When it began to grow dark, the Rat,
with an air of excitement and mystery, summoned them
back into the parlour, stood each of them up alongside
of his little heap, and proceeded to dress them up
for the coming expedition. He was very earnest
and thoroughgoing about it, and the affair took quite
a long time. First, there was a belt to go round
each animal, and then a sword to be stuck into each
belt, and then a cutlass on the other side to balance
it. Then a pair of pistols, a policeman’s
truncheon, several sets of handcuffs, some bandages
and sticking-plaster, and a flask and a sandwich-case.
The Badger laughed good-humouredly and said, ’All
right, Ratty! It amuses you and it doesn’t
hurt me. I’m going to do all I’ve
got to do with this here stick.’ But the
Rat only said, ’please, Badger. You
know I shouldn’t like you to blame me afterwards
and say I had forgotten anything!’
When all was quite ready, the Badger
took a dark lantern in one paw, grasped his great
stick with the other, and said, ’Now then, follow
me! Mole first, ’cos I’m very pleased
with him; Rat next; Toad last. And look here,
Toady! Don’t you chatter so much as usual,
or you’ll be sent back, as sure as fate!’
The Toad was so anxious not to be
left out that he took up the inferior position assigned
to him without a murmur, and the animals set off.
The Badger led them along by the river for a little
way, and then suddenly swung himself over the edge
into a hole in the river-bank, a little above the
water. The Mole and the Rat followed silently,
swinging themselves successfully into the hole as
they had seen the Badger do; but when it came to Toad’s
turn, of course he managed to slip and fall into the
water with a loud splash and a squeal of alarm.
He was hauled out by his friends, rubbed down and
wrung out hastily, comforted, and set on his legs;
but the Badger was seriously angry, and told him that
the very next time he made a fool of himself he would
most certainly be left behind.
So at last they were in the secret
passage, and the cutting-out expedition had really
begun!
It was cold, and dark, and damp, and
low, and narrow, and poor Toad began to shiver, partly
from dread of what might be before him, partly because
he was wet through. The lantern was far ahead,
and he could not help lagging behind a little in the
darkness. Then he heard the Rat call out warningly,
‘come on, Toad!’ and a terror seized
him of being left behind, alone in the darkness, and
he ‘came on’ with such a rush that he
upset the Rat into the Mole and the Mole into the Badger,
and for a moment all was confusion. The Badger
thought they were being attacked from behind, and,
as there was no room to use a stick or a cutlass, drew
a pistol, and was on the point of putting a bullet
into Toad. When he found out what had really
happened he was very angry indeed, and said, ‘Now
this time that tiresome Toad shall be left behind!’
But Toad whimpered, and the other
two promised that they would be answerable for his
good conduct, and at last the Badger was pacified,
and the procession moved on; only this time the Rat
brought up the rear, with a firm grip on the shoulder
of Toad.
So they groped and shuffled along,
with their ears pricked up and their paws on their
pistols, till at last the Badger said, ’We ought
by now to be pretty nearly under the Hall.’
Then suddenly they heard, far away
as it might be, and yet apparently nearly over their
heads, a confused murmur of sound, as if people were
shouting and cheering and stamping on the floor and
hammering on tables. The Toad’s nervous
terrors all returned, but the Badger only remarked
placidly, ‘They are going it, the Weasels!’
The passage now began to slope upwards;
they groped onward a little further, and then the
noise broke out again, quite distinct this time, and
very close above them. ‘Ooo-ray-ooray-oo-ray-ooray!’
they heard, and the stamping of little feet on the
floor, and the clinking of glasses as little fists
pounded on the table. ‘What a time
they’re having!’ said the Badger.
‘Come on!’ They hurried along the passage
till it came to a full stop, and they found themselves
standing under the trap-door that led up into the
butler’s pantry.
Such a tremendous noise was going
on in the banqueting-hall that there was little danger
of their being overheard. The Badger said, ’Now,
boys, all together!’ and the four of them put
their shoulders to the trap-door and heaved it back.
Hoisting each other up, they found themselves standing
in the pantry, with only a door between them and the
banqueting-hall, where their unconscious enemies were
carousing.
The noise, as they emerged from the
passage, was simply deafening. At last, as the
cheering and hammering slowly subsided, a voice could
be made out saying, ’Well, I do not propose to
detain you much longer’ (great applause) ’but
before I resume my seat’ (renewed
cheering) ’I should like to say one
word about our kind host, Mr. Toad. We all know
Toad!’ (great laughter) ’good
Toad, modest Toad, honest Toad!’ (shrieks
of merriment).
‘Only just let me get at him!’
muttered Toad, grinding his teeth.
‘Hold hard a minute!’
said the Badger, restraining him with difficulty.
‘Get ready, all of you!’
‘ Let me sing you
a little song,’ went on the voice, ’which
I have composed on the subject of Toad’ (prolonged
applause).
Then the Chief Weasel for
it was he began in a high, squeaky voice
’Toad he went a-pleasuring
Gaily down the street ’
The Badger drew himself up, took a
firm grip of his stick with both paws, glanced round
at his comrades, and cried
‘The hour is come!
Follow me!’
And flung the door open wide.
My!
What a squealing and a squeaking and a screeching
filled the air!
Well might the terrified weasels dive
under the tables and spring madly up at the windows!
Well might the ferrets rush wildly for the fireplace
and get hopelessly jammed in the chimney! Well
might tables and chairs be upset, and glass and china
be sent crashing on the floor, in the panic of that
terrible moment when the four Heroes strode wrathfully
into the room! The mighty Badger, his whiskers
bristling, his great cudgel whistling through the
air; Mole, black and grim, brandishing his stick and
shouting his awful war-cry, ‘A Mole! A Mole!’
Rat; desperate and determined, his belt bulging with
weapons of every age and every variety; Toad, frenzied
with excitement and injured pride, swollen to twice
his ordinary size, leaping into the air and emitting
Toad-whoops that chilled them to the marrow!
‘Toad he went a-pleasuring!’ he yelled.
’I’ll pleasure ’em!’ and
he went straight for the Chief Weasel. They were
but four in all, but to the panic-stricken weasels
the hall seemed full of monstrous animals, grey, black,
brown and yellow, whooping and flourishing enormous
cudgels; and they broke and fled with squeals of terror
and dismay, this way and that, through the windows,
up the chimney, anywhere to get out of reach of those
terrible sticks.
The affair was soon over. Up
and down, the whole length of the hall, strode the
four Friends, whacking with their sticks at every head
that showed itself; and in five minutes the room was
cleared. Through the broken windows the shrieks
of terrified weasels escaping across the lawn were
borne faintly to their ears; on the floor lay prostrate
some dozen or so of the enemy, on whom the Mole was
busily engaged in fitting handcuffs. The Badger,
resting from his labours, leant on his stick and wiped
his honest brow.
‘Mole,’ he said,’
’you’re the best of fellows! Just
cut along outside and look after those stoat-sentries
of yours, and see what they’re doing. I’ve
an idea that, thanks to you, we shan’t have much
trouble from them to-night!’
The Mole vanished promptly through
a window; and the Badger bade the other two set a
table on its legs again, pick up knives and forks and
plates and glasses from the debris on the floor, and
see if they could find materials for a supper.
‘I want some grub, I do,’ he said, in that
rather common way he had of speaking. ’Stir
your stumps, Toad, and look lively! We’ve
got your house back for you, and you don’t offer
us so much as a sandwich.’ Toad felt rather
hurt that the Badger didn’t say pleasant things
to him, as he had to the Mole, and tell him what a
fine fellow he was, and how splendidly he had fought;
for he was rather particularly pleased with himself
and the way he had gone for the Chief Weasel and sent
him flying across the table with one blow of his stick.
But he bustled about, and so did the Rat, and soon
they found some guava jelly in a glass dish, and a
cold chicken, a tongue that had hardly been touched,
some trifle, and quite a lot of lobster salad; and
in the pantry they came upon a basketful of French
rolls and any quantity of cheese, butter, and celery.
They were just about to sit down when the Mole clambered
in through the window, chuckling, with an armful of
rifles.
‘It’s all over,’
he reported. ’From what I can make out,
as soon as the stoats, who were very nervous and jumpy
already, heard the shrieks and the yells and the uproar
inside the hall, some of them threw down their rifles
and fled. The others stood fast for a bit, but
when the weasels came rushing out upon them they thought
they were betrayed; and the stoats grappled with the
weasels, and the weasels fought to get away, and they
wrestled and wriggled and punched each other, and rolled
over and over, till most of ’em rolled into the
river! They’ve all disappeared by now,
one way or another; and I’ve got their rifles.
So that’s all right!’
‘Excellent and deserving animal!’
said the Badger, his mouth full of chicken and trifle.
’Now, there’s just one more thing I want
you to do, Mole, before you sit down to your supper
along of us; and I wouldn’t trouble you only
I know I can trust you to see a thing done, and I wish
I could say the same of every one I know. I’d
send Rat, if he wasn’t a poet. I want you
to take those fellows on the floor there upstairs with
you, and have some bedrooms cleaned out and tidied
up and made really comfortable. See that they
sweep under the beds, and put clean sheets and
pillow-cases on, and turn down one corner of the bed-clothes,
just as you know it ought to be done; and have a can
of hot water, and clean towels, and fresh cakes of
soap, put in each room. And then you can give
them a licking a-piece, if it’s any satisfaction
to you, and put them out by the back-door, and we
shan’t see any more of them, I fancy.
And then come along and have some of this cold tongue.
It’s first rate. I’m very pleased
with you, Mole!’
The goodnatured Mole picked up a stick,
formed his prisoners up in a line on the floor, gave
them the order ‘Quick march!’ and led his
squad off to the upper floor. After a time, he
appeared again, smiling, and said that every room
was ready, and as clean as a new pin. ’And
I didn’t have to lick them, either,’ he
added. ’I thought, on the whole, they had
had licking enough for one night, and the weasels,
when I put the point to them, quite agreed with me,
and said they wouldn’t think of troubling me.
They were very penitent, and said they were extremely
sorry for what they had done, but it was all the fault
of the Chief Weasel and the stoats, and if ever they
could do anything for us at any time to make up, we
had only got to mention it. So I gave them a roll
a-piece, and let them out at the back, and off they
ran, as hard as they could!’
Then the Mole pulled his chair up
to the table, and pitched into the cold tongue; and
Toad, like the gentleman he was, put all his jealousy
from him, and said heartily, ’Thank you kindly,
dear Mole, for all your pains and trouble tonight,
and especially for your cleverness this morning!’
The Badger was pleased at that, and said, ’There
spoke my brave Toad!’ So they finished their
supper in great joy and contentment, and presently
retired to rest between clean sheets, safe in Toad’s
ancestral home, won back by matchless valour, consummate
strategy, and a proper handling of sticks.
The following morning, Toad, who had
overslept himself as usual, came down to breakfast
disgracefully late, and found on the table a certain
quantity of egg-shells, some fragments of cold and
leathery toast, a coffee-pot three-fourths empty,
and really very little else; which did not tend to
improve his temper, considering that, after all, it
was his own house. Through the French windows
of the breakfast-room he could see the Mole and the
Water Rat sitting in wicker-chairs out on the lawn,
evidently telling each other stories; roaring with
laughter and kicking their short legs up in the air.
The Badger, who was in an arm-chair and deep in the
morning paper, merely looked up and nodded when Toad
entered the room. But Toad knew his man, so he
sat down and made the best breakfast he could, merely
observing to himself that he would get square with
the others sooner or later. When he had nearly
finished, the Badger looked up and remarked rather
shortly: ’I’m sorry, Toad, but I’m
afraid there’s a heavy morning’s work
in front of you. You see, we really ought to
have a Banquet at once, to celebrate this affair.
It’s expected of you in fact, it’s
the rule.’
‘O, all right!’ said the
Toad, readily. ’Anything to oblige.
Though why on earth you should want to have a Banquet
in the morning I cannot understand. But you know
I do not live to please myself, but merely to find
out what my friends want, and then try and arrange
it for ’em, you dear old Badger!’
‘Don’t pretend to be stupider
than you really are,’ replied the Badger, crossly;
’and don’t chuckle and splutter in your
coffee while you’re talking; it’s not
manners. What I mean is, the Banquet will be at
night, of course, but the invitations will have to
be written and got off at once, and you’ve got
to write ’em. Now, sit down at that table there’s
stacks of letter-paper on it, with “Toad Hall”
at the top in blue and gold and write invitations
to all our friends, and if you stick to it we shall
get them out before luncheon. And I’ll
bear a hand, too; and take my share of the burden.
I’ll order the Banquet.’
‘What!’ cried Toad, dismayed.
’Me stop indoors and write a lot of rotten letters
on a jolly morning like this, when I want to go around
my property, and set everything and everybody to rights,
and swagger about and enjoy myself! Certainly
not! I’ll be I’ll see you Stop
a minute, though! Why, of course, dear Badger!
What is my pleasure or convenience compared with that
of others! You wish it done, and it shall be done.
Go, Badger, order the Banquet, order what you like;
then join our young friends outside in their innocent
mirth, oblivious of me and my cares and toils.
I sacrifice this fair morning on the altar of duty
and friendship!’
The Badger looked at him very suspiciously,
but Toad’s frank, open countenance made it difficult
to suggest any unworthy motive in this change of attitude.
He quitted the room, accordingly, in the direction
of the kitchen, and as soon as the door had closed
behind him, Toad hurried to the writing-table.
A fine idea had occurred to him while he was talking.
He would write the invitations; and he would take
care to mention the leading part he had taken in the
fight, and how he had laid the Chief Weasel flat;
and he would hint at his adventures, and what a career
of triumph he had to tell about; and on the fly-leaf
he would set out a sort of a programme of entertainment
for the evening something like this, as
he sketched it out in his head:
Speech. . . . By toad.
(There will be other speeches by toad
during the evening.)
Address. . . By toad
Synopsis Our Prison System the
Waterways of Old England Horse-dealing,
and how to deal Property, its rights
and its duties Back to the Land
A Typical English Squire.
Song. . . . By toad.
(Composed by himself.)
Other compositions. By
toad
will be sung in the course of the evening
by the. . . Composer.
The idea pleased him mightily, and
he worked very hard and got all the letters finished
by noon, at which hour it was reported to him that
there was a small and rather bedraggled weasel at the
door, inquiring timidly whether he could be of any
service to the gentlemen. Toad swaggered out
and found it was one of the prisoners of the previous
evening, very respectful and anxious to please.
He patted him on the head, shoved the bundle of invitations
into his paw, and told him to cut along quick and
deliver them as fast as he could, and if he liked
to come back again in the evening, perhaps there might
be a shilling for him, or, again, perhaps there mightn’t;
and the poor weasel seemed really quite grateful,
and hurried off eagerly to do his mission.
When the other animals came back to
luncheon, very boisterous and breezy after a morning
on the river, the Mole, whose conscience had been
pricking him, looked doubtfully at Toad, expecting
to find him sulky or depressed. Instead, he was
so uppish and inflated that the Mole began to suspect
something; while the Rat and the Badger exchanged significant
glances.
As soon as the meal was over, Toad
thrust his paws deep into his trouser-pockets, remarked
casually, ’Well, look after yourselves, you
fellows! Ask for anything you want!’ and
was swaggering off in the direction of the garden,
where he wanted to think out an idea or two for his
coming speeches, when the Rat caught him by the arm.
Toad rather suspected what he was
after, and did his best to get away; but when the
Badger took him firmly by the other arm he began to
see that the game was up. The two animals conducted
him between them into the small smoking-room that
opened out of the entrance-hall, shut the door, and
put him into a chair. Then they both stood in
front of him, while Toad sat silent and regarded them
with much suspicion and ill-humour.
‘Now, look here, Toad,’
said the Rat. ’It’s about this Banquet,
and very sorry I am to have to speak to you like this.
But we want you to understand clearly, once and for
all, that there are going to be no speeches and no
songs. Try and grasp the fact that on this occasion
we’re not arguing with you; we’re just
telling you.’
Toad saw that he was trapped.
They understood him, they saw through him, they had
got ahead of him. His pleasant dream was shattered.
‘Mayn’t I sing them just
one little song?’ he pleaded piteously.
‘No, not one little song,’
replied the Rat firmly, though his heart bled as he
noticed the trembling lip of the poor disappointed
Toad. ’It’s no good, Toady; you know
well that your songs are all conceit and boasting
and vanity; and your speeches are all self-praise and and well,
and gross exaggeration and and ’
‘And gas,’ put in the Badger, in his common
way.
‘It’s for your own good,
Toady,’ went on the Rat. ’You know
you must turn over a new leaf sooner or later,
and now seems a splendid time to begin; a sort of
turning-point in your career. Please don’t
think that saying all this doesn’t hurt me more
than it hurts you.’
Toad remained a long while plunged
in thought. At last he raised his head, and the
traces of strong emotion were visible on his features.
‘You have conquered, my friends,’ he said
in broken accents. ’It was, to be sure,
but a small thing that I asked merely leave
to blossom and expand for yet one more evening, to
let myself go and hear the tumultuous applause that
always seems to me somehow to
bring out my best qualities. However, you are
right, I know, and I am wrong. Hence forth I
will be a very different Toad. My friends, you
shall never have occasion to blush for me again.
But, O dear, O dear, this is a hard world!’
And, pressing his handkerchief to
his face, he left the room, with faltering footsteps.
‘Badger,’ said the Rat,
’I feel like a brute; I wonder what you
feel like?’
‘O, I know, I know,’ said
the Badger gloomily. ’But the thing had
to be done. This good fellow has got to live
here, and hold his own, and be respected. Would
you have him a common laughing-stock, mocked and jeered
at by stoats and weasels?’
‘Of course not,’ said
the Rat. ’And, talking of weasels, it’s
lucky we came upon that little weasel, just as he
was setting out with Toad’s invitations.
I suspected something from what you told me, and had
a look at one or two; they were simply disgraceful.
I confiscated the lot, and the good Mole is now sitting
in the blue boudoir, filling up plain, simple invitation
cards.’
At last the hour for the banquet began
to draw near, and Toad, who on leaving the others
had retired to his bedroom, was still sitting there,
melancholy and thoughtful. His brow resting on
his paw, he pondered long and deeply. Gradually
his countenance cleared, and he began to smile long,
slow smiles. Then he took to giggling in a shy,
self-conscious manner. At last he got up, locked
the door, drew the curtains across the windows, collected
all the chairs in the room and arranged them in a
semicircle, and took up his position in front of them,
swelling visibly. Then he bowed, coughed twice,
and, letting himself go, with uplifted voice he sang,
to the enraptured audience that his imagination so
clearly saw.
Toad’slast little song!
The Toad came home!
There was panic in the parlours and howling in
the halls,
There was crying in the cow-sheds and shrieking
in the stalls,
When the Toad came home!
When the Toad came home!
There was smashing in of window and crashing in
of door,
There was chivvying of weasels that fainted on
the floor,
When the Toad came home!
Bang! go the drums!
The trumpeters are tooting and the soldiers
are saluting,
And the cannon they are shooting and
the motor-cars are hooting,
As the Hero comes!
Shout Hoo-ray!
And let each one of the crowd try and
shout it very loud,
In honour of an animal of whom you’re
justly proud,
For it’s Toad’s great day!
He sang this very loud, with great
unction and expression; and when he had done, he sang
it all over again.
Then he heaved a deep sigh; a long, long, long sigh.
Then he dipped his hairbrush in the
water-jug, parted his hair in the middle, and plastered
it down very straight and sleek on each side of his
face; and, unlocking the door, went quietly down the
stairs to greet his guests, who he knew must be assembling
in the drawing-room.
All the animals cheered when he entered,
and crowded round to congratulate him and say nice
things about his courage, and his cleverness, and
his fighting qualities; but Toad only smiled faintly,
and murmured, ‘Not at all!’ Or, sometimes,
for a change, ’On the contrary!’ Otter,
who was standing on the hearthrug, describing to an
admiring circle of friends exactly how he would have
managed things had he been there, came forward with
a shout, threw his arm round Toad’s neck, and
tried to take him round the room in triumphal progress;
but Toad, in a mild way, was rather snubby to him,
remarking gently, as he disengaged himself, ’Badger’s
was the mastermind; the Mole and the Water Rat bore
the brunt of the fighting; I merely served in the ranks
and did little or nothing.’ The animals
were evidently puzzled and taken aback by this unexpected
attitude of his; and Toad felt, as he moved from one
guest to the other, making his modest responses, that
he was an object of absorbing interest to every one.
The Badger had ordered everything
of the best, and the banquet was a great success.
There was much talking and laughter and chaff among
the animals, but through it all Toad, who of course
was in the chair, looked down his nose and murmured
pleasant nothings to the animals on either side of
him. At intervals he stole a glance at the Badger
and the Rat, and always when he looked they were staring
at each other with their mouths open; and this gave
him the greatest satisfaction. Some of the younger
and livelier animals, as the evening wore on, got whispering
to each other that things were not so amusing as they
used to be in the good old days; and there were some
knockings on the table and cries of ‘Toad!
Speech! Speech from Toad! Song! Mr.
Toad’s song!’ But Toad only shook his
head gently, raised one paw in mild protest, and, by
pressing delicacies on his guests, by topical small-talk,
and by earnest inquiries after members of their families
not yet old enough to appear at social functions,
managed to convey to them that this dinner was being
run on strictly conventional lines.
He was indeed an altered Toad!
After this climax, the four animals
continued to lead their lives, so rudely broken in
upon by civil war, in great joy and contentment, undisturbed
by further risings or invasions. Toad, after due
consultation with his friends, selected a handsome
gold chain and locket set with pearls, which he dispatched
to the gaoler’s daughter with a letter that
even the Badger admitted to be modest, grateful, and
appreciative; and the engine-driver, in his turn, was
properly thanked and compensated for all his pains
and trouble. Under severe compulsion from the
Badger, even the barge-woman was, with some trouble,
sought out and the value of her horse discreetly made
good to her; though Toad kicked terribly at this,
holding himself to be an instrument of Fate, sent
to punish fat women with mottled arms who couldn’t
tell a real gentleman when they saw one. The
amount involved, it was true, was not very burdensome,
the gipsy’s valuation being admitted by local
assessors to be approximately correct.
Sometimes, in the course of long summer
evenings, the friends would take a stroll together
in the Wild Wood, now successfully tamed so far as
they were concerned; and it was pleasing to see how
respectfully they were greeted by the inhabitants,
and how the mother-weasels would bring their young
ones to the mouths of their holes, and say, pointing,
’Look, baby! There goes the great Mr. Toad!
And that’s the gallant Water Rat, a terrible
fighter, walking along o’ him! And yonder
comes the famous Mr. Mole, of whom you so often have
heard your father tell!’ But when their infants
were fractious and quite beyond control, they would
quiet them by telling how, if they didn’t hush
them and not fret them, the terrible grey Badger would
up and get them. This was a base libel on Badger,
who, though he cared little about Society, was rather
fond of children; but it never failed to have its
full effect.