“I beg your pardon,” said the Mole, pulling himself together
with an effort. “You must think me very rude; but all this is so new to me. So—
this— is— a— River!”
“The River,” corrected the Rat.
“And you really live by the river? What a jolly life!”
“By it and with it and on it and in it,” said the Rat. “It's
brother and sister to me, and aunts, and company, and food and drink, and
(naturally) washing. It's my world, and I don't want any other. What it hasn't
got is not worth having, and what it doesn't know is not worth knowing. Lord!
the times we've had together! Whether in winter or summer, spring or autumn,
it's always got its fun and its excitements. When the floods are on in
February, and my cellars and basement are brimming with drink that's no good to
me, and the brown water runs by my best bedroom window; or again when it all
drops away and, shows patches of mud that smells like plum-cake, and the rushes
and weed clog the channels, and I can potter about dry shod over most of the
bed of it and find fresh food to eat, and things careless people have dropped
out of boats!”
“But isn't it a bit dull at times?” the Mole ventured to
ask. “Just you and the river, and no one else to pass a word with?”
“No one else to— well, I mustn't be hard on you,” said the
Rat with forbearance.
“You're new to it, and of course you don't know. The bank is
so crowded nowadays that many people are moving away altogether: O no, it isn't
what it used to be, at all. Otters, kingfishers, dabchicks, moorhens, all of
them about all day long and always wanting you to do something— as if
a fellow had no business of his own to attend to!”
“What lies over there?” asked the Mole, waving a paw
towards a background of woodland that darkly framed the water-meadows on one
side of the river.
“That? O, that's just the Wild Wood,” said the Rat shortly. “We
don't go there very much, we river-bankers.”
“Aren't they— aren't they very nice people in
there?” said the Mole, a trifle nervously.
“W-e-ll,” replied the Rat, “let me see. The squirrels are
all right. And the rabbits— some of 'em, but rabbits are a mixed lot. And
then there's Badger, of course. He lives right in the heart of it; wouldn't
live anywhere else, either, if you paid him to do it. Dear old Badger! Nobody
interferes with him. They'd better not,” he added significantly.
“Why, who should interfere with him?” asked the
Mole.
“Well, of course— there— are others,” explained the Rat in a
hesitating sort of way.
“Weasels— and stoats— and foxes— and so on. They're all
right in a way— I'm very good friends with them— pass the time of day when we
meet, and all that— but they break out sometimes, there's no denying it, and
then— well, you can't really trust them, and that's the fact.”
The Mole knew well that it is quite against animal-etiquette
to dwell on possible trouble ahead, or even to allude to it; so he dropped the
subject.
“And beyond the Wild Wood again?” he asked: “Where it's all
blue and dim, and one sees what may be hills or perhaps they mayn't, and
something like the smoke of towns, or is it only cloud- drift?”
“Beyond the Wild Wood comes the Wide World,” said the Rat. “And
that's something that doesn't matter, either to you or me. I've never been
there, and I'm never going, nor you either, if you've got any sense at all.”
Kenneth Grahame, from Wind in the Willows
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