
Chapter Four
in which it stops raining for ever, and
something slinky comes out of the river
NOBODY COULD REMEMBER ANYTHING like it. It
had not rained for forty days and forty nights, and it kept getting
hotter. Little streams high up in the Forest became lazy and lost
their sparkle. The boggy bit near Eeyore’s Gloomy Place stopped
being boggy, and the big river became no more than a trickle, so
that Roo could hop across it, jumping from stone to stone, without
getting his tail wet.

Then it got even hotter. In his thick coat, Tigger
hardly bounced at all, while Piglet would go to lie in Eeyore’s
shadow and Eeyore would swish his tail to keep the flies
away.
Still Owl’s barometer said Set Fair, and, when he
tapped it, it still said Set Fair, and when he tapped it again it
fell onto the floor and the glass broke, but it still said Set Fair
and still there was no rain.
The river got thinner and thinner until it was
little more than a few paddling pools which Roo went paddling in
when Kanga wasn’t looking and sometimes when she was, and, when he
came in for tea, he left little paw-shaped patches on the carpet.
At the bottom of a dried-out hollow, Eeyore found an old tin trunk
with HMS Fortitude on the side, and he thought that if it
ever did rain again, this would be a good place to store the
water.
Christopher Robin and Pooh helped Eeyore to drag
the trunk out of the hollow, then sat on the grass to rest.
Pooh said to Christopher Robin, “It’s all very well
for you, Christopher Robin, because you can take your things off,
but I can’t take my fur off.”

But Christopher Robin was too hot to reply. Then
one day, which some said was the hottest yet and others said was
the hottest ever, something long and slinky and furry and whiskery
came out of what had once been a river but now was little better
than a mud patch.

“Oh, la!” said the Silver-and-Silky Slinky Thing,
sitting up straight as a beech-tree and looking around with beady
eyes. “What is a self-respecting otter to do when she can’t have a
bath? And,” she added in a haughty voice, “when she has nothing to
eat?”
“Are you talking to me?” asked Rabbit, who was
bringing what was left of his washing to what was left of the
stream.
“And who are you, Long Ears?”

“I am Rabbit,”said Rabbit, startled and rather
offended. “And who are you?”
“I am asking the questions, Bunny Rabbit. Unless
you are cleverer than I am, which I don’t suppose you are, looking
as if you have just been dragged out of a conjurer’s hat.”
Rabbit was so worried at being spoken to like this
that he didn’t know which way to look. When the Slinky Thing saw
this she grunted a few times, which was as close as she could come
to a chuckle.
“Well, Bunny, if you must know, my name is Lottie.
But you haven’t answered my questions.”
“What were they again?”
“I can’t remember,” said Lottie.
“I’ll go and ask Christopher Robin,” said Rabbit,
and he scuttled away a little faster than usual.
Christopher Robin was looking at an atlas.
“I wonder why so many of the countries are
pink?”hesaid.
“I haven’t time for all that now,” said
Rabbit.

“Well, if you were to visit them, the ground
wouldn’t be pink, would it? And if the world is round why is the
atlas flat?”
“Oh dear,” said Rabbit beginning to panic because
of so many questions in a single morning. Not knowing the answers,
he changed the subject. “Anyway, Christopher Robin, something has
just come out of the river and it wants a bath and something to
eat. I think it’s an otter.”
“I’ve got a bath,” said Christopher Robin
cheerfully. “And there’s some potted meat in the larder. Do you
think that would do?”
“Perhaps you should come and ask her
yourself.”

By the time they got to the oozy bit that had once
been a proper stream, quite a few of the animals had gathered
around the otter, who was twisting and turning in front of them
like a ballerina in a musical box.
“My name is Lottie,” she announced. “See my fine
fur coat, which is the colour of silver when the sun shines upon
it, and pewter when it’s cloudy. And see,” she added, “my golden
eyes, and my long tail which I call my rudder. It has been much
admired for its length and flexibility. And beware,” she concluded,
“my red tongue and my white teeth, which are sharp enough, I can
promise you, when they need to be.”
Then, just when the animals were becoming alarmed,
she rolled over a few times and slithered off to hide in the
bushes.

“Catch me if you can,” she cried. “Bet you
can’t!”
For a while the animals tried their hardest
not to find Lottie, which was difficult because her tail was
sticking out a good six inches. But then Tigger accidentally
stepped on it and Lottie made a growling noise, so the game was
up.
“Welcome to the Forest,” said Christopher Robin
quickly, before anything more disturbing could happen. “I’m
Christopher Robin, and you’re welcome to have a bath at my house,
if that’s what you would like.”
Lottie reappeared from behind the bushes and bobbed
her head gracefully.
“Thank you so much, Mr. Robin. Iwould not trouble
you if I were not in great need.”
Then they all made their way to Christopher Robin’s
house, where Christopher Robin ran a bath and helped Lottie to
climb in.

“Colder, Mr. Robin,” she said. “I like it nice and
cold; it keeps me alert.”
She swam around for a while, tossing the sponge
into the air and catching it, and curling herself into a tight ball
and spinning around with grunts of satisfaction and delight. But
when Christopher Robin offered her potted meat, Lottie said: “Eels
and frogs are what otters eat, so that is what I shall expect for
my supper.”
“I don’t think we have any eels or frogs, Lottie,
but would sardines do?”
“Are they Portuguese?”

“I expect some of them are.”
“Are they in olive oil or tomato sauce?”
“Gosh!” said Christopher Robin who was not used to
being quizzed like this, not even at school, and he went to the
larder and came back with a tin.
“In the best houses,” said Lottie, “they serve both
kinds and have pilchards in the servants’ quarters!”
Christopher Robin wrapped Lottie in a yellow towel
and carried her into the sitting room. He brought her sardines in
olive oil on a blue dish, and she ate them hungrily, chewing up the
crunchy bits and commenting: “Not bad.”
“And now,” she said, “I shall play
you a tune on my mouth organ.”
She did it very prettily, so that the animals
clapped and the bolder ones shouted, “Bravo, Lottie.”

“Thank you. I believe I shall stay,” she told them,
curtsying.

And still it did not rain. Eeyore tried to lie down
in his shadow, but no matter how he tried it was always too quick
for him, and when that did not work he licked the dew off the
blackberry brambles.
“It’s not much fun,” he said, “especially when
there are cobwebs on them, which there usually are in the mornings,
but it’s better than nothing.”
One day, when Christopher Robin turned on the taps
to run Lottie’s bath, there was a sort of coughing noise and all
that emerged from the pipe was a trickle of brownish water and a
deep sigh.
“Oh, la!” cried Lottie. “I’m not getting into that.
I still have standards!”
There was nothing for it but to call a Meeting. Owl
drew up the Agenda, which read:
1. Minnits of the last meeting
2. Lak of water
3. Any other bizness

It was Owl who called the meeting to order.
“Item one,” he said. “Minutes of the last
meeting.”
“There aren’t any,”said Christopher Robin, “because
there wasn’t one. And even if there had been, there wouldn’t have
been.”
The animals murmured their approval.
“Very well,”said Owl a bit grudgingly, “that’s
passed. Item two.”
“It seems to me,” said Rabbit, “that we need water
and we don’t have any. Which means that we need to get some.”
“And quickly!” Lottie added.
“This is true,”admitted Owl. “But where will we get
some from?”

Eeyore raised a hoof. “If anyone’s interested in
hearing what I have to say, which I don’t suppose they are, but
I’ll say it anyway. . . . Where was I? Oh, yes, if people in this
Forest thought a bit more, instead of just minuting all the time,
they might remember that there used to bean old well near Galleon’s
Lap. At least, I think there did.”
“But is it still there?” asked Rabbit. “And can we
find it and will there be water in it if it is and if we
can?”
“Possibly Not and Possibly Not and Possibly
Not,”said Eeyore, “and three Possiblys add up to one
Probably.”
“Then we must go in search of it,” said Owl.

They might not have found the old well had it not
been for Lottie. As they approached the clump of ivy and gorse
which concealed the opening, she suddenly sat up, the hair on her
back bristling, her head high, her ears laid back, her nose
twitching. Very softly she said, “It is here. I can scent it. Water
is to an otter as air is to a bird.”
With that, the animals set about clearing away the
smaller plants while Christopher Robin hacked at the big ones. Soon
a hole in the ground appeared right in front of them.
Around the hole, which Christopher Robin called a
shaft, was a circle of rotten wood crawling with wood lice, an old
rusted bucket on a rickety-looking chain, and an even rustier
winch.
Piglet stared nervously over the edge. “It goes
down and down,” he said.
“It seems to me,” said Christopher Robin sensibly,
“that now we know that there’s a well here, we need to make sure
that there’s water in it, and the way to do that is to throw
something down and listen for a splash. Does anyone have a
pebble?”
“I have,”said Tigger,“but it’s avery special one
that I was keeping for my Collection of Special and Interesting
Stones.”


“Tigger,”said Rabbit severely, “what we have to
consider here is the Greater Good of the Greater Number. Give me
your pebble.”
“Must I?”But even as Tigger asked, he knew what the
answer would be.
Then Rabbit took Tigger’s pebble and held it high
above the shaft and called for silence and let it drop. The animals
listened for what seemed like several minutes but was probably just
a few seconds, and then unmistakably there could be heard a faint
splosh.
“Well,” said Christopher Robin, “that is very good
news indeed.”
“It is good news, I quite see that, Christopher
Robin,” said Pooh, “but if the water is down there and we are up
here...”
“The answer is the bucket,” said Christopher Robin.
“We let down the bucket, and it gets filled with water, and then we
pull it up.”
This suggestion met with general approval, and Pooh
said, “What it is to have a Brain!”
And Christopher Robin said, “Silly old Pooh!” and
dropped the bucket down the well. They all watched as the chain
unwound and the winch spun with a racket like a hundred saucepans
being thrown onto a tin roof, until suddenly everything stopped.
The bucket stopped and the winch stopped and the noise
stopped.
“Machinery!” muttered Eeyore. “Modern inventions!
Never as good as they’re cracked up to be.”
“There must be a blockage,” said Christopher Robin.
“The pebble missed it but the bucket didn’t. What we need is . . .”
and then he stopped and glanced around the animals, and cleared his
throat, and continued, “What we need is a Brave Volunteer to go
down in the bucket to Clear the Obstruction and come back up with
some water.”
There was a long silence in Galleon’s Lap, broken
only by the wind in the pine trees and a distant buzzing of
bees.
“Of course it has to be somebody who is not only
brave but small.”
There was another long silence. When Piglet looked
at the other animals, he noticed that they were all staring at
him.
“Oh dear,”he squeaked.“Why is everyone looking at
me ?” But he already knew why. “Oh dear,” he repeated, “oh dearie
me.”
So then he climbed into the bucket, and stood with
his face just peeping over the edge.
“I don’t much want to be here,” he said.


Eeyore took hold of the winch. “If you want me to
pull you up, little Piglet, just shout ‘Up!’ and if you want to go
deeper—”
“Deeper?”squeaked Piglet.
“—just shout ‘Deeper!’”
“Oh,”squeaked Piglet again. “Oh dearie, dearie
me.”
“Winch away!” cried Christopher Robin, and away
Eeyore winched. The wood creaked and the chain rattled and ever so
slowly the bucket vanished from sight.

Piglet, peering over the top of the bucket, could
see the faces of his friends growing smaller and smaller. He could
not quite smother a squeak of alarm, which echoed around him. The
rope swayed, and it grew ever darker, and Piglet clutched the edge
of the bucket with all his might.
“What if the chain breaks?” he whispered to
himself. “And what if the bucket falls to bits, and what if the
blockage is a Woozle, or Several Woozles, and what if they forget
that I’m down here and go home and have tea and toasted
buns?”
All around him came ghostly echoes whispering
“toasted buns, toasted buns,” and Piglet kept trying to think of a
hum to cheer himself up, but he couldn’t.
Then suddenly the bucket stopped.
Piglet could just make out the blockage. It was a
holly branch that was jammed in the wall.
Piglet grabbed hold of it, and shook it as hard as
he dared. It fell right away, and there was a splash, and the
bucket went down very fast after the tree branch—until there was
another splash, and Piglet found himself bobbing around on an ocean
of dark, glittering water.

Now he knew what had to be done.
1. He tilted the bucket and pushed it under the
water until it was half full and he was three-quarters wet.
Then,
2. He stood on the rim of the bucket and held
very tight onto the chain. And then,
3. He shouted at the very top of his little
voice, “Up! Up! Up, Eeyore, UP!”
He heard his voice echoing all around. After a
while, the bucket began to rise and Piglet, balancing carefully on
the rim and clutching the chain, went with it. The circle of light
at the top of the shaft grew larger and lighter, and there were all
the faces of his friends smiling down. Soon he could feel the sun
on his face and see good old Eeyore turning the winch. He could
hear the cheers and hoorays ringing out, and they were all for him,
for Piglet.
He said in his proudest voice to all his friends:
“It was nothing,” but in his heart he knew that it was not nothing
but Something Very Big Indeed.


For the next few days, while the Friends and
Relations dug a ditch running downhill from the well to Eeyore’s
Gloomy Place, enough water was collected to run down the ditch and
fill Eeyore’s tin trunk to the brim. There Lottie made her home,
which she called Fortitude Hall.
A new game became popular in the Forest. It was
called Doing the Ditch, and, when the rains came, which in due
course they did, as they always will, the nimbler animals would run
up to Galleon’s Lap and throw themselves into the ditch and be
washed all the way down the hill to Eeyore’s Place. Lottie was the
quickest at it because her skin was the sleekest, and she would add
little twists and turns along the way.
“Oh, la la!” she would cry as she landed in a heap
at the bottom. And then she would play a twiddly bit on her mouth
organ because she was having such fun.
Late one evening, a few days after this big
adventure, when Piglet was thinking of going to bed, and thinking
how nice it would be if he were already in bed, and what a bore it
was that he wasn’t already in bed, and how he liked his yellow
pajamas much better than his green ones, there was a knock on the
door. It was Pooh.
“Sorry to come home so late, Piglet, but it takes
time, you know.”
“What does, Pooh?”

“Hums does. You think one is coming and it really
wants to come only it suddenly decides that it won’t come until
later, and maybe not even then. Like sneezing. And then, Piglet, it
comes all of a sudden and you have to be ready for it with a piece
of paper.”
“The sneeze?”
“The hum.”
“Oh, Pooh!” cried Piglet. “Is it a very long
one?”
“Longer than most and almost as long as some,” said
Pooh.
Then Piglet got into his best listening position,
which he did by burrowing down in the cushion that lay on the chair
with the lilac upholstery. He felt himself getting rather red in
the face, especially when Pooh cleared his throat and began.

Oh, it wouldn’t rain and it wouldn’t snow
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
At this point, Pooh broke off.
“You must join in with the ‘ho’s’ when you get to
know when they are coming, Piglet,” he said.
“I will, Pooh. Ho! Is that right?”
“It’s just right,” said Pooh, and he went on:

Oh, it wouldn’t rain and it wouldn’t snow
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
And there wasn’t a cloud in the whole of the sky
And the river ran wet until it ran dry
And all of the animals standing by
Cried ho, ho, ho!
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
And there wasn’t a cloud in the whole of the sky
And the river ran wet until it ran dry
And all of the animals standing by
Cried ho, ho, ho!

“Ho!” said Piglet, and smiled happily.

Oh, it wouldn’t rain and it wouldn’t snow
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
Then out of the river there came a—what?
A thing called—what was it called?—an ott
Whose name was Lottie, unless it was not
With a ho, ho, diddle-dum, ho!
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
Then out of the river there came a—what?
A thing called—what was it called?—an ott
Whose name was Lottie, unless it was not
With a ho, ho, diddle-dum, ho!
“Ho!” said Piglet, but this time he sounded a
little worried.

Oh, it didn’t rain and it wouldn’t snow
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
Then Eeyore remembered there once was a well
But where it had been he could no longer tell
But Lottie could smell it—a watery smell,
With a diddle-dum, diddle-dum, ho!
And the sun shone all day long—ho!
Then Eeyore remembered there once was a well
But where it had been he could no longer tell
But Lottie could smell it—a watery smell,
With a diddle-dum, diddle-dum, ho!
“Ho,”said Piglet in arather quiet voice.

Oh, it hasn’t rained and it hasn’t snowed
And the sun shines all day long—ho!
But there’s water now in our friendly wood,
Which when it is hot feels extremely good,
And if you don’t join in this song you should!
With a ho, ho, diddle-dum, ho,
With a ho, ho, ho, ho...
And the sun shines all day long—ho!
But there’s water now in our friendly wood,
Which when it is hot feels extremely good,
And if you don’t join in this song you should!
With a ho, ho, diddle-dum, ho,
With a ho, ho, ho, ho...

“Ho,” whispered Piglet in the tiniest voice
yet.
“What’s wrong, Piglet?” asked Pooh anxiously.
“Don’t you like my new hum?”
“Yes, Pooh,” said Piglet, “I do rather like it. And
all the ho, ho, hos and everything. But...but...”
“Anyway, Piglet, I must go to bed now that you’ve
heard the hum, and I was so pleased that you were the first to hear
it. Tomorrow we’ll go and hum it to the others,” said Pooh, and he
went off happily to bed.
But long after Pooh was asleep, Piglet lay awake
thinking about hums, and why this one had seemed a little...a
little...
“I mean the arrival of an otter in the Forest,” (he
said to himself with a frown of concentration), “is certainly a big
thing. And finding water when you need it is a very big thing. And
nobody in the world heard Pooh’s hum before I did, and tomorrow
we’re going to hum it to the others together, and that’s something
too, so if the hum was a little . . . not quite . . . well, it
doesn’t really matter. Maybe tomorrow there will be another
adventure with me in it, and Pooh will write another hum about it,
and then I shan’t feel quite so...quite so...”
But before he knew exactly what he might not feel
quite so-ish about, he had fallen asleep and was dreaming about a
tame Heffalump and a friendly Thesaurus, and snoring a few very
quietsnores,although of course there was nobody there to hear him,
so you and I are the only ones to know.
