on to that bell-pull
you see there, and ring hard, as hard as you can,
while I hammer!’
While the Rat attacked the door with
his stick, the Mole sprang up at the bell-pull, clutched
it and swung there, both feet well off the ground,
and from quite a long way off they could faintly hear
a deep-toned bell respond.