Milne Alexander - (Extracurricular reading). Winnie the Pooh

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear and a great friend of Christopher Robin. All kinds of stories happen to him. One day, going out into a clearing, Winnie the Pooh sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing: zhzhzhzhzhzh! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking a blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”: “I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Tuchka / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll go bad,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this, for a whole week the bear’s paws stuck up and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh!” Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, getting out, got stuck in the hole. Winnie the Pooh's faithful friend, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said: “It’s time!” and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed onto Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed onto the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglets Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who lives in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was a notice: “PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The Owl launches into theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about, and answers the Owl’s questions in turn with “yes” and “no.” To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The Owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she called very loudly, and the cord came off... Pooh explains to the Owl that Eeyore really needed this cord, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

At first, the Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson (he is outraged that she carries a child in her pocket, he tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry children in this way - it turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief! ): steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, tell her “AHA!” in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. And Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly, so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet has already been washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - fish oil, Little Roo’s hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course: either the “expedition” goes to the North Pole, then Piglet is saved from the flood in Christopher Robin’s umbrella, then the storm destroys Owl’s house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet’s house), and Piglet goes to live with Winnie. Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

And wherever they go and no matter what happens to them - “here, in the Enchanted Place on the top of the hill in the forest, the little boy will always, always play with his little bear.”

“Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All” is wonderful. She became famous throughout the land. The hero of the fairy tale, Christopher Robin, is a boy who has a very developed imagination and lives in his own world of toys. .

The book is unique in that each chapter is a separate fairy tale that reveals one story. It's easy and fun to read. The main character of fairy tales, Christopher Robin, has such qualities as: kindness, courage, compliance.

He sets a good example for everyone on how to treat the weak and true friends. . We invite you to read Alan Milne's book "Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All" for lovers of light and cheerful adventures. The work will give you many joyful emotions.

Brief story

This fairy tale tells about a boy, Christopher Robin, who has teddy bear Winnie the Pooh and different adventures constantly happen to him . One story tells how a clubfoot notices something buzzing on a tall oak tree and thinks that they are bees, and if they are bees, then that means there is his favorite honey there!

He tries to climb a tree, but quickly falls into the bushes. You can't stop the bear cub! Vinnie took the blue balloon. Rising on it, it disguises itself as a cloud to deceive the bees, but you won’t fool them.— the bees actively begin to sting Pooh one by one.

In a panic, Vinny asks to shoot Christopher with the gun. After a quick fall, his paws hurt for a long time. Another adventure with the bear cub takes place while visiting the Rabbit, who lives in a hole. . The lover of sweets ate too many delicacies, after which his belly increased in size so much that Vinny could not crawl out of the hole.

Remaining in the passage of the hole for a whole week, his true friend Christopher Robin does not leave him, but supports him, reading books, until Pooh became smaller and with all their common efforts he was pulled out of the hole. Another case tells about how a donkey lost its tail.

Having learned about what happened, Vinnie goes to search for the loss, organizing his own investigation. First of all, he goes to the Owl. Without wasting time, he immediately tells the wise Owl about the incident. During the conversation, it turns out that the owner of the house has a new cord for the doorbell, which she acquired quite recently.

It turns out that she accidentally tore off Eeyore's tail and tied it to the bell on her door. Pooh tells the Owl how precious the donkey's tail was. This story makes such an impression on her that she gives it away with pleasure. The donkey is very pleased with the return of his loss.

Many more adventures are described by Alan Milne, for example, a meeting with an unknown animal Tigger, Kangaroo mother and Little Roo, and also describes a trip to the North Pole and a small flood, and there are a lot of such stories.

All adventures end when Christopher Robin leaves the forest and all the inhabitants say goodbye to him. It is impossible to convey everything in a short description interesting facts travels of Winnie the Pooh and his friends, but only by reading Alan Milne’s fairy tale “Winnie the Pooh and All-All All” in its entirety.

Why is it worth reading the book?

  • Each chapter is a new story and can be read separately.
  • Example of Christopher Robin and fairy-tale heroes Helps children show kindness and selflessness.

Reading Alan Milne about Winnie the Pooh and his companions is very interesting. A kind, instructive, funny, wonderful book that appeals to both adults and children . Leave your comments, we will be very grateful.

British writer Alan Aleksander Milne remains in the history of literature and the memory of readers as the author of stories about a teddy bear with sawdust in his head, and a number of poems. He considered himself a serious playwright and short story writer. Milne Alan Alexander lived his life under this paradox, whose biography will be discussed below.

Early years and education

In the family of the director of a private school in London, John Vine and Sarah Marie Milne, a third son, Alan Alexander, was born on January 18, 1882. A. A. Milne was educated at Westminster School and then at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied mathematics. At the same time, together with his brother Kenneth, he published articles under the initials AKM in the student magazine Grant. In 1903, Milne Alan Alexander moved to London, whose biography will now be connected with his true calling - literature.

War and the beginning of literary activity

Since 1906, he has been published in Punch magazine, and humorous poems and essays have been published in other magazines since 1914. In 1915, A. A. Milne left to serve as an officer in the British army. He was wounded at the Battle of the Somme. After recovery, he works in the military intelligence propaganda service and writes patriotic articles. He was demobilized with the rank of lieutenant in 1919. During the war, he wrote his first play, but success came after 1920, when comedies appeared in theaters, favorably received by critics and the public. At the same time, 4 films were shot based on his scripts. In 1922, he published a detective story called “Secrets of the Red House.”

Marriage and literature

In 1913, on the eve of the war, A. Milne married Dorothy de Selkencourt. Personal life and military service writer whose name is Milne Alan Alexander. His biography was replenished with 18 plays and 3 novels by 1925. And earlier his son was born (August 1920). In 1924, A. Milne published a collection of children's poems, When We Were Young, and bought a house in Hartfield in 1925.

They leave at the same time short stories for children "Children's Gallery", which he later used when writing his most popular work. Life and creativity went in parallel. So far Milne Alan Alexander, whose biography began to change in 1926, had every reason to be satisfied. It was from this time that he began to be perceived as exclusively a children's writer.

Cult fairy tale "Winnie the Pooh"

A. Milne's son had toys: Piglet, Eeyore, Kanga and Tigger. Below is their photo.

They are now in New York. 750 thousand people visit them annually to see them. Milne named the hero of his tale "Winnie" after seeing a Canadian black bear from Winnipeg at the zoo. “Pooh” comes from a swan that the writer met while on vacation. This is how Winnie the Pooh turned out. Three more characters - Owl, Rabbit and Roo - were created solely from the writer's imagination. In 1926, the first version of Winnie the Pooh was published. The following year, the sequel “Now We Are Six” was published, and a year later the finale appeared - “The House on the Pooh Edge.”

The first book immediately brought worldwide fame and money. The writer was not dizzy from fame and success. Being in doubt about his literary talent, Milne Alan Alexander, whose biography and work in the minds of readers were tightly connected with Vinny, tried to break out of the existing stereotype of a children's writer. But the charming heroes did not let him go. The book was published in insane editions; its number exceeded 7 million copies during A. Milne’s lifetime. She translated to everything foreign languages. Cartoons were created based on it. She began to live independent life, eclipsing everything that A. Milne worked on further.

Life goes on

On the one hand, A. Milne was grateful to his wife and son for creating the book, but on the other, he did not introduce his son Christopher Robin to it. Milne read to his son the works of his friend P. G. Wodehouse, whose work he admired. And the adult son then, in turn, raised his daughter Claire on the stories and tales of the amazing humorist Wodehouse.

Since 1931, Alan will write a lot Alexander Milne. His books will not meet with such an enthusiastic reception as the simple-minded, slightly selfish Vinnie. In 1931 the novel “Two” was published, in 1933 - “A Very Short-lived Sensation”, in 1934 - the anti-war work “Honorable Peace”, in 1939 - “Too Late” (an autobiographical work), in 1940-1948 . - poetic works “Behind the Front Line” and “Norman Church”, in 1952 - a collection of articles “Year after Year”, in 1956 - the novel “Chloe Marr”.

The writer worked hard, and critics and readers greeted this work with indifference and indifference. Alan Alexander Milne found himself hostage to his charming hero, who immortalized his name.

Why is Vinny so attractive?

The story told by A. Milne fired like a fireworks, a volley of cheerfulness and vivacity. There is no struggle between good and evil, but there is slight irony, with which the author observes his characters whom he has placed in fairy forest, very reminiscent of the surroundings of his own home. Time in a fairy tale is frozen and does not change. Robin, the owner of the toys, is always 6 years old, Winnie - 5, Piglet - an awful lot - 3 or 4 years old! Plush Vinnie is an optimist who greets every day with pleasure.

Problems and suffering are alien to him. He is a glutton and a gourmet. When the Rabbit invites him to choose what he will eat: bread with honey or with condensed milk, then, following the rules of good upbringing, Winnie with a sweet tooth refuses three items of food, leaving only honey and condensed milk. This is where it gets funny. The little bear has sawdust in his head, but he makes noisemakers and chants. He is ready at any moment to help his friends or pretend that he is a cloud and go to the bees for honey. Good fantasies are constantly born in his “smart” little head. Other characters are also charming: the pessimistic Donkey, the learned Owl, and the shy Piglet. They all expect praise and take themselves very seriously.

Recent years

During the 2nd World War, A. Milne's son Christopher tried to get into the army, but did not get into it. medical indications. He later married his cousin, which upset his parents. A. Milne gave birth to a granddaughter, Claire, who suffers from cerebral palsy. The father occasionally met with his son, but the mother did not want to see him. A. A. Milne himself died after a severe brain illness (which began in 1952) in 1956 at his home in Hartfield.

Alan Alexander Milne: interesting facts

  • The teacher at the school where A. Milne studied was G. Wells, whom the writer considered both a teacher and a friend.
  • On his first birthday, the writer gave one year old son Teddy bear, whom he named Edward. Only in the book did he turn into Vinnie and was a year younger than its main character.

  • The book has been translated into 25 languages, including Latin.
  • The number of records sold with the recording of the book exceeded 20 million copies.
  • Christopher Robin himself first became acquainted with the book sixty years after its creation.
  • His father sent his toys to the USA. They can be viewed at the New York Public Library.
  • Images of Vinny appeared on stamps from 18 countries, including the USSR after the release of the cartoon.
  • A series of stamps from Canada, one depicts the lieutenant with Winnipeg Bear, the second - Christopher with a teddy bear, the third - the heroes of the classic illustrations for the book, and finally the fourth - Winnie from the Disney cartoon.

Winnie the Pooh

PREFACE



Exactly forty years ago - as one old book says, “in the middle of life’s road” (I was then just forty years old, and now, as you can easily calculate, twice as old) - I met Winnie the Pooh.
Winnie the Pooh was not yet called Winnie the Pooh. His name was "Winnie-tze-poo." And he didn’t know a word of Russian - after all, he and his friends lived all their lives in the Enchanted Forest in England. Writer A.A. Milne, who wrote two whole books about their lives and adventures, also spoke only English.
I read these books and immediately fell in love with Pooh and everyone else so much that I really wanted to introduce them to you guys.
But since they all (you guessed it?) could only speak English, which is a very, very difficult language - especially for those who don't know it - I had to do something.
I had to first teach Winnie the Pooh and his friends to speak Russian, I had to give them - Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All - new names; I had to help Pooh compose Noisemakers, Puffers, Screamers and even Screamers and who knows what else...
I assure you, doing all this was not so easy, although it was very pleasant! But I really wanted you guys to love Pooh and All-All-All like family.
Well, now I can say - without any exaggeration! - that my hopes were justified. Over the years, millions and millions of children in our country (and adults, especially those who are smarter) have become friends with Winnie the Pooh (and All-All-All). And Winnie the Pooh himself has become a very, very Russian bear cub, and some even believe that he speaks Russian better than English. It's not for me to judge.
Believe it or not, at one time he even taught our children the RUSSIAN language on the radio! There was such a program. Maybe your elders remember it.
And how Pooh and I have become close over the years - I can’t tell in a fairy tale, I can’t even describe with a pen!
The thing is that we loved Pooh (and All-All-All, of course!) so much that they had to act in films, and perform on stage, and play on the stages of theaters - both simple and puppet theaters - in different plays and even sing in opera - at the Moscow Musical Theater for Children.
And our hardworking little bear had to compose Noisemakers again and again, because the stories were new, which means new songs were needed.
I must admit that this (as you probably guess) could not have happened without my participation. I had to write scripts for films, plays for theaters, and even a libretto for the opera “Winnie the Pooh Again.” And of course, Pooh composed all the new Noisemakers, Puffers and Screamers under my leadership. In a word, all these years we did not part, and, in the end, I began to consider Pooh bear my adopted son, and he me as his second father...
Books about Winnie the Pooh for these for many years published many, many times. They were read by your grandparents, fathers and mothers, older brothers and sisters. But there has never been such a publication as the one you are holding in your hands.
Firstly, there are all twenty true stories here (and not eighteen, as was before).
Secondly, Pooh and his friends were placed in two whole books, and not in one. Now they are truly spacious - there was enough space for a lot of other things. Take a look at the Applications - and make sure that there is not only Everything-All-Everything, but also Everything-Everything-Everything!
And finally, I'm sure you'll enjoy the drawings. Especially those who saw real cartoons about Pooh - after all, Pooh and his friends were drawn here by the same wonderful artist - E.V. Nazarov.
(Why am I talking about real cartoons? Unfortunately, nowadays there are many fakes. Winnie the Pooh is also faked. On television they often show a Pooh that can only be called a fake. Thank God, it’s easy to distinguish him from the real one: he’s completely different, and most importantly, he doesn’t compose or sing any Noisemakers. What kind of Winnie the Pooh is this?!)
Well, perhaps we can end here - I think I said Everything, Everything, Everything I wanted to say, and even more!
I leave you with Winnie the Pooh and his friends.
Your old friend
Boris Zakhoder

CHAPTER ONE,
in which we meet Winnie the Pooh and some bees

Well, here is Winnie the Pooh.
As you can see, he goes down the stairs after his friend Christopher Robin, head down, counting the steps with the back of his head: boom-boom-boom. He doesn’t yet know any other way to get down the stairs. Sometimes, however, it seems to him that some other way could be found, if only he could stop babbling for a minute and concentrate properly. But alas, he has no time to concentrate.
Be that as it may, he has already come down and is ready to meet you.
- Winnie the Pooh. Very nice!
You are probably wondering why his name is so strange, and if you knew English, you would be even more surprised.
This unusual name was given to him by Christopher Robin. I must tell you that Christopher Robin once knew a swan on a pond, whom he called Pooh. It was a very appropriate name for a swan, because if you call a swan loudly: “Pooh! Pooh!” - and he doesn’t respond, then you can always pretend that you were just pretending to shoot; and if you called him quietly, then everyone will think that you just blew under your breath. The swan then disappeared somewhere, but the name remained, and Christopher Robin decided to give it to his bear cub so that it would not be wasted.


And Winnie was the name of the best, kindest bear in the zoo, whom Christopher Robin loved very, very much. And she really, really loved him. Whether she was named Winnie in honor of Pooh, or Pooh was named in her honor - now no one knows, not even Christopher Robin's dad. He once knew, but now he has forgotten.
In a word, the bear is now called Winnie the Pooh, and you know why.
Sometimes Winnie the Pooh likes to play something in the evening, and sometimes, especially when dad is at home, he likes to sit quietly by the fire and listen to some interesting fairy tale.
This evening...

- Dad, how about a fairy tale? - asked Christopher Robin.
- What about a fairy tale? - Dad asked.
- Could you tell Winnie the Pooh a fairy tale? He really wants it!
“Maybe I could,” said Dad. - Which one does he want and about whom?
- Interesting, and about him, of course. He's SUCH a teddy bear!
“I understand,” said dad.
- So, please, daddy, tell me!
“I’ll try,” said dad.
And he tried.

A long time ago - it seems like last Friday - Winnie the Pooh lived alone in the forest, under the name Sanders.

- What does “lived under a name” mean? - Christopher Robin asked immediately.
- This means that on the plaque above the door it said "Mr. Sanders" in gold letters, and he lived under it.
“He probably didn’t understand it himself,” said Christopher Robin.
“But now I understand,” someone muttered in a deep voice.
“Then I will continue,” said dad.

One day, while walking through the forest, Pooh came out into a clearing. In the clearing there grew a tall, tall oak tree, and at the very top of this oak tree someone was buzzing loudly: zhzhzhzhzh...
Winnie the Pooh sat down on the grass under a tree, clasped his head in his paws and began to think.
At first he thought: “This is not without reason! No one will buzz in vain. The tree itself cannot buzz. So, someone is buzzing here. Why would you buzz if you are not a bee? I think so!”


Then he thought and thought some more and said to himself: “Why are there bees in the world? To make honey! I think so!” Then he stood up and said:
- Why is there honey in the world? So that I can eat it! In my opinion, this way and not otherwise!
And with these words he climbed the tree.
He climbed, and climbed, and climbed, and along the way he sang to himself a song that he himself immediately composed. Here's what:

The bear loves honey very much!
Why? Who will understand?
In fact, why
Does he like honey that much?

So he climbed a little higher... and a little more... and just a little bit higher... And then another chugging song came to his mind:

If bears were bees,
Then they wouldn't care
Never thought
Build a house so high;
And then (of course, if
Bees - they were bears!)
We bears would have no need to
Climb such towers!

To tell the truth, Pooh was already pretty tired, which is why Pyhtelka turned out to be so plaintive. But he only had to climb quite a bit. All you have to do is climb onto this branch - and... CRACK!
- Mother! - Pooh shouted, flying a good three meters down and almost hitting his nose on a thick branch.
“Eh, why did I just...” he muttered, flying another five meters.
“But I didn’t want to do anything bad...” he tried to explain, hitting the next branch and turning upside down.
“And all because,” he finally admitted, when he somersaulted three more times, wished all the best to the lowest branches and smoothly landed in a prickly, thorny thorn bush, “it’s all because I love honey too much!” Mother!…
Pooh climbed out of the thorn bush, pulled the thorns out of his nose and began to think again. And the very first thing he thought about was Christopher Robin.

- About me? - Christopher Robin asked in a voice trembling with excitement, not daring to believe such happiness.
- About you.
Christopher Robin said nothing, but his eyes grew larger and larger, and his cheeks grew pinker and pinker.


Winnie the Pooh first went to one familiar puddle and rolled out in the mud to become completely, completely black, like a real cloud.
Then they began to inflate the balloon, holding it together by the string. And when the ball inflated so much that it seemed like it was about to burst, Christopher Robin suddenly let go of the string, and Winnie the Pooh smoothly flew into the sky and stopped there - just opposite the top of the bee tree, only a little to the side.
- Hurray! - Christopher Robin shouted.
- What, great? - Winnie the Pooh shouted to him from the sky. - Well, who do I look like?
- At a bear flying in a hot air balloon!
- Doesn’t he look like a little black cloud? - Pooh asked anxiously.
- Not good.
- Okay, maybe it looks more like it from here. And then, who knows what will come to the bees’ minds!
Unfortunately, there was no wind, and Pooh hung in the air completely motionless. He could smell honey, he could see honey, but, alas, he could not get honey...
- Christopher Robin! - he shouted in a whisper.
- What?
- I think bees are doing something suspect!
- What exactly?
- I don’t know. But only, in my opinion, they behave suspicious!
- Maybe they think you want to steal their honey?
- Maybe so. Do you know what the bees will think of?
There was a long silence again. And again Pooh's voice was heard:
- Christopher Robin!
- What?
- Do you have an umbrella at home?
- It seems there is.
- Then I ask you: bring it here and walk here with it back and forth, and look at me all the time and say: “Tsk-tsk-tsk, it looks like it’s going to rain!” I think then the bees will trust us better.
Well, Christopher Robin, of course, laughed to himself and thought: “You stupid bear!” - but he didn’t say this out loud, because he loved Pooh very much.
And he went home to get an umbrella.
- Finally! - Winnie the Pooh shouted as soon as Christopher Robin returned. - And I was already starting to worry. I noticed that the bees were acting very suspicious!
- Should I open my umbrella or not?
- Open, but just wait a minute. We must act for sure. The most important thing is to deceive the queen bee. Can you see it from there?
- No.
- It's a pity, it's a pity. Well, then you walk with an umbrella and say: “Tch-tsk-tsk, it looks like it’s going to rain,” and I will sing Tuchka’s special Song - the one that all the clouds in the sky probably sing... Come on!
Christopher Robin began to walk back and forth under the tree and said that it seemed like it was going to rain, and Winnie the Pooh sang this song:

I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka,
And not a bear at all.
Oh, how nice it is for Cloud
Fly across the sky!

Ah, in the blue, blue sky
Order and comfort -
That's why all Clouds
They sing so joyfully!

But the bees, oddly enough, buzzed more and more suspiciously.


Many of them even flew out of the nest and began to fly around Cloud when she sang the second verse of the song. And one bee suddenly sat on Cloud’s nose for a minute and immediately took off again.
- Christopher - ah! - Robin! - Cloud screamed.
- What?
- I thought and thought and finally understood everything. These are the wrong bees!
- Yes, well?
- Completely wrong! And they're probably making the wrong honey, right?
- Well, yes?
- Yes. So I'd probably better go downstairs.
- How? - asked Christopher Robin.
Winnie the Pooh hadn’t even thought about this yet. If he lets go of the string, he will fall and boom again. He didn't like this idea. Then he thought some more and then said:
- Christopher Robin, you must shoot the ball with a gun. Do you have a gun with you?
“Of course, take it with you,” said Christopher Robin. - But if I shoot the ball, it will spoil!
“And if you don’t shoot, then I’ll be spoiled,” said Pooh.
Of course, here Christopher Robin immediately understood what to do. He took very careful aim at the ball and fired.
- Oh-oh-oh! - Winnie the Pooh cried.
- Didn't I get it? - asked Christopher Robin.
“It’s not that it didn’t hit at all,” said Pooh, “but it just didn’t hit the ball!”
“Sorry, please,” said Christopher Robin and fired again.
This time he didn't miss. The air began to slowly come out of the ball, and Winnie the Pooh smoothly sank to the ground.
True, his paws were completely stiff, because he had to hang for so long, holding on to the rope. For a whole week after this incident, he could not move them, and they stuck up. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh! Puhhh!”
And maybe - although I'm not sure of this - maybe it was then that he was finally called Pooh.

- Is the fairy tale over? - asked Christopher Robin.
- The end of this fairy tale. And there are others.
- About Pooh and me?
- And about the Rabbit, about Piglet, and about everyone else. Don't you remember yourself?
- I remember, but when I want to remember, I forget...
- Well, for example, one day Pooh and Piglet decided to catch the Heffalump...
- Did they catch him?
- No.
- Where are they! After all, Pooh is very stupid. Did I catch him?
- Well, if you hear it, you will know. Christopher Robin nodded.
- You see, dad, I remember everything, but Pooh forgot, and he is very, very interested in listening again. After all, it will be a real fairy tale, and not just like that... a memory.
- That's what I think.
Christopher Robin took a deep breath and took the little bear by the hind paw and trudged to the door, dragging him behind him. At the threshold he turned around and said:
-Will you come and watch me swim?
“Probably,” said dad.
- Wasn’t it really painful for him when I hit him with the gun?
“Not a bit,” said dad.
The boy nodded and left, and a minute later dad heard Winnie the Pooh going up the stairs: boom-boom-boom.

CHAPTER TWO
in which Winnie the Pooh went to visit and found himself in a desperate situation


One afternoon, known to his friends, and therefore now also to you, Winnie the Pooh (by the way, sometimes he was simply called Pooh for short) was leisurely walking through the Forest with a rather important look, grumbling a new song under his breath.
He had something to be proud of - after all, he himself composed this grumbling song just this morning, doing, as usual, morning exercises in front of the mirror. I must tell you that Winnie the Pooh really wanted to lose weight and therefore diligently did gymnastics. He stood up on his toes, stretched out with all his might, and at that time sang like this:
- Tara-tara-tara-ra!
And then, when he bent over, trying to reach his toes with his front paws, he sang like this:
- Tara-tara-oh, guard, trump-pump-pa!
Well, that’s how the grumbling song was composed, and after breakfast Vinny repeated it to himself all the time, grumbling and grumbling until he learned it all by heart. Now he knew it all from beginning to end. The words in this Grumpy were something like this:

Tara-tara-tara-ra!
Tram-pum-pum-pum-pum-pum!
Tiri-tiri-tiri-ri,
Tram-pam-pam-tiririm-pim-pi!

And so, grumbling this Grumpy under his breath and thinking - and Winnie the Pooh was thinking about what would happen if he, Winnie, were not Winnie the Pooh, but someone completely, completely different - our Winnie quietly reached to a sandy slope in which there was a large hole.
- Yeah! - said Pooh. (Pump-pum-pum-tararam-pum-pah!) - If I understand anything, then a hole is a hole, and a hole is a Rabbit, and a Rabbit is a suitable company, and a suitable company is the kind of company where they will treat me to something and listen to my Grumpy with pleasure. And all that stuff!
Then he bent down, stuck his head into the hole and shouted:
- Hey! Is anyone home?


- Is it time already? - the Rabbit asked politely. You can't guarantee that he didn't think to himself:
“It’s not very polite to leave guests as soon as you’re full.” But he didn’t say this out loud, because he was a very smart Rabbit. He asked aloud:
- Is it time already?
“Well,” Winnie the Pooh hesitated, “I could stay a little longer, if you... if you had...” he stammered and for some reason did not take his eyes off the buffet.
“To tell the truth,” said the Rabbit, “I was planning to go for a walk myself.”
- Ah, well, okay, then I’ll go too. Best wishes.
- Well, all the best, if you don’t want anything else.
- Is there anything else? - Pooh asked hopefully, perking up again.
The rabbit looked into all the pots and jars and said with a sigh:
- Alas, there is absolutely nothing left.
“I thought so,” said Pooh sympathetically, shaking his head. - Well, goodbye, I have to go.
And he climbed out of the hole. He pulled himself with all his strength with his front paws and pushed himself with all his strength with his back paws, and after a while his nose was free... then his ears... then his front paws... then his shoulders... and then...
And then Winnie the Pooh shouted:
- Hey, save me! I'd better go back! Later he shouted:
- Hey, help! No, it’s better to go ahead!
And finally, he screamed in a desperate voice:
- Ay-ay-ay, save, help! I can’t go back or forth!
Meanwhile, the Rabbit, who, as we remember, was going to go for a walk, seeing that the front door was blocked, ran out the back door and, running around, approached Pooh.
- Are you stuck? - he asked.
“No, I’m just resting,” answered Pooh, trying to speak in a cheerful voice. - I’m just relaxing, thinking about something and singing a song...
“Come on, give me your paw,” said the Rabbit sternly.


Winnie the Pooh extended his paw to him, and the Rabbit began to drag him.
He pulled and pulled, he pulled and pulled, until Vinny screamed:
- Oh-oh-oh! Hurt!
“Now everything is clear,” said the Rabbit, “you’re stuck.”
“It’s all because,” said Pooh angrily, “that the exit is too narrow!”
- No, it’s all because someone was greedy! - Rabbit said sternly. - At the table it always seemed to me, although out of politeness I did not say this, that someone was eating too much! And I knew for sure that this “someone” was not me! There’s nothing to do, you’ll have to run after Christopher Robin.
Christopher Robin, a friend of Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, lived, as you remember, at a completely different end of the Forest. But he immediately ran to the rescue and when he saw the front half of Winnie the Pooh, he said:
“Oh, my stupid little bear!!” - in such a gentle voice that everyone’s soul immediately felt lighter.
“And I was just starting to think,” said Winnie, sniffling slightly, “that suddenly poor Rabbit would never, ever have to walk through the front door again... I would be very, very upset then...
“Me too,” said the Rabbit.
- You won't have to go through the front door? - asked Christopher Robin. - Why? Perhaps you'll have to...
“Well, that’s good,” said the Rabbit.
“We’ll probably have to push you into the hole if we can’t get you out,” Christopher Robin finished.
Then the Rabbit thoughtfully scratched his ear and said that if Winnie the Pooh was pushed into a hole, he would stay there forever. And that although he, the Rabbit, is always incredibly happy to see Winnie the Pooh, still, no matter what you say, some are supposed to live on earth, and others underground, and...
- In your opinion, now I will never, ever be released? - Winnie the Pooh asked pitifully.
“In my opinion, if you’re already halfway out, it’s a pity to stop halfway,” said the Rabbit.
Christopher Robin nodded his head.
“There is only one way out,” he said, “you need to wait until you lose weight again.”
- How long will it take me to lose weight? - Pooh asked in fear.
- Yes, for about a week.
- Oh, I can’t hang around here for a whole week!
- You can hang around just fine, my stupid bear. Getting you out of here is a trickier job!
- Don’t worry, we will read it out loud to you! - the Rabbit exclaimed cheerfully. “If only it wouldn’t snow... Yes, here’s another thing,” he added, “you, my friend, have taken up almost my entire room... Can I hang towels on your hind legs?” Otherwise, they stick out there completely in vain, and they will make a wonderful towel rack!
- Oh-oh-oh, a whole week! - Pooh said sadly. - What about lunch?!
- There’s no need for lunch, my dear! - said Christopher Robin. - After all, you must lose weight quickly! Read aloud - that's what we promise you!
The little bear wanted to breathe, but could not - he was stuck so tightly. He shed a tear and said:
- Well, then at least read me some digestible book that can support and console the unfortunate bear cub in a hopeless situation...
And for a whole week, Christopher Robin read aloud just such a digestible, that is, understandable and interesting, book near the Northern Land of Pooh, and the Rabbit hung the washed clothes on his Southern Land... and meanwhile Pooh became thinner, and thinner, and thinner.
And when the week was over, Christopher Robin said:
- It's time!
He grabbed Pooh's front paws, the Rabbit grabbed onto Christopher Robin, and all of Rabbit's Relatives and Friends (there were an awful lot of them!) grabbed onto the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might.
And at first Winnie the Pooh said one word:
- Oh!
And then another word:
- Oh!
And suddenly - very, very suddenly - he said:
- Clap! - exactly as the cork says when it flies out of the bottle.
Then Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit, and all of the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends immediately flew upside down!
And on top of this heap was Winnie the Pooh - free!
Winnie the Pooh nodded importantly to his friends as a sign of gratitude and with an important air went for a walk through the Forest, humming his song.
And Christopher Robin looked after him and whispered tenderly:
- Oh, my stupid little bear!

CHAPTER THREE
in which Pooh and Piglet went hunting and almost caught Buka

Winnie the Pooh's best friend, a tiny pig named Piglet, lived in a big, big house, in a big, big tree. The tree stood in the very middle of the Forest, the house was in the very middle of the tree, and Piglet lived in the very middle of the house. And next to the house there was a post on which was nailed a broken board with an inscription, and anyone who knew how to read a little could read:

TO STRANGERS V.

And no one else could read anything, even those who could read very well.
Once Christopher Robin asked Piglet what was written here on the blackboard. Piglet immediately said that his grandfather’s name was written here and that this board with the inscription was their family heirloom, that is, a family treasure.
Christopher Robin said that there could be no such name - Outsider V., and Piglet replied that no, maybe not, maybe, because that was his grandfather's name! And “B” is just an abbreviation, but my grandfather’s full name was Outsider Willie, and this is also an abbreviation of the name William Outsider.
“Grandfather had two names,” he explained, “especially in case he lost one somewhere.”
- Just think! “I also have two names,” said Christopher Robin.
- Well, that's what I said! - said Piglet. - So I'm right!
It was a wonderful winter day. Piglet, who had been sweeping away the snow at the door of his house, looked up and saw none other than Winnie the Pooh. Pooh walked slowly somewhere, carefully looking at his feet, and was so deep in thought that when Piglet called out to him, he did not think to stop.


- Hey, Pooh! - Piglet shouted. - Great, Pooh! What are you doing there?
- I'm hunting! - said Pooh.
- Are you hunting? To whom?
- I'm tracking someone! - Pooh answered mysteriously.
Piglet came closer to him:
- Are you tracking? Whom?
“That’s exactly what I ask myself all the time,” said Pooh. - That's the whole question: who is it?
- How do you think you will answer this question?
“I’ll have to wait until I meet him,” said Winnie the Pooh. - Look here. - He pointed to the snow right in front of him. - What do you see here?
“Traces,” said Piglet. - Paw prints! - Piglet even squealed with excitement. - Oh, Pooh! Do you think... this... this... scary Buka?!
“Maybe,” said Pooh. - Sometimes it’s like he is, and sometimes it’s like he’s not. Can you guess by the tracks?
He fell silent and resolutely walked forward along the trail, and Piglet, after hesitating for a minute or two, ran after him.
Suddenly Winnie the Pooh stopped and bent down to the ground.
- What's the matter? - asked Piglet.
“It’s a very strange thing,” said the bear cub. - Now there seem to be two animals here. This - Unknown Who - was approached by another - Unknown Who, and now they are walking together. You know what, Piglet? Maybe you will come with me, otherwise it will turn out to be Evil Beasts?
Piglet courageously scratched behind his ear and said that he was completely free until Friday and would be very happy to go with Pooh, especially if the Real Beech was there.
“You mean, if there are two Real Beeches there,” Winnie the Pooh clarified, and Piglet said that it doesn’t matter, because he has absolutely nothing to do until Friday. And they moved on together.
The tracks went around a small alder grove... and that means two Beeches, if it was them, also walked around the grove, and, of course, Pooh and Piglet also walked around the grove.


Along the way, Piglet told Winnie the Pooh interesting stories from the life of his grandfather to Outsiders V. For example, how this grandfather was treated for rheumatism after hunting and how in his declining years he began to suffer from shortness of breath, and all sorts of other interesting things.
And Pooh kept wondering what this grandfather looks like.
And it occurred to him that suddenly they were now hunting just two grandfathers, and he wondered if they caught these grandfathers, would it be possible to take at least one home and keep him with him, and what, I wonder, would Christopher Robin say about this? .
And the tracks went on and on in front of them...
Suddenly Winnie the Pooh stopped dead in his tracks again.
- Look! - he shouted in a whisper and pointed to the snow.
- Where? - Piglet also shouted in a whisper and jumped up in fear. But to show that he jumped not out of fear, but just like that, he immediately jumped two more times, as if he just wanted to jump.
“Traces,” said Pooh. - A third beast has appeared!
“Pooh,” Piglet squealed, “do you think this is another Buka?”
“No, I don’t think so,” said Pooh, “because the tracks are completely different... These are, perhaps, two Buki, and one, let’s say... let’s say, Byaka... Or, on the contrary, two Byaki, and one, let’s say... let’s say, Buka ... We have to follow them, nothing can be done.
And they moved on, starting to worry a little, because these three Unknown Beasts could turn out to be Very Terrible Beasts. And Piglet really wanted his dear grandfather Stranger V. to be here now, and not somewhere in an unknown place... And Pooh was thinking about how good it would be if they suddenly, quite by accident, met Christopher Robin, - of course, simply because he, Pooh, loves Christopher Robin so much!…
And then, quite unexpectedly, Pooh stopped for the third time and licked the tip of his nose, because he suddenly felt terribly hot. In front of him were the tracks of four beasts!
- Look, look, Piglet! Do you see? There are now three Beeches and one Byaka! Another Buka has been added!…
Yes, apparently it was! The tracks, however, were a little confused and crossed each other, but, without a doubt, these were the tracks of four sets of paws.
- You know what? - said Piglet, in turn licking the tip of his nose and making sure that this helped very little. - You know what? I think I remembered something. Yes, yes! I remembered one thing that I forgot to do yesterday, and tomorrow I won’t have time... In general, I need to quickly go home and do this thing.
“Let’s do this after lunch,” said Pooh, “I’ll help you.”
“Yes, you see, this is not something that can be done after lunch,” Piglet said quickly. - This is such a special morning thing. It definitely needs to be done in the morning, preferably around... What time did you say?
“About twelve,” said Pooh, looking at the sun.
- Here, as you said yourself, at twelve o’clock. More precisely, from twelve to five minutes past twelve! So don’t be offended by me, but I... Oh, mom! Who's there?
Pooh looked up at the sky, and then, hearing someone whistling again, he looked up at the big oak tree and saw someone on a branch.
- Yes, this is Christopher Robin! - he said.
“Ah, well, then everything is in order,” said Piglet, “no one will touch you with him.” Goodbye!
And he ran home as fast as he could, terribly pleased that he would soon be completely safe. Christopher Robin slowly climbed down from the tree.
“My stupid little bear,” he said, “what are you doing there?” I see that at first you walked around this grove twice alone, then Piglet ran after you, and you began to walk together... Now, in my opinion, you were going to go around it for the fourth time in your own footsteps!...
“Just a minute,” said Pooh, raising his paw.
He squatted down and thought deeply.
Then he put his paw on one of the tracks... Then he scratched behind his ear twice and stood up.
- Yes... - he said. “Now I understand,” he added. - I didn’t even know that I was such a stupid simpleton! - said Winnie the Pooh. - I am the most stupid little bear in the world!
- What you! You are the best teddy bear in the world! - Christopher Robin consoled him.
- Is it true? - asked Pooh. He was visibly relieved. And suddenly he completely beamed: “Whatever you say, it’s already time for dinner,” he said. And he went home to have dinner.

CHAPTER FOUR
in which Eeyore loses his tail and Pooh finds it

The old gray donkey Eeyore stood alone in a thistle-covered corner of the Forest, with his front legs spread wide and his head hanging to one side, and thought about Serious Things. Sometimes he thought sadly: “Why?”, and sometimes: “For what reason?”, and sometimes he even thought: “What conclusion follows from this?” And it is not surprising that sometimes he completely ceased to understand what he was actually thinking about.
Therefore, to tell you the truth, when he heard the heavy steps of Winnie the Pooh, Eeyore was very happy that he could stop thinking for a minute and just say hello.
- How are you feeling? - as usual, he asked sadly.
- How are yours? - asked Winnie the Pooh. Eeyore shook his head.
- Not really! - he said. - Or even not at all. I don't think I've felt like this for a very long time.
“Ah-ah-ah,” said Winnie the Pooh, “very sad!” Let me look at you.
Eeyore continued to stand, looking dejectedly at the ground, and Winnie the Pooh walked around him.
- Oh, what happened to your tail? - he asked in surprise.
- What happened to him? - said Eeyore.
- He's gone!
-Are you right?
- You either have a tail or you don’t. In my opinion, you can't go wrong here. But your tail is missing.
- What is there then?
- Nothing.
“Well, let’s see,” said Eeyore.


And he slowly turned to the place where his tail had recently been; then, noticing that he could not catch up with him, he began to turn in the opposite direction until he returned to where he started, and then he lowered his head and looked from below and finally said, sighing deeply and sadly:
- It seems you're right.
“Of course I’m right,” said Pooh.
“It’s quite natural,” said Eeyore sadly. - Now everything is clear. There is no need to be surprised.
“You probably forgot it somewhere,” said Winnie the Pooh.
“Someone probably dragged him away...” said Eeyore. - What to expect from them! - he added after a long pause.
Pooh felt that he should say something useful, but he couldn't think of what. And he decided to do something useful instead.
“Eeyore,” he said solemnly, “I, Winnie the Pooh, promise you to find your tail.”
“Thank you, Pooh,” said Eeyore. - You are a true friend. Not like some!
And Winnie the Pooh went in search of the tail.
He set out on a wonderful spring morning. Small transparent clouds played merrily in the blue sky. They either ran into the sun, as if they wanted to block it, or quickly ran away to let others enjoy themselves.
And the sun shone cheerfully, not paying any attention to them, and the pine tree, which carried its needles all year round without taking it off, it seemed old and shabby next to the birches that had put on new green lace. Vinny walked past pines and fir trees, walked along slopes overgrown with juniper and thistles, walked along the steep banks of streams and rivers, walked among piles of stones and again among thickets, and finally, tired and hungry, he entered the Deep Forest, because it was there, in the Deep Forest, lived an Owl.
The owl lived in the magnificent Chestnut Castle. Yes, it was not a house, but a real castle. In any case, it seemed so to the little bear, because on the castle door there was a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was an announcement:

PLEASE PRESS IF THEY DO NOT OPEN

And under the bell there is another announcement:

PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN

Both of these advertisements were written by Christopher Robin, who alone in the whole Forest knew how to write. Even Owl, although she was very, very smart and knew how to read and even sign her name - Sava, would not have been able to write such difficult words correctly.
Winnie the Pooh carefully read both advertisements, first from left to right, and then - in case he missed something - from right to left.
Then, just to be sure, he pressed the bell button and tapped it, and then pulled the bell cord and shouted in a very loud voice:
- Owl! Open up! The Bear has arrived!
The door opened and Owl looked out.
“Hello, Pooh,” she said. - What news?
“Sad and terrible,” said Pooh, “because Eeyore, my old friend, has lost his tail, and he is very worried about it.” Be so kind as to tell me, please, how can I find him?
“Well,” said the Owl, “the usual procedure in such cases is as follows...
- What does Bull Tsedura mean? - said Pooh. - Don’t forget that I have sawdust in my head and long words only upset me.
- Well, that means what needs to be done.
“As long as it means that, I don’t mind,” said Pooh humbly.
- And you need to do the following: first, report it to the press. After…
“Be healthy,” said Pooh, raising his paw. - So what should we do about this... like you said? You sneezed as you were about to speak.


- I didn't sneeze.
- No, Owl, you sneezed.
- Please forgive me, Pooh, but I didn’t sneeze. You can't sneeze and not know that you sneezed.
- Well, you can’t know that someone sneezed when no one sneezed.
- I started saying: first tell me...
- Well, here you are again! “Be healthy,” said Winnie the Pooh sadly.
“Report to the press,” said the Owl very loudly and clearly. - Place an ad in the newspaper and promise a reward. We should write that we will give something nice to whoever finds Eeyore's tail.
“I see, I see,” said Pooh, nodding his head. “By the way, about “something nice,” he continued sleepily, “I usually wouldn’t mind having something good right at this time...” And he glanced sideways at the buffet that stood in the corner of Owl’s room. - Let's say, a spoonful of condensed milk or something else, for example, one sip of honey...
“Well,” said the Owl, “that means we’ll write our ad and it will be posted all over the Forest.”
“A spoonful of honey,” the little bear muttered to himself, “or... or not, at worst.”
And he took a deep breath and began to try very hard to listen to what the Owl was saying.
And the Owl spoke and said some terribly long words, and these words became longer and longer... Finally she returned to where she started and began to explain that Christopher Robin should write this advertisement.
- It was he who wrote the notices on my door. Have you seen them, Pooh?
Pooh had been saying “yes” and “no” in turn for quite some time to everything Owl said. And since the last time he said “yes, yes,” this time he said: “no, no, never!” - although he had no idea what we were talking about.
- What, you haven’t seen them? - asked the Owl, clearly surprised. - Let's go look at them.
They went outside and Pooh looked at the bell and the notice underneath it and looked at the bell and the cord that came from it, and the more he looked at the bell cord the more he felt that he had seen something very similar. Somewhere completely different, sometime before...
- It's a beautiful lace, isn't it? - said the Owl.
Pooh nodded.
“It reminds me of something,” he said, “but I can’t remember what.” Where did you get it?
- I was once walking through the forest, and he was hanging on a bush, and at first I thought that someone lived there, and I called, and nothing happened, and then I called very loudly, and he broke away, and since In my opinion, no one needed him, I took him home, and...
“Owl,” said Pooh solemnly, “someone really needs him.”
- To whom?
- Eeyore. To my dear friend Eeyore. He... he loved him very much.
- Did you love him?
“I was very attached to him,” Winnie the Pooh said sadly.
With these words, he took the lace from the hook and took it to its owner, that is, Eeyore, and when Christopher Robin nailed the Tail into place, Eeyore began to rush around the Forest, waving his tail with such delight that Winnie the Pooh was tickled all over and he had to quickly run home and get some food.
Half an hour later, wiping his lips, he proudly sang:

Who found the tail?
Me, Winnie the Pooh!
About two
(Only in reality it was about eleven!)
I found the tail!

CHAPTER FIVE
in which Piglet meets the Heffalump

One day, when Christopher Robin, Winnie the Pooh and Piglet were sitting and talking peacefully, Christopher Robin swallowed what he had in his mouth and said, as if by chance:
- You know, Piglet, today I saw a Heffalump.
- What did he do? - asked Piglet.
“Well, just hanging around,” said Christopher Robin. - I don't think he saw me.
“I also saw one once,” said Piglet. - I think it was him. Or maybe not.
“Me too,” said Pooh, perplexed. “I wonder who this Heffalump is?” - he thought.
“You don’t see them often,” said Christopher Robin casually.
“Especially now,” said Piglet.
“Especially at this time of year,” said Pooh.
Then they started talking about something else, and soon it was time for Pooh and Piglet to go home. They went together. At first, as they trudged along the path at the edge of the Deep Forest, both were silent; but when they reached the river and began to help each other move over the pebbles, and then walked side by side along a narrow path between the bushes, they began a Very Smart Conversation. Piglet said: “Do you understand, Pooh, what I want to say?” And Pooh said: “I think so myself, Piglet.” Piglet said: “But on the other hand, Pooh, we must not forget.”
And Pooh answered: “Exactly right, Piglet. I don’t understand how I could have missed this.”
And so, just when they reached Six Pines, Pooh looked around and, making sure that no one was listening, said in a very solemn tone:
- Piglet, I came up with something.
- What did you come up with, Pooh?
- I decided to catch the Heffalump.
Having said this, Winnie the Pooh nodded his head several times in a row. He expected Piglet to say: “Well, yes!”, or “Come on?”, or: “Pooh, it can’t be!”, or make some other useful remark in this spirit, but Piglet said nothing.
In truth, Piglet was upset that he was not the first to come up with this wonderful idea.


And so Piglet put the pot at the bottom of the hole, climbed out, and they went home.
“Well, Pooh, good night,” said Piglet when they approached Pooh’s house. - Tomorrow morning at six o'clock we will meet at the Pines and see how many Heffalumps we have caught.
- Until six, Piglet. Do you have any rope?
- No. Why did you need the rope?
- To take them home.
- Oh... I thought the Heffalumps were following the whistle.
- Some go, and some don't. You can't vouch for the Heffalumps. Well, good night!
- Good night!
And Piglet ran at a trot to his house, near which there was a board with the inscription “To Outsiders V.”, and Winnie the Pooh went to bed.
A few hours later, when the night was slowly disappearing, Pooh suddenly woke up from some kind of nagging feeling. He had had this nagging feeling before, and he knew what it meant: he was hungry.
He trudged to the sideboard, climbed onto a chair, rummaged around on the top shelf and found emptiness there.
“This is strange,” he thought, “I know that I had a pot of honey there. A full pot, full of honey to the very brim, and on it was written "Myot" so that I don't make a mistake. Very, very strange."
And he began to pace the room back and forth, wondering where the pot could have gone, and muttering a grumbling song to himself. Here's what:

Where could my honey go?
After all, it was a full pot!
There was no way he could escape -
After all, he has no legs!

He couldn't sail down the river
(He has no tail or fins)
He couldn't bury himself in the sand...
He couldn’t, but still he was!

He could not go into the dark forest,
Couldn't fly into the sky...
He couldn’t, but he still disappeared!
Well, these are pure miracles!


Meanwhile, Piglet also woke up. When he woke up, he immediately said, “Oh.” Then, gathering his courage, he declared: “Well!” “We’ll have to,” he finished bravely. But all his veins were shaking, because there was thunder in his ears. scary word - Heffalumps!
What is he, this Heffalump?
Really very angry?
Is he following the whistle? And if it does, then WHY?...
Does he like piglets or not?
AND HOW does he love them?...
If he eats piglets, then maybe he still won’t touch the piglet, who has a grandfather named Outsider V.?
Poor Piglet didn't know how to answer all these questions. But in just an hour, for the first time in his life, he was to meet a real Heffalump!
Maybe it’s better to pretend that you have a headache and not go to Six Pines?
But what if the weather is very good and there will be no Heffalump in the trap, and he, Piglet, spends the whole morning in bed in vain?
What to do?
And then a cunning idea occurred to him. He will now go slowly to Six Pines, very carefully look into the trap and see whether there is a Heffalump there or not. If he is there, then he, Piglet, will come back and go to bed, and if not, then he, of course, will not go to bed!...
And Piglet went. At first he thought that, of course, there would be no Heffalump there; then I began to think that no, it probably would turn out to be the case; when he approached the trap, he was absolutely sure of it, because he heard him heffalump with all his might!
- Oh-oh-oh! - said Piglet. He really wanted to run away. But he couldn't. Since he has already come so close, you need to take at least one look at the Heffalump. And so he carefully crept up to the side of the hole and looked in...
But Winnie the Pooh still couldn’t get his head out of the honey pot. The more he shook his head, the tighter the pot sat. Pooh shouted: “Mom!”, shouted: “Help!”, shouted and simply: “Ay-ay-ay!”, but all this did not help. He tried to hit the pot on something, but since he didn’t see what he was hitting, it didn’t help. He tried to get out of the trap, but since he didn’t see anything except the pot (and not all of it), it didn’t work.
Completely exhausted, he raised his head (along with the pot) and let out a desperate, pitiful cry...
And it was at that moment that Piglet looked into the hole.
- Guard! Guard! - Piglet shouted, - Heffalump, terrible Heffalump!!! - And he rushed away, so that his heels sparkled, continuing to scream: - Guard! Elephant asshole! Guard! Sweaty Elephants! Slonoul! Slonoul! Karasny Potoslonam!…
He screamed and flashed his heels until he reached Christopher Robin's house.
- What's the matter, Piglet? - said Christopher Robin, pulling on his pants.
“Kkk-karapot,” said Piglet, who was so out of breath that he could hardly utter a word. - Already... then... Heffalump!
- Where?
“Over there,” said Piglet, waving his paw.
- What is he like?
- U-uh-terrible! With a head like this! Well, straight, straight... like... like I don’t know what! Like a pot!
“Well,” said Christopher Robin, putting on his shoes, “I must look at him.” Went.
Of course, together with Christopher Robin, Piglet was not afraid of anything. And off they went.
- Do you hear, do you hear? It's him! - Piglet said fearfully when they came closer.
“I hear something,” said Christopher Robin. They heard a knock. It was poor Vinny who finally came across some root and tried to break his pot.
- Stop, you can’t go any further! - said Piglet, tightly squeezing Christopher Robin's hand. - Oh, how scary!...
And suddenly Christopher Robin burst out laughing. He laughed and laughed... laughed and laughed... And while he was laughing, the Heffalump's head hit a root hard. Fuck! - the pot shattered into pieces. Bang! - and the head of Winnie the Pooh appeared.
And then Piglet finally realized what a stupid Piglet he was. He felt so ashamed that he rushed home and went to bed with a headache, and that morning he almost finally decided to run away from home and become a sailor.
And Christopher Robin and Pooh went to have breakfast.
- Bear! - said Christopher Robin. - I love you terribly!
- And me! - said Winnie the Pooh.

CHAPTER SIX,
in which Eeyore had a birthday and Piglet almost flew to the moon

Once Eeyore, an old gray donkey, stood for a long time on the bank of a stream and looked dejectedly into the water at his reflection.
“It’s a heartbreaking sight,” he said finally. - That's what it's called - a heartbreaking sight.
He turned and slowly walked along the bank downstream. After walking about twenty meters, he forded the stream and just as slowly walked back along the other bank. Opposite the place where he first stood, Eeyore stopped and looked into the water again.
“I thought so,” he sighed. - From this side it’s no better. But no one cares. Nobody cares. A heartbreaking sight - that's what it's called!
Then a crash was heard in the alder forest behind him, and Winnie the Pooh appeared.
- Good morning, Eeyore! - said Pooh.
“Good morning, Pooh Bear,” Eeyore answered sadly. - If it's good morning. Which I personally doubt.
- Why? What's happened?
- Nothing, Pooh Bear, nothing special. Still they can’t. And some don't have to. There's nothing you can do about it.
- What can’t everyone do? - Pooh asked, rubbing his nose.
- Have fun. Sing, dance and so on. Under a walnut bush.
“Ah, I see...” said Pooh. He thought deeply, and then asked: “Under what walnut bush?”
“Under which the nuts are roasted,” Eeyore continued sadly. - Round dance, fun and the like. I'm not complaining, but that's the way it is.
Pooh sat down on a large stone and tried to understand something. It turned out to be something like a riddle, and Pooh was very weak at riddles, since he had sawdust in his head. And just in case, he sang a mysterious song:

ABOUT FORTY FIVES

- My question is simple and short, -
The Rhinoceros said,
Which is better - forty fives
Or forty heels?
Alas, no one is on this
Reply
I couldn't give it!

That's right, said Eeyore. - Sing, sing. Thrum-thump-thump-thrum-boom-boom. A stick was born in the forest, and it grew in the forest. And she brought a lot of joy to the children. Have fun and have fun.
“I’m having fun,” said Pooh.
“Some people succeed,” said Eeyore.
- What happened? - asked Pooh.
- Did anything happen?
- No, but you look so sad.
- Sad? Why should I be sad? Today is my birthday. The best day of the year!
- What's your birthday? - asked Pooh, terribly surprised.
- Certainly. Don't you notice? Look at all these gifts. - Eeyore waved his front leg from side to side. - Look at the birthday cake!
Pooh looked - first to the right, then to the left.
- Present? - he said. - Birthday cake? Where?
- Don't you see them?
“No,” said Pooh.
“Me too,” said Eeyore. “It’s a joke,” he explained. - Ha ha.
Pooh scratched the back of his head, completely confused.
- Is today really your birthday? - he asked.
- Is it true.
- Oh! Well, congratulations and wish you lots and lots of happiness on this day.
- And I congratulate you and wish you much, much happiness on this day, Pooh Bear.
- But today is not my birthday.
- No, not yours, but mine.
- And you say “I wish you happiness on this day.”
- So what? Do you want to be unhappy on my birthday?
“Oh, I see,” said Pooh.
“It’s enough,” said Eeyore, almost crying, “it’s enough that I myself am so unhappy - without gifts and without a birthday cake, and generally forgotten and abandoned, and even if everyone else is unhappy...
Winnie the Pooh couldn't bear it anymore.
“Wait here,” he shouted and rushed home as fast as he could. He felt that he must immediately give the poor donkey something, and then he would always have time to think about the Real Gift.
Near his house, he came across Piglet, who was jumping at the door, trying to get the bell button.
“Hello, Piglet,” said Winnie the Pooh.
“Hello, Vinny,” said Piglet.
- What are you doing?
“I’m trying to call,” explained Piglet. “I was walking past and...
“Let me help you,” said Pooh helpfully. He walked to the door and pressed the button. “I just saw Eeyore,” he began. - The poor donkey is terribly upset, because today is his birthday, and everyone has forgotten about him, and he is very depressed - you know how he can do it, well, he’s so depressed, and I... Why is this nobody to us? doesn’t open - did they all fall asleep there, or what? - And Pooh called again.
“Pooh,” said Piglet. - This is your own home!
“Ah,” said Pooh. - Well, yes, that's right! Then let's go in!
And they entered the house.
Pooh first went to the cupboard to make sure he had a suitable, not particularly large pot of honey. The pot was in place, and Pooh took it off the shelf.
“I’ll take it to Eeyore,” he explained. - As a gift. What are you thinking of giving him?
- Can I give it to you too? - asked Piglet. - As if from both of us.
“No,” said Pooh. - You came up with a bad idea.
- Well, okay then. I'll give Eeyore balloon. I have one left over from the holiday. I'll go get him now, okay?
- You came up with a very good idea, Piglet! After all, Eeyore needs to be cheered up. And whoever wants to have fun with a balloon! No one can be sad when they have a balloon!
Well, Piglet trotted home, and Pooh with a pot of honey headed to the stream.
The day was hot, and the path was long, and, not even halfway there, Pooh suddenly felt a strange tickling sensation. At first it tickled in his nose, then in his throat, and then it began to suck in the pit of his stomach, and so gradually reached his very heels. It seemed as if someone inside him was saying: “You know, Pooh, now is the time for a little something...”
“Ay-ay,” said Pooh, “I didn’t know it was already so late!”
He sat down on the ground and took the lid off his pot.
“It’s good that I took him with me,” he said. - Quite a few bears on such a hot day wouldn’t even think of taking with them something to refresh themselves a little!…
“Now let’s think,” he said, licking the bottom of the pot for the last time, “let’s think about where I was going to go.” Oh yes, to Eeyore.
Winnie the Pooh slowly stood up. And then he suddenly remembered everything. He ate the Gift!
- Ay-ay-ay! - said Pooh. - What should I do? I have to give him something! Ay-ay-ay-ay-ay!


At first he didn't really know what to think. And then he thought:
“Still, this is a very nice pot, although there is no honey in it. If I wash it properly and have someone write “Happy Birthday” on it, Eeyore can hold whatever he wants in it. It will be a useful thing!”
And since he was not far from the Owl’s House at that time - and everyone in the forest was sure that the Owl could write perfectly - he decided to visit her.
- Good morning, Owl! - said Pooh.
- Good morning, Pooh! - answered the Owl.
“Happy birthday to Eeyore,” said Pooh.
- Is that so? - Owl was surprised.
- Yes. What are you thinking of giving him?
- What are you thinking of giving him?
“I’m bringing him a Useful Pot as a gift, in which you can keep everything you want,” said Pooh. - And I wanted to ask you...
- This one? - asked the Owl, taking the pot from Pooh's paws.
- Yes, and I wanted to ask you...
“They once kept honey here,” said the Owl.
“You can keep whatever you want in it,” Pooh said seriously. - This is a very, very useful thing. And I wanted to ask you...
- You could write on it: “Happy Birthday.”
- So this is what I came to ask you about! - Pooh explained. - Because my spelling is kind of lame. In general, it is a good spelling, but for some reason it is lame and the letters are late... in their places. Will you write on it: “Happy Birthday”? I beg you very much!


“Nice pot,” said the Owl, looking at the pot from all sides. - Can I give it as a gift too? Let it be ours general gift.
“No,” said Pooh. - You came up with a bad idea. Let me wash it first, and then you can write everything on it.
And so he washed the pot and wiped it dry, and the Owl, meanwhile, was fiddling with the tip of her pencil and wondering how to spell the word “Congratulations.”
- Pooh, can you read? - she asked, not without anxiety in her voice. - For example, there is a notice on my door asking how to call - Christopher Robin wrote this to me. Can you read it?
“Christopher Robin told me what it said, and then I could,” answered Pooh.
- Very good! So I’ll also tell you what will be written here on the pot, and then you can read it!
And the Owl began to write... This is what she wrote: “About in vain, blah, blah, mrash day, about in vain, blah, blah!”
Pooh looked at this inscription with admiration.
“I wrote here: “Happy birthday,” Owl remarked casually.
- This is the inscription! - Winnie the Pooh said respectfully.
- Well, if I’m going to tell you everything, it’s written in full like this: “Happy birthday, I wish you all the best. Your Pooh." I didn't take into account the consumption of graphite.
- What? - asked Pooh.
- There’s a lot of pencil here! - explained the Owl.
- Of course! - said Pooh.
Meanwhile, Piglet managed to run to his home and, grabbing a balloon for Eeyore, rushed at full speed, holding the balloon tightly to his chest so that it would not be blown away by the wind. Piglet was in a terrible hurry to get to Eeyore before Pooh; he wanted to be the first to give the donkey a gift, as if he, Piglet, himself remembered his birthday, without any prompting.
He was in such a hurry and so thinking about how Eeyore would be happy with the gift that he didn’t look at his feet at all... And suddenly his foot fell into a mouse hole and poor Piglet flew nose down:
BOOM!!!
Piglet lay on the ground, not understanding what had happened. At first he thought that the whole world had gone up in smoke, then he thought that maybe only their beloved Forest; even later - that maybe only he, Piglet, took off and now he is lying alone somewhere on the Moon and will never, ever see either Pooh, or Christopher Robin, or Eeyore... And then it occurred to him that Even on the Moon you don’t have to lie nose down all the time. He carefully stood up and looked around... He was still in the Forest!
"Very interesting! - he thought. - I wonder what kind of Boom it was? I couldn’t have made so much noise myself when I fell! And where, I wonder, is my ball? And where, I wonder, did this rag come from?”
Oh horror! This rag is exactly what it was! - his balloon!!
- Oh, mom! - said Piglet. - Oh, mom, oh, mommy, oh, mom, mom, mom! Well... There's nothing to do now. There is no going back. I don’t have another balloon... Maybe Eeyore doesn’t like balloons that much?...
And he ran on. To tell the truth, he was no longer running very cheerfully, but still he soon reached the very place where Eeyore stood and still looked at his reflection in the water.
- Good morning, Eeyore! - Piglet shouted from afar.
“Good morning, little Piglet,” said Eeyore. “If this morning is good,” he added, “which I personally doubt.” But it doesn't matter.
“Happy birthday to you,” said Piglet, coming closer in the meantime.
Eeyore looked up from what he was doing and stared at Piglet.
“Repeat, repeat,” he said.
- Congratulations...
- Just a minute...
Having difficulty standing on three legs, Eeyore began to carefully raise his fourth leg to his ear.
“I learned this yesterday,” he explained, falling for the third time. - It’s very simple, and, most importantly, I hear better this way. Well, everything is fine. “Just as you said, repeat it,” he said, using his hoof to point his ear forward.
“Happy birthday,” repeated Piglet.
- Are you me?
- Of course, Eeyore.
- Happy my birthday?
- Yes!
- So it’s my real birthday?
- Of course, Eeyore, and I brought you a gift. Eeyore slowly lowered his right leg and, with considerable difficulty, raised his left.
“I want to listen with another ear,” he explained. - Now speak.
- Present! - Piglet repeated very loudly.
- To me? - Yes!
- For your birthday?
- Certainly!
- So it turned out to be a real birthday for me?
- Certainly! And I brought you a balloon.
- Balloon? - said Eeyore. - Did you say balloon? They are so big, beautiful, bright, are they still inflated? Songs and dances, gop-gop-gop and trumpet-la-la?
- Well, yes, but just... you see... I’m very upset... you know... when I was running to quickly bring it to you, I fell.
- Ay-ah, so sorry! You probably ran too fast. I hope you're not hurt, little Piglet?
- No, thank you, but he... he... Oh, Eeyore, he burst. There was a very long silence.
- My ball? - Eeyore finally asked. Piglet nodded.
- My birthday present?
“Yes, Eeyore,” said Piglet, sniffling slightly. - Here he is. Happy birthday to you.
And he gave Eeyore a rubber cloth.
- Is this him? - asked Eeyore, very surprised. Piglet nodded.
- My gift? Piglet nodded again.
- Ball? - Yes.
“Thank you, Piglet,” said Eeyore. “Excuse me, please,” he continued, “but I would like to ask what color he was when... when he was a ball?”
- Red.
“Just think! Red... My favorite color,” Eeyore muttered to himself.
- What size?
- Almost from me.
- Yes? Just think, almost as big as you!... My favorite size! - Eeyore said sadly under his breath. - Yes, yes.
Piglet felt very unwell and didn’t really know what to say. Every now and then he opened his mouth, about to say something, but then decided that this was exactly what he shouldn’t say.
And suddenly, fortunately for him, someone called out to them from the other bank of the stream. It was Pooh.
- I wish you much, much happiness! - Pooh shouted, obviously forgetting that he had already said this.
“Thank you, Pooh, I’m already lucky,” Eeyore answered sadly.
“I brought you a gift,” continued Pooh joyfully.
“I have a gift,” answered Eeyore. Meanwhile, Pooh crossed the stream and approached Eeyore. Piglet sat a little away, sniffling.
“Here he is,” announced Pooh. - This is a Very Useful Pot. Do you know what is written on it? “Happy birthday, I wish you all the best. Your Pooh." That's how much has been written! And you can put whatever you want in it. Here you go.


Eeyore, seeing the pot, became very animated.
- Wow! - he shouted. - You know what? My ball will fit into this pot!
“What are you, what are you, Eeyore,” said Pooh. - Balloons are not included in the pots. They're too big. You don't know how to handle them. Here's what you need to do: take the ball for faith...
“It’s the other balls that don’t go in, but mine does,” Eeyore said proudly. - Look, Piglet!
Piglet looked around sadly, and Eeyore grabbed his former ball with his teeth and carefully put it in the pot, then he took it out and put it on the ground, and then picked it up again and carefully put it back.
- It turns out! - Pooh shouted. - I mean, he's coming in!
- Comes in! - Piglet shouted. - And it comes out!
- Looks great! - Eeyore shouted. - It goes in and out - it’s absolutely wonderful!
“I’m very pleased,” Pooh said joyfully, “that I thought of giving you a Useful Pot, where you can put whatever things you want!”
“And I’m very pleased,” Piglet said joyfully, “that I thought of giving you such a Thing that you can put in this Useful Pot!”
But Eeyore didn't hear anything. He had no time for that: he either put his ball in the pot, then took it out again, and it was clear that he was completely happy!

CHAPTER SEVEN
in which Kanga and Little Roo appear in the Forest and Piglet takes a bath

Nobody knew where they came from, but suddenly they found themselves here in the Forest: Kanga's mother and Little Roo.
Pooh asked Christopher Robin: “How did they get here?” And Christopher Robin replied: “In the usual way. Do you understand what this means? Pooh, who didn't understand, said, "Uh-huh." Then he nodded his head twice and said: “The usual way. Yes. Yes". And he went to visit his friend Piglet to find out what he thought about it. Rabbit was visiting Piglet. And the three of them began to discuss the issue.
“This is what I don’t like,” said the Rabbit, “we live here - you, Pooh, and you, Piglet, and me, - and suddenly ...
“And also Eeyore,” said Pooh.
- And also Eeyore, - and suddenly...
“And also Owl,” said Pooh.
- And also Owl, - and suddenly, out of the blue...
“Yes, yes, and also Eeyore,” said Pooh, “I almost forgot about him!”
- We live here, - said the Rabbit very slowly and loudly, “all of us, and suddenly out of the blue we wake up one morning and what do we see?” We see some unfamiliar animal! An animal we've never heard of before!! An animal that carries its children in its pocket!!! Suppose I were to carry my children in my pocket, how many pockets would I need?
“Sixteen,” said Piglet.
“Seventeen, I think... Yes, yes,” said the Rabbit, “and one more for the handkerchief, - eighteen in total.” Eighteen pockets in one suit! I would just be confused!
Then everyone fell silent and began to think about their pockets.
After a long pause, Pooh, who had been furrowing his brow terribly for several minutes, said:
- I think there are fifteen of them.
- What, what? - asked the Rabbit.
- Fifteen.
- Fifteen what?
- Your children.
-What happened to them?
Pooh rubbed his nose and said that he thought the Rabbit was talking about his children.
- Really? - said the Rabbit casually.
- Yes, you said...
“Okay, Pooh, let’s forget it,” Piglet interrupted him impatiently. - The question is: what should we do with Kanga?
“Ah, I see,” said Pooh.
“The best thing,” said the Rabbit, “will be this.” The best thing is to steal Little Roo and hide him, and then when Kanga says, "Where's Little Roo?" - we will say: “AHA!”
- AHA! - said Pooh, deciding to exercise. - AHA! AHA!
“I think,” he said a little later, “we can say “AHA” even if we don’t steal Little Roo.
“Pooh,” said the Rabbit in a patronizing tone, “you really have nothing but sawdust in your head!”
“I know,” Pooh said modestly.
- We'll say "YEAH" so Kanga knows we know where Little Roo is. This “AHA” means: “We’ll tell you where Little Roo is if you promise to leave our Forest and never come back.” Now shut up - I'll think!
Pooh went into a corner and began to learn to say “AHA.” Sometimes it seemed to him that he was getting that “AHA” that the Rabbit was talking about, and sometimes it seemed that he was not.
“It’s probably all about the exercise,” he thought. “I wonder if Kanga will also need to practice so much to understand us?”
“That’s what I wanted to ask,” said Piglet, hesitating a little, “I talked to Christopher Robin, and he told me that Kanga, generally speaking, is considered one of the Most Fierce Beasts.” I'm actually not afraid of ordinary fierce beasts, but everyone knows that if One Most Fierce Beast loses its cub, it becomes as ferocious as Two Most Fierce Beasts. And then, perhaps, saying “AHA” is quite stupid.
“Piglet,” said the Rabbit, taking out a pencil and licking its tip, “you’re a terrible coward.”
Piglet sniffled slightly.
“It's hard to be brave,” he said, “when you're just a Very Small Creature.”
The rabbit, who had meanwhile begun to write something, looked up for a second and said:
“It is precisely because you are a Very Small Creature that you will be very useful in the adventure ahead of us.”
Piglet was so delighted at the thought that he would be useful that he even forgot about his fears. And when Rabbit said that Kangas are only fierce in the winter months, and the rest of the time they are in a good-natured mood, Piglet could hardly sit still - he wanted to immediately become useful.
- What about me? - Pooh said sadly. - So I won't be useful?
“Don’t be upset, Pooh,” the generous Piglet hastened to console him. - Maybe some other time...
“Without Winnie the Pooh,” said the Rabbit solemnly, starting to fix the pencil, “the whole enterprise will be impossible.”
- Oh! - said Piglet, trying not to show his disappointment.
Pooh again modestly retreated to the corner. But to himself he proudly said: “Without me, everything is impossible! Oh yes bear!
- Well, now everyone listen! - said the Rabbit, having finished writing.
Pooh and Piglet sat down and prepared to listen - they even opened their mouths. This is what Rabbit read:

PLAN TO KIDDLE KRUBY RU

1. Firstly. Kanga runs faster than all of us, even faster than me.
2. First of all. Kanga never takes his eyes off Little Roo unless he's buttoned up in her pocket.
3. So, if we want to kidnap Little Roo, we need to gain time, because Kanga runs faster than all of us, even faster than me (see point 1).
4. Idea. If Roo jumps out of Kanga's pocket, and Piglet jumps in, Kanga won't notice the difference, because Piglet is a Very Small Creature.
5. Like Little Roo.
6. But Kanga must definitely look in the other direction so as not to notice how Piglet jumps into his pocket.
7. See point 2.
8. One more idea. Now, if Pooh speaks to her very inspiredly, she may turn away for a minute.
9. And then I can run away with Little Roo.
10. Very quickly.
11. And Kanga won’t notice anything at first, but will notice everything only later.

Well, Rabbit proudly read it all out loud, and after that no one said anything for a while. Finally, Piglet, who kept opening and closing his mouth without making a sound, managed to say in a very hoarse voice:
- And then?
- What do you want to say?
- When will Kanga notice that it's not Roo?
“Then we’ll all say “AHA.”
- All three?
- Yes.
- Is it true?
- What's bothering you, Piglet?
“Nothing,” said Piglet. - If all three of us say "AHA", then everything is fine. If all three of us say “AHA,” said Piglet, “I don’t mind, but I wouldn’t want to say “AHA” myself, alone. Otherwise, this “AHA” will turn out very badly... By the way,” he continued, “you quite Are you sure about what you said about the winter months?
- About the winter months?
- Well, about the ferocity only in the winter months.
- Ahh. Yes, yes, that's right. Well, Pooh, do you understand what you have to do?
“No,” said Pooh Bear. - Not really. What should I do?
- Well, talk and talk to Kanga all the time so that she doesn’t notice anything.
- Oh! What about?
- About whatever you want.
- Or maybe read poetry to her or something like that?
“That’s it,” said the Rabbit. - Brilliant. Now let's go.
And they all went to look for Kanga.
Kanga and Roo were spending their afternoon peacefully near a large sand pit. Little Roo practiced high and long jumps and even deep jumps - he learned to fall into mouse holes and get out of them, and Kanga was worried and kept saying: “Well, my dear, jump one more time and go home.” And at that moment none other than Pooh appeared on the hill.
“Good afternoon, Kanga,” he said.
- Good afternoon, Pooh.
- Look how I jump! - Little Roo squeaked and fell into another mouse hole.
- Hello, Ru, baby!
“We’re just getting ready to go home...” said Kanga. - Good afternoon, Rabbit. Good afternoon, Piglet.
Rabbit and Piglet, who had meanwhile appeared on the other side of the hill, also said “good afternoon” and “hello, Roo,” and Little Roo invited them to watch him jump...
They stood and watched. And Kanga looked - looked with all her eyes...


“Listen, Kanga,” said Pooh after the Rabbit winked at him a second time, “I wonder if you like poetry?”
“Not particularly,” said Kanga.
“Ah,” said Pooh.
- Ru, my dear, jump one more time, and it’s time for us to go home!
There was a short silence. Little Roo fell into another mouse hole.
- Well, come on, come on! - The Rabbit hissed loudly, covering his mouth with his paw.
“By the way, about poetry,” continued Pooh. - I just composed a short poem on the way. Something like this. Mmmm... Just a minute...
“Very interesting,” said Kanga. - And now, my little Ru...
“You will like this poem,” said the Rabbit.
“You’ll love him,” Piglet squeaked.
“Just listen very, very carefully,” said the Rabbit.
“Don’t miss anything, watch,” Piglet squeaked.
“Yes, yes,” said Kanga. But, alas, she did not take her eyes off Little Roo.
- So what does it say, Pooh? - asked the Rabbit. Pooh cleared his throat slightly and began:

LINES COMPOSED BY A BEAR WITH SAWDUST IN HIS HEAD

The other day, I don’t know why,
I went into an unfamiliar house,
I wanted someone with someone
Talk about This and That.

I told them who, when,
And why, and why,
He said from where and where,
And How, and Where, and For What;

What happened before, what happened next,
And Who Whom, and What's What,
And what did you think about Tom?
And If Not, Then Why?

When I was at a loss for words
I added “Ah”, then “Eh”,
And “So to speak” and “Be healthy”
And “Well, well!” and “Just a laugh!”

When I finished the story,
Then Somebody asked: - That's all?
You've been talking here for an hour,
And he told neither this nor that!...
Then…

“Very, very nice,” said Kanga, not expecting a story about what happened then. - Well, the very, very last time, jump, Ru, my dear, and march home!
The rabbit nudged Pooh in the side with his elbow.
“By the way, about poetry,” Pooh said hastily. - Have you ever paid attention to that tree over there?
“Where?...” said Kanga. - Well, dear baby...
“He’s there, in front,” said Pooh, pointing behind Kanga.
“No!...” said Kanga. - Well, Ru, my dear, jump into your pocket and let's go home!
“No, be sure to look at that tree over there,” said the Rabbit. “Ru, do you want me to lift you up?” - And he took Little Roo in his paws.
“And there’s a bird sitting on that tree,” said Pooh. - Or maybe it’s a fish.
“Of course, there’s a bird sitting there,” said the Rabbit, “unless it’s a fish.”
“It’s not a fish, it’s a bird,” Piglet squeaked.
“So it is,” said the Rabbit.
- I wonder if this is a starling or a thrush? - said Pooh.
“That’s the whole question,” said the Rabbit. - Is it a thrush or a starling?
And then finally Kanga turned and looked at that tree over there.
And at that moment, when she turned away, the Rabbit said in a loud voice:
- Ru, take your place!
And Piglet jumped into his place - into Kanga's pocket, and the Rabbit grabbed Roo tightly and ran away as fast as he could.
“Where did the Rabbit go?...” asked Kanga, turning her head again. - Well, dear baby, is everything all right?
Piglet squeaked something from the bottom of Kanga's pocket - exactly like Roo.
“The rabbit had to leave,” said Pooh, “he probably remembered some important matter.” Suddenly.
- And Piglet?
- Probably, Piglet also remembered something. Suddenly.
“Okay, we’ll go home,” said Ken-ga. - All the best, Pooh!
Three huge leaps - and she disappeared from sight. Pooh looked after her.
“I wish I could jump like that! - he thought. - Why do some people know how to do this and others can’t? Very, very disappointing!”


Kanga, no doubt, knew how to jump very well, but Piglet, to be honest, wished for minutes that Kanga couldn’t. Sometimes, returning home from a long walk in the Forest, Piglet dreamed of becoming a bird and being able to fly, but now, when he was hanging at the bottom of Kanga’s pocket, the following thoughts were jumping in his head:

Fly,
called... then I'm on it...
this... never...
“If... I don’t agree!”

Woohoo! - he said, soaring into the air, and coming down, he said: - Wow!...
And he had to repeat “Uuuuuu-uh!”, “Uuuuuu-uh!”, “Uuuuuu-uh!” all the way - all the way to Kanga's house.
Of course, at home, as soon as Kanga unzipped her pocket, she noticed what had happened. At first she was almost afraid, but she immediately realized that there was nothing to be afraid of - after all, she was quite sure that Christopher Robin would not allow anyone to offend Little Roo.
“Okay,” she said to herself, “since they decided to prank me, I’ll prank them myself.”
“Well, Roo, my dear,” she said, pulling the piglet out of her pocket, “it’s time to go to bed.”
- Yeah! - said Piglet, trying to pronounce this word as best as possible. But, alas, after such a terrible journey, the "aha" was not a very good one, and Kanga apparently did not understand what it meant.
“First, swim,” Kanga said cheerfully.
- Yeah! - repeated Piglet, looking around anxiously in search of the others.
But the others were not there. The rabbit sat at home and played with Little Roo, feeling that every minute he loved him more and more, and Pooh, who decided to try to become Kanga, was still learning to jump in the same hole with sand.
“I don’t know,” Kanga said in a very thoughtful voice, “maybe it’s better for you to take a cold bath today?” What do you think, Ru, honey?
Piglet, who had never particularly liked swimming, trembled with indignation and said in the most courageous voice he could:
- Kanga! I see that the time has come to speak frankly.
“What a funny little fool you are, Roo,” said Kanga, pouring water into the bath.
“I’m not Roo,” Piglet said loudly. - I'm Piglet!
“Yes, honey, yes,” Kanga said affectionately. - Nobody argues with you!... And he imitates Piglet’s voice, what a clever girl! - she muttered, taking a large piece of yellow soap from the shelf. - Well, what else can you come up with for me?


- Don’t you see? - Piglet shouted, - Don’t you have an eye? Look at me!
“I see, my little Ru,” said Kanga rather sternly. - But do you remember what I told you yesterday about grimaces? If you make faces like Piglet, then when you grow up you will become like Piglet, and then you will really, really regret it. Now - go to the bathroom and don't make me repeat it again!
And before he knew it, Piglet was in the bathtub, and Kanga began scrubbing him as hard as she could with a large shaggy washcloth.
- Oh! - Piglet squeaked. - Let me go! I'm Piglet!
“Don’t open your mouth, dear, or soap will get into it,” said Kanga. - Here you go! What did I tell you?
“You-you-you, you did it on purpose,” Piglet gurgled as soon as he was able to speak again...
But then there was a washcloth in his mouth.
“That’s good, honey, keep quiet,” said Kanga.
The next moment, Piglet was taken out of the bath and thoroughly dried with a shaggy towel.
“Well,” said Kanga, “now take your medicine and go to bed.”
- W-w-what le-le-medicine? - Piglet stammered.
- Fish oil to make you grow big and strong, honey. You don't want to be as small and weak as Piglet, do you? Well, that's it.
At that moment someone knocked on the door.
“Come in,” said Kanga. And Christopher Robin entered.
- Christopher Robin, Christopher Robin! - Piglet sobbed. - Tell Kanga who I am. She keeps saying I'm Ru! But I’m not Ru, right?
Christopher Robin examined him very carefully and shook his head.
“Of course you’re not Roo,” he said, “because I just saw Roo visiting the Rabbit.” They play there.
- Well, well! - said Kanga. - Just think! How could I have misrepresented myself like that!
- Yeah, yeah! You see! - said Piglet. - What did I tell you? I'm Piglet!
Christopher Robin shook his head again.
“No, you’re not Piglet,” he said. - I know Piglet well, and he is a completely different color.
“That’s because I just took a bath this minute,” Piglet wanted to say, but managed to realize that perhaps it wasn’t worth saying. Just as he opened his mouth to say something completely different, Kanga quickly shoved a spoonful of medicine into his mouth and patted him on the back and told him that fish oil was very, very tasty once you got used to it.
“I knew it wasn’t Piglet,” Kanga said later. - I wonder who it could be?
- Maybe some relative of Pooh? - said Christopher Robin. - Say, nephew, or uncle, or something like that?
“Probably, probably,” Kanga agreed. - We just need to come up with a name for him.
“You can call him Pushel,” said Christopher Robin. - For example, Henry Puschel. Abbreviated.
But, as soon as he received a new name, Henry Puschel twisted out of Kanga's embrace and jumped down. To his great happiness, Christopher Robin left the door open.
Never in his life has Henry Puschel - Piglet run as fast as he does now! He rushed without stopping for a second. Only a hundred steps from the house he stopped running and rolled on the ground to once again find his own - sweet, cozy and familiar - color...
So Kanga and Little Roo remained in the Forest. And every Tuesday, Little Roo went for the whole day to visit his new friend, Rabbit, and Kanga spent the whole day with her new friend, Pooh, teaching him to jump, and Piglet these days visited his old friend Christopher Robin.
And everyone had a blast!

CHAPTER EIGHT
in which Christopher Robin organizes an expedition to the North Pole

Winnie the Pooh wandered through the Forest, going to see his friend Christopher Robin and find out if he had forgotten that bears exist in the world. In the morning at breakfast (the breakfast was very modest - a little marmalade spread on honeycombs with honey) Pooh came up with a new song (Noisemaker). It began like this: “It’s good to be a bear, hurray!”
Having come up with this line, he scratched his head and thought: “The beginning is just wonderful, but where can I get the second line?”
He tried repeating “hurray” two or three times, but it didn’t help. “Maybe it would be better,” he thought, “to sing “It's Good to Be a Bear, Wow!” And he sang “wow.” But, alas, things didn’t go any better anyway. “Well, okay then,” he said, “then I can sing this first line twice, and maybe if I sing very quickly, without noticing it, I’ll get to the third and fourth lines, and then it will work out.” good noisemaker. Come on:

It's good to be a bear, yay!
It's good to be a bear, yay!
I'll run...
(no, I will win!)
I will conquer heat and frost,
If only my nose was smeared with honey!
I will win...
(no, I will win!)
I will overcome any trouble,
If only all the paws were covered in honey!…
Hurray, Winnie the Pooh!
Hurray, Winnie the Pooh!
An hour or two will fly by like a bird,
And it's time to refresh yourself!

For some reason, he liked this song (Noisemaker) so much that he sang it all the way, walking through the forest. “But if I continue to sing it,” he suddenly thought, “the time will come for something to eat, and the last line will be wrong.” So he hummed this song without words.
Christopher Robin sat at the threshold, pulling on his Hiking Boots. As soon as Pooh saw the Hiking Boots, he immediately realized that an Adventure was coming, and, brushing the remaining honey from his face with his paw, he pulled himself up as best he could to show that he was ready for anything.
- Good morning, Christopher Robin! - he shouted.
- Hello, Winnie the Pooh. There's no way I can pull this Boot on.
“This is bad,” said Pooh.
“Please, press against my back, otherwise I might pull so hard that I’ll fly upside down.”
Pooh sat down and firmly, with all his might, rested his paws on the ground, and with his back rested with all his might against Christopher Robin's back, and Christopher Robin rested with all his might against Pooh's back and began to pull and pull his Boot until he finally put it on
“Well, that’s it,” said Pooh. - What will we do next?
- We are going on an expedition. That’s it,” said Christopher Robin, getting up and dusting himself off. - Thank you, Pooh.
- Are we going on expedition? - Pooh asked with interest. - I've never seen one. Where is this expedition?
- Expedition, my stupid bear. Not “sk”, but “ks”.
“Ah,” said Winnie the Pooh. - It's clear. To tell the truth, he didn't understand anything.
- We must find and open the North Pole.
- A-ah! - Pooh said again. - What is the North Pole? - he asked.
“Well, this is the kind of thing that is opened,” said Christopher Robin casually, who himself did not know exactly what this thing was.
“Ah, I see,” said Pooh. - Do bears help open it?
- Of course they help. And Rabbit, and Kanga, and that's it. This is an expedition. An expedition is what it means: everyone follows each other, single file... You better tell everyone else to get together while I clean the gun. And we must not forget the provisions.
- What should I not forget about?
- Not about anything, but about what they eat.
- A-ah! - Pooh said joyfully. - It seemed to me that you were talking about some kind of vision. Then I'll go and tell them all.
And he set off.
The first person he met was Rabbit.
“Hello, Rabbit,” said Pooh. - It's you?
“Let’s play as if it’s not me,” said the Rabbit. - Let's see what we can do then.
- I have an errand for you.
- Okay, I'll tell the Rabbit.
- We're all going on expedition with Christopher Robin.
- The rabbit will definitely take part.
“Oh, Rabbit, I don’t have time,” said Pooh. - We must, most importantly, not forget about... In a word, about what they eat. And then suddenly we want to eat. Now I’ll go to Piglet, and you tell Kanga, okay?
He said goodbye to the Rabbit and ran to Piglet's house. Piglet sat on the ground and told fortunes using a daisy, finding out whether he loved, did not love, would spit or kiss. It turned out that he would spit, and now he tried to remember who he wished for, hoping that it was not Pooh. And then Winnie the Pooh appeared.
- Hey, Piglet! - Pooh said excitedly. - We are all going on expedition. Everything, everything! And we take about... To eat. We have to discover something.
- What to open? - Piglet asked in fear.
- Well, something like that.
- Not very angry?
- Christopher Robin didn't say anything about anger. He only said that it had a “ks” in it.
“I’m not afraid of the kitty,” Piglet said seriously. “I’m only afraid of wolves, but if Christopher Robin comes with us, then I’m not afraid of anything at all!”
After a little time, everyone was assembled, and the expedition began.
The first to go were Christopher Robin and the Rabbit, followed by Piglet and Pooh, then Kanga with Little Roo and Owl, even further - Eeyore, and at the very end, stretched out in a long chain, walked all the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends.
“I didn’t invite them,” the Rabbit explained casually, “they just took it and came.” They always do. They can go at the end, behind Eeyore.
“I would like to say,” said Eeyore, “that it gets on your nerves.” I had no intention of going to this cave at all... or whatever Pooh put it. I came only out of a sense of duty. Nevertheless, I am here, and if I have to go at the end of the age - you understand what I'm talking about - then let me be at the end. But if every time I want to sit and relax, I first have to clear a place for myself from all this small stuff - Rabbit’s Relatives and Friends, then it won’t be a place - or whatever they call it - but just vanity and turmoil. That's what I wanted to say.
“I understand what Eeyore means,” said the Owl. - If you ask me...
“I don’t ask anyone,” said Eeyore. - On the contrary, I explain to everyone. You can search for the North Pole, or you can play “Sit, sit, Yasha” on the anthill. There are no objections on my part.
Then a scream was heard from the head of the column.
- Forward! Forward! - Christopher Robin shouted.
- Forward! - Pooh and Piglet shouted.
- Forward! - shouted the Owl.
- Let's move! - said the Rabbit. - I have to run. - And he rushed to the head of the column to Christopher Robin.
“That’s it,” said Eeyore. - They've obviously moved on. But I have nothing to do with it.
So they set out on a campaign to the Pole. On the way they all chatted about different things. Everyone except Pooh, who was composing a song.
“Here is the first stanza,” he said to Piglet when it was finally ready.
- First stanza of what?
- My song.
- What song?
- This one.
- Which?
- If you listen, you will find out everything.
- How do you know that I’m not listening?
Pooh couldn’t find anything to answer to this, so he started singing:

Everyone went to EXPEDITION
(Counting me too).
Owl, and Roo, and Rabbit,
And all his relatives!

All our EXPEDITION
I wandered through the forest all day,
I was looking for ISKPEDITION
Everywhere there is a road to the Pole,

And everyone in EXPEDITION
I would be terribly glad
Find out what Pole means
And what do you eat it with?

Shh! - said Christopher Robin, turning to Pooh. - We are just approaching a dangerous place!
- Shh! - said Pooh, quickly turning to the piglet.
- Shh! - said Piglet to Kanga.
- Shh! - Kanga said to the Owl, and Little Roo said “shhh” to himself several times.
- Shh! - said the Owl, turning to Eeyore.
- Tsits! - Eeyore said in a terrible voice to all the Rabbit’s Relatives and Friends, and they began to hastily say “shh” to each other until they got to the very last thing. And the last, the smallest Relative and Acquaintance, was so frightened, deciding that the whole expedition was saying “shh” to him, that he immediately buried himself in the ground and sat there upside down for two whole days, until he was convinced that the danger had finally passed. Then he went home.
His name was Sashka Bukashka.
The expedition approached a river that was merrily twisting and tumbling among high stone banks, and Christopher Robin immediately assessed the situation.
- This is just the right place for an ambush.


- What garden? - Winnie the Pooh whispered to Piglet. - Maybe there are raspberries there?
“My dear Pooh,” said the Owl in a patronizing tone, “don’t you even know what an ambush is?”
“Owl,” said Piglet, looking sternly at her, “Pooh wasn’t whispering to you, but to me, and it wasn’t necessary for you at all...
“Ambush,” said the Owl, “it’s like a surprise.”
“Sometimes raspberries too,” said Pooh.
“An ambush, as I was going to explain to Winnie the Pooh,” said Piglet, “it’s kind of a surprise.”
“If they suddenly run into you, it’s called an ambush,” said the Owl.
“It’s called an ambush, Pooh, when someone suddenly jumps on you,” explained Piglet.
Pooh, who now knew what an ambush was, said that one day a raspberry bush suddenly came upon him when he, Pooh, was falling from a tree and then he had to pull out the thorns for a whole week.
“Nobody talked about raspberries,” said the Owl rather angrily.
“I told you so,” said Pooh.


They walked very carefully along the shore, making their way between rocks and stones, and soon reached a place where the shore was wider and imperceptibly turned into a flat lawn overgrown with green grass, on which they just wanted to sit and relax. As soon as they got there, Christopher Robin commanded: “Stop!” - and everyone sat down to rest.
“In my opinion,” said Christopher Robin, “we should eat all our provisions so that it will be easier for us to move on.”
- Eat all of ours? - said Pooh.
“Everything we brought,” said Piglet and got down to business.
“That’s a good idea,” said Pooh and also got down to business.
- Does everyone have something to eat? - asked Christopher Robin with his mouth full.
“Everyone except me,” said Eeyore. - As usual! - He looked around sadly. - I wonder if any of you are sitting on a thistle, by any chance?
“I think I’m sitting,” said Pooh. - Oh! - He jumped up and looked around. - Yes, I was sitting. That's how I felt!
- Thank you, Pooh. If you don't need him anymore, then...
Eeyore moved to Pooh's place and began to eat.
“By the way, thistles are not good for being sat on,” Eeyore spoke, looking up from his food for a minute. - He loses all freshness. Remember this, my friends. It doesn’t hurt to show attention to your friend. Sometimes you need to think about others, I want to say!
As soon as Christopher Robin had finished his breakfast, he whispered something to the Rabbit, and the Rabbit said, “Yes, yes, of course,” and they walked away.
“I didn’t want to talk in front of everyone,” Christopher Robin began.
“I see,” said the Rabbit, puffing up with pride.
- The thing is... I wanted... but no, probably you don’t know either, Rabbit... I wonder what this North Pole is like!
“Well,” said the Rabbit, bristling his mustache, “I should have asked earlier.”
“I knew before, but I seemed to have forgotten,” said Christopher Robin casually.
“It’s a strange coincidence,” said the Rabbit, “I also seemed to have forgotten, although I, of course, knew before.”
- In my opinion, the earth's axis passes there. It's probably stuck in the ground. Is it true?
- Of course, there is an axis there, and, of course, it is stuck into the ground, because there is nowhere else to stick it, and besides, it is called “earthen”.
- And I think so.
“That’s not the question,” said the Rabbit. - The question is, where is this axis?
- We will find out soon! - said Christopher Robin.
They returned to the rest of the expedition. Piglet lay on the grass and snored peacefully; Roo washed his face and paws in the river near the dam, and Kanga, filled with pride, explained to everyone that Roo was washing himself for the first time in his life; and the Owl was telling Kanga an interesting story, full of long words like “encyclopedia” and “rhododendron,” although Kanga did not think to listen to it.
“I don’t approve of these different washings,” Eeyore grumbled. - Especially this new fashion of washing behind the ears. What about you, Pooh?
“Well,” said Pooh, “I think...
But we will never know what Pooh thought, because at that moment there was a splash, a squeak from Roo and a loud, frightened cry from Kanga.
- Roo fell into the water! - cried the Rabbit.
- I was thinking about it! - said Eeyore.
Christopher Robin and Pooh rushed to the rescue. - Look how I swim! - Ru squeaked. He was already in the middle of the river, and the current was quickly carrying him to the waterfall near the dam. - Ru, dear, are you okay? - Kanga shouted. - Yes! - answered Ru. - Look how I cry... Glug, glug! - And he emerged at the next dam. Everyone tried to help him as best they could. Piglet, completely awake, jumped on the spot and shouted: “Oh, oh!”; The owl explained that in case of unexpected immersion in water, the most important thing is to keep your head above the surface; Kanga rushed along the shore with huge leaps, not forgetting to ask: “Ru, dear, are you really safe?” - to which Ru replied: “Look how I swim!”; Eeyore sat down near the dam - the same one where Roo fell - and lowered his tail into the water. Turning his back to everything that was happening, he said: “It’s all because of this washing, but you just hold on to my tail, Roo, and everything will be all right.” And Christopher Robin and the Rabbit rushed back and forth, calling everyone else.


- Ru, hold on, we are coming to you! - Christopher Robin shouted.
- Hey, you guys, throw something across the river, a little lower! - commanded the Rabbit.
And only Winnie the Pooh did something useful. He picked up a long stick and threw it to the other side. Kanga immediately jumped there and grabbed the other end; they lowered the stick to the water itself, and soon Roo, who continued to gurgle joyfully: “Look how I swim!” - grabbed hold of it and climbed ashore.

NORTH POLE.

OPENED IN DOWN.

POOH FOUND HIM.

Then everyone went home. And I think, although I'm not entirely sure, Little Roo had to take a hot bath and go straight to bed. And Pooh was so proud of his feat that he had to eat very, very thoroughly.

CHAPTER NINE
in which Piglet is completely surrounded by water

The rain poured and poured and poured. Piglet told himself that never in his entire life - and he was an awful lot of years old: maybe three years old, maybe even four! - He had never seen so much rain at once. And the rain poured and poured and poured. From morning to evening. Day after day.
“If only,” thought Piglet, looking out of the window, “I was visiting Pooh, or Christopher Robin, or even the Rabbit when it started to rain, I would have fun all the time. Otherwise, sit here alone and wonder when he will stop!”
And he imagined that he was visiting Pooh and saying to him: “Have you ever seen such rain?” - and Pooh replies: “Well, it’s just terrible!”, or he, Piglet, in turn says: “I wonder if the road to Christopher Robin has washed away?”, and Pooh replies: “And poor old Rabbit has probably run away from home."
Of course, such a conversation is a pleasure!
And in general, what is the use of such amazing things as floods and floods if you have no one to even talk about them with?
And it was, no doubt, incredibly interesting. The small dry ditches in which Piglet used to climb so often became streams; the streams along which he used to paddle, turning up his pants, turned into streams, and the river, on the banks of which friends often played, crawled out of its bed (that’s what a river’s bed is called) and spilled so widely that Piglet began to worry whether he would get in she will soon be in his own bed (that is, in his bed).
“Yes, it’s a little scary,” he said to himself, “to be a Very Small Creature completely surrounded by water! Christopher Robin and Pooh can escape by climbing a tree, Kanga can gallop away and also escape, Rabbit can escape by burying himself in the ground, Owl can fly away, and Eeyore can escape - mmm... if he screams loudly until he is rescued.
But I’m sitting here, completely surrounded by water, and I can’t do anything at all!”
The rain kept pouring down, and every day the water rose a little higher, and now it came right up to the window, and Piglet still did nothing.
And suddenly he remembered the story that Christopher Robin told him - the story about a man on a desert island who wrote something on a piece of paper, put it in a bottle and threw the bottle into the sea; and Piglet thought that if he wrote something on a piece of paper, put it in a bottle and threw it into the water, then maybe someone would come and save him!
He searched his entire house, or rather, everything that was dry in the house, and finally he found a dry pencil, a piece of dry paper, a dry bottle and a dry cork and wrote on one side of the paper:

HELP! PIGLE (IT'S ME),

And on the back:

IT'S ME, PIGLE
SAVE, HELP!

Then he put the paper in the bottle, capped the bottle as best he could, leaned out of the window as far as he could without falling out, and threw the bottle with all his might.
- Plop! - said the bottle and swayed on the waves. Piglet watched it slowly float away until his eyes hurt, and sometimes it seemed to him that it was a bottle, and sometimes that it was just ripples on the water, and finally he realized that he would never see it again and that he did everything he could to save himself.
“And that means now,” he thought, “someone else will have to do something. I hope he does it quickly, because otherwise I’ll have to swim, but I don’t know how.” Then he took a very deep breath and said:
- I want Pooh to be here, it’s much more fun together!

When it started to rain, Winnie the Pooh was sleeping. The rain poured and poured and poured, and he slept and slept and slept. He was very tired the day before.
As you remember, he discovered the North Pole, and he was so proud of it that he asked Christopher Robin if there were any other Poles that Sawdust Bear could discover.
“There is also a South Pole,” said Christopher Robin, “and I think there is an East Pole and a West Pole somewhere, although for some reason people don’t like to talk about them.”
Hearing this message, Pooh became very excited and suggested immediately organizing an expedition to the East Pole, but Christopher Robin was busy with something with Kanga, so Pooh went to discover the East Pole himself. Whether he opened it or not, I forget, but he returned home so tired that he fell asleep in the middle of dinner, about half an hour after he sat down at the table. And so he slept, and slept, and slept.
And suddenly he had a dream. He, Pooh, was at the East Pole, and it turned out to be a very cold Pole, all covered with the coldest varieties of snow and ice. Pooh found a bee hive and went to sleep there, but there was not enough room in the hive for Pooh's hind legs, and they had to be left outside. And suddenly, out of nowhere, the Wild Beeches, who live at the East Pole, came and began to pluck the fur on Pooh’s paws to make nests for their babies, and the more they plucked, the colder the paws became, and finally Pooh woke up screaming and found who is sitting on a chair, and his feet are in water and there is water everywhere around him too!
He padded to the door and looked outside...
“The situation is serious,” said Pooh, “we must seek salvation.”
He grabbed the largest pot of honey and escaped with it onto a thick, very thick branch of his tree, sticking out high, high above the water.
Then he climbed down again and escaped with another pot.
And when all the rescue operations were completed, Pooh was sitting on a branch, dangling his legs, and ten pots of honey stood nearby...
The next day, Pooh sat on a branch, dangling his legs, and next to him stood four pots of honey.


On the third day, Pooh sat on a branch, dangling his legs, and next to him stood a pot of honey.
On the fourth day, Pooh sat alone on a branch.
And that very morning Piglet's bottle floated past Pooh.
And then with a loud cry “Honey! Honey!" Pooh rushed into the water, grabbed the bottle and, up to his neck in water, bravely returned to the tree and climbed onto a branch.
“It’s a pity, it’s a pity,” said Pooh, opening the bottle, “to get so wet, and completely in vain!... Wait, what is this piece of paper doing here?”
He pulled out a piece of paper and looked at it.
“This is Salvation,” he said, “that’s what it is.” But this is the letter “Py,” yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, and “Py” probably means “Pooh,” and that means this is a very important Salvation for me, but I can’t find out what it means! I should find Christopher Robin, or Owl, or Piglet - in a word, some reader who can read all the words, and they will tell me what is written here; I just don't know how to swim. It's a pity!
And suddenly an idea occurred to him, and I think that for a bear with sawdust in his head it was a very good idea. He said to himself:
“If the bottle can float, then the pot can float, and when the pot floats, I can sit on it if it is a very large pot.”
He took his largest pot and tied it tightly.
“Every ship should have its own name,” he said, “so I’ll call mine “Floating Bear.”
With these words, he threw his ship into the water and jumped after it.
For some time Pooh and Floating Bear could not decide which of them should be on top, but in the end they agreed. The "Floating Bear" was below, and on it was Pooh, desperately swinging his legs.

Christopher Robin lived in the highest place in the Forest. The rain poured and poured and poured, but the water could not reach his house. And, perhaps, it was quite fun to look down and admire all this water, but the rain was so heavy that Christopher Robin sat at home almost all the time and thought about different things.
Every morning he went out (with an umbrella) and stuck a stick in the place where the water had reached, and the next morning the stick was already hidden under the water, so he had to stick a new stick, and the road home became shorter and shorter.
On the morning of the fifth day, he realized that for the first time in his life he was on a real island. This, of course, was very, very cool!
And that very morning the Owl flew in to find out how her friend Christopher Robin was doing.
“Listen, Owl,” said Christopher Robin, “how great!” I live on an island!
- Atmospheric conditions in lately were somewhat unfavorable,” said Owl.
- What, what?
“It was raining,” explained the Owl.
“Yes,” said Christopher Robin, “he was.”
- The flood level has reached an unprecedented height.
- Who?
“I’m saying, there’s a lot of water around,” explained the Owl.
“Yes,” agreed Christopher Robin, “a lot.”
“However, prospects are rapidly improving.” The forecast shows...
-Have you seen Pooh?
- No, the forecast...
“I hope he is alive and well,” said Christopher Robin. - I'm a little worried about him. I wonder if Piglet is with him or not? Do you think they're okay, Owl?
- I guess everything is in order. You understand, the forecast...
- You know what, Owl, look how they are there, because Pooh has sawdust in his head and he can do something stupid, and I love him so much, Owl. Do you understand, Owl?
“Very good,” said the Owl, “I’m leaving.” I'll be back immediately. - And she flew away.
Soon she returned.
“There’s no fluff there,” she said.
- No?
- He was there. He was sitting on a branch with ten pots of honey, but now he is not there.
“Pooh, dear,” cried Christopher Robin, “where are you?”
“That’s where I am,” answered a grumpy voice from behind.
- Pooh!!
They rushed to hug.
- How did you get here, Pooh? - asked Christopher Robin when he was able to speak again.
- On the ship! - Pooh said proudly. - I received a very important Salvation in a bottle, but since water got into my eyes, I could not read it and brought it to you on my ship.
With these proud words, he conveyed a message to Christopher Robin.
- This is from Piglet! - Christopher Robin shouted after reading the message.
- Isn’t there anything about Pooh there? - asked the bear cub, looking over Christopher Robin's shoulder.
Christopher Robin read the message aloud.
- Oh, so all these “Py” were Piglets? I thought they were Poohs.
- We must save him immediately! I thought he was with you, Pooh. Owl, can you save him on your back?
“I don’t think so,” answered the Owl after a long reflection. - It is doubtful that the spinal muscles are able...
- Then fly to him now and tell him that salvation is approaching, and Pooh and I will think about how to save him, and we will come as soon as we can. Oh, Owl, just, for God’s sake, don’t talk, fly quickly!
And, still repeating to herself everything that she wanted, but did not have time to express, the Owl flew away.
“Well, Pooh,” said Christopher Robin, “where is your ship?”
“I must say,” Pooh explained to Christopher Robin on the way to the shore, “that this is not an ordinary ship.” Sometimes it's a ship, and sometimes it's like an accident, depending on...
- It depends on what?
- Well, depending on whether I’m up or down. On it or under it.
- Well, where is he?
“Here,” said Pooh proudly and pointed to the “Floating Bear.”
Yes, this was not at all what Christopher Robin expected to see.
And the more he looked at the "Floating Bear", the more he thought about how brave and smart the bear Winnie the Pooh is, but the more Christopher Robin thought about it, the more modestly Pooh looked at the ground, trying to pretend that it was not him.
“But he’s too small for both of us,” said Christopher Robin sadly.
- For the three of us, including Piglet.
- Well, that means it’s even smaller. Winnie the Pooh, what should we do?
And then there's Little Bear, Winnie the Pooh, D.P. (Piglet's Friend), P.K. (Rabbit's Pal), O.P. (Pole Discoverer), W.I. and N.H. (Eeyore's Comforter and Finder of the Tail), - in a word, our Winnie the Pooh said such a wise thing that Christopher Robin could only widen his eyes and open his mouth, not understanding whether this was really the same bear with sawdust in his head that he had known and loved for so long.
“We’ll sail in your umbrella,” said Pooh.
- ??
- We let's swim in your umbrella,” said Pooh.
- ???
- We let's float in your umbrella,- said Pooh.
- !!!
Yes, Christopher Robin suddenly realized that this was possible. He opened his umbrella and lowered it onto the water. The umbrella floated, but swayed. Pooh climbed into it.
And he was about to say that everything was in order, when he discovered that not everything was, and, after a short swim, he waded back to Christopher Robin. Then they both sat down in the umbrella, and the umbrella no longer swayed.


“We’ll call this ship the Wisdom of Pooh,” said Christopher Robin.
And the “Wisdom of Pooh” sailed with full sail in a south-easterly direction, rotating smoothly from time to time.
Imagine how happy Piglet was when he finally saw the Ship! Then for many years he liked to think that he was in very great danger during this terrible flood, but the only danger threatened him only in the last half hour of his imprisonment, when the Owl sat down on a branch and, in order to support him morally, began to tell him a long story about his The aunt who once mistakenly demolished goose egg, and this story dragged on and on (just like this phrase), until Piglet, who was listening to the Owl, leaning out of the window, having lost hope of salvation, began to fall asleep and, naturally, began to little by little fall out of the window; but, fortunately, at that moment, when he was holding on only with the hooves of his hind legs, the Owl screamed loudly, depicting the horror of his Aunt and her cry when she (Aunt) discovered that the egg was really a goose, and Piglet woke up and just in time sneak back out the window and say: “Oh, how interesting! What are you saying!” - in a word, you can imagine his joy when he saw the glorious ship “The Wisdom of Pooh” (Captain - K. Robin, 1st mate - V.-Pooh), which sailed to his rescue, and K. Robin, and V .-Pooh, in my own eyes...
Well, this story essentially ends here, and I’m so tired of this last phrase that I’ll be glad to put an end to it. What about you?

CHAPTER TEN
in which Christopher Robin arranges a ceremonial Pyrgoroy and we say Goodbye to Everyone, Everyone, Goodbye

RESTLESS DOWN SNORING:

Hooray! Long live Pooh!
(Wow!
Who is this - Pooh?)
- Well, our Pirgoroy!
- WHO, WHO?
- Our hero!
(Is this really our Winnie the Pooh?)
- He's the one!
Is doubt possible?
He saved a friend from trouble!
(Out of trouble?)
- Well, it’s easier to tell you - from the water!
Long live Pooh!
He stayed dry
Despite all the floods!
He swam for the first time
But still saved
(Whom?)
- His!
(Who is it?)
- His!
That is, the one you need!
For this he
(Whom?)
Himself!
Pooh, okay!
Now the reward awaits.
Yes, Pooh is a bear
with a Great Mind!
Long live Pooh!
(Repeat that out loud!)
- With a Great Mind!
(With your mind - or maybe with your tummy?)
With the tummy too -
He loved to eat -
So what?
But still
He didn't know how to swim, but he swam anyway
On such a ship
What - what to hide -
We can't name
Not a brig
neither a yacht,
neither by boat,
not a raft...
Long live, long live,
Hello Pooh!
Whose intrepid spirit...
(Ugh!)
So let's all shout triple cheers together!
(It's high time!)
And we will give him what we will reward him with!…
(Or maybe we’ll just ask him?)
No, no, -
We will hand over or, better yet, hand over...
(To whom?!)
- How stupid!
Of course he -
Whom do we congratulate?
We will also glorify:
Long live
Hello,
Hello Pooh!
(Just tell me -
WHAT DOES HE HAVE TO DO HERE?)

While all this was happening in Pooh’s soul, Owl was talking with Eeyore.
“Eeyore,” said the Owl, “Christopher Robin is making Pyrgoroy.”
“Very interesting,” said Eeyore. “I suppose they will send me the crumbs that fell from the table.”
Which they managed to step on. With your feet. Very kind and caring of them. Thank you very much.
- They sent you an invitation.
- Curious. Can I have a look?
- This is the invitation.
- Yes, yes, I heard. Who dropped it?
- This is not what they eat. This means that your name is Pyrgoroy. They invite you. For tomorrow.
Eeyore slowly shook his head.


- You mean Piglet. This baby with nervous ears. This is Piglet. I'll tell him.
“No, no,” said the Owl, still not allowing herself to be confused. - It's you!
-Are you sure?
- Absolutely, absolutely sure! Christopher Robin said: "Invite All-All-Everyone!"
- All-All-All, except Eeyore?
“All-All-All,” repeated the Owl with annoyance.
“Hmm,” said Eeyore. - There is no doubt that there is a mistake here, but I will still come. Just don't blame me if it rains.
But there was no rain. Christopher Robin made a long table out of planks under a tree. In one Chairman's seat - at the end of the table - sat Christopher Robin, and in the other Chairman's seat - at the other end of the table - sat Winnie the Pooh himself, and in the remaining seats, between them, were the Guests - on one side, Owl, Eeyore and Piglet, and opposite - Rabbit, Little Roo and Kanga. And all around, right on the grass, the Rabbit’s Relatives and Acquaintances, of all varieties and sizes (starting with those on which you accidentally step, and ending with those that sometimes accidentally fly into your eye), sat and patiently waited for one of them to The guests will talk to them, or drop something, or at least ask them what time it is.
Little Roo went to Pyrgoroy for the first time in his life, and he was understandably terribly excited. As soon as everyone sat down at the table, he started talking and could not calm down.
- Hello, Pooh! - he squeaked first.
- Hello, Ru! - Pooh answered.
Little Roo jumped up and down in his little chair and started again.
- Hello, Piglet! - he squeaked even louder. Piglet only waved his paw in response, as his mouth was too busy.
“Hello, Eeyore,” said Little Roo. Eeyore looked at him sadly.
“It will rain soon, you’ll see,” he said.
- Hello, Owl!
The owl affectionately answered him: “Hello, baby!” - and continued to tell Christopher Robin about the accident that almost happened to one of her friends (which Christopher Robin had never heard of), and Kanga said to Roo:
- First, drink the milk, dear, and then talk.
And of course, Little Roo, who was just drinking milk, tried to say that he could do both at the same time... so he had to be patted on the back and then dried out for quite a long time.


When All-All-Everyone had enjoyed their meal (and were almost finished), Christopher Robin tapped his spoon on the table; the conversations immediately stopped and everyone fell silent, with the exception of Little Roo, who had just overcome a bout of hiccups and was now trying to pretend that it was not him at all, but one of the Rabbit’s Relatives and Acquaintances.
“This Pyrgoroi,” said Christopher Robin, “Pyrgoroi is in honor of someone who did something, and we all know who that Someone is, and this is his Pyrgoroi, in honor of what he did, and I have a gift for him - here it is.
Then he rummaged around and asked in a whisper:
- Where is he?
And while he was looking around in search, Eeyore cleared his throat impressively and spoke.
“Friends,” he began, “my friends... including others!” It is a great joy for me - at least until now it was great joy- to see you on my Pirgoroy. What I did was just a trifle. Each of you - of course, with the exception of Rabbit, Owl and Kanga - would do the same in my place. Oh, and besides Pooh. Naturally, my comments do not apply to Piglet and Little Roo - they are both too small. In a word, any of those present could have done this. It was purely by chance that I turned out to be the hero. I think there is no need to mention that I did not do this for the sake of what Christopher Robin is now looking for ...
Then Eeyore raised his front leg to his mouth and said in a terrible whisper:
- Look under the table! - and continued: - No. I did what I did solely out of a sense of duty, that is, I acted as, it seems to me, any of us is obliged to do, without any exceptions - to do everything in our power to help... And it seems to me that everything We…
- Hiccup! - Little Roo said loudly, although accidentally.
- My dear! - Kanga said reproachfully.
- Is it me? - asked Ru with sincere surprise.
- What is Eeyore talking about? - Piglet whispered to Pooh.
“I don’t know,” Pooh answered, not very cheerfully.
- I thought it was your Pyrgoroy.
- And that’s what I thought at first. But now I've stopped.
“It would be better if the holiday were in your honor,” said Piglet.
“And I don’t mind,” said Pooh.
- Hiccup! - Little Roo said again.
- AND - IT SEEMES TO ME, - said Eeyore loudly and sternly, - it seems to me, as I said, until I was disturbed by various meaningless sounds, it seems to me that...
- Here they are! Found it! - Christopher Robin shouted joyfully. - Please tell Winnie the Pooh. This is for Pooh.
- For Pooh? - said Eeyore.
- Certainly. For the best little bear in the world!
“I should have seen it coming,” said Eeyore. - Well, there's no need to complain. I have friends. Someone spoke to me just yesterday. And last week - or was it the week before last? - The rabbit knocked me down and almost apologized. Society, society. Something is constantly happening.
But no one listened to him. Everyone crowded around Winnie the Pooh, shouting vying with each other: “Unwrap it, Pooh!”, “Open it quickly!”, “And I know what’s there!”, “You don’t know anything!” - and making other useful comments.
And finally, Pooh unwrapped the Gift - and it was large and carefully packed - and although Pooh was in a hurry, he still did not cut it, but untied the ribbon - after all, you can always suddenly need it. And then Everyone-All-Everyone gasped. And Pooh himself almost fell - he was so happy.
Because it turned out to be a beautiful, large Special Box with a wonderful set of pencils!
There were pencils marked "B" - in honor of Winnie the Pooh, and pencils marked "NV" - in honor of Fearless Winnie, and more pencils marked "BB" - in honor of... in honor of Helpful Winnie, because that's him helped Piglet out; and there was also a Pencil Dotting Machine, and a Red Eraser, which is very good at erasing everything you wrote incorrectly, and then a Ruler, and Blue Pencils, and Red Pencils, and even Green, and Red-Blue, just like in adults.
And all this was for Pooh!


“Oh,” said Pooh.
- Oh, Pooh! - said All-All-Everything, with the exception of Eeyore.
- Thank you! - Pooh barely said. And Eeyore muttered to himself:
- Just think, pencils or whatever they are called... Writers! Big deal! Who needs them? Nonsense!
Then, when everyone had already said “Goodbye” and “Thank you” to Christopher Robin, Pooh and Piglet returned home together. The evening was completely golden, and the friends were silent for a long time.
- Pooh! “When you wake up in the morning,” Piglet finally said, “what is the first thing you say to yourself?”
- What do we have for breakfast? - said Pooh. - What are you saying, Piglet?
- I say: “I wonder what interesting things will happen today?” - said Piglet.
Pooh nodded thoughtfully.
“It’s the same thing,” he said.

- And what happened? - asked Christopher Robin.
- When?
- Tomorrow morning.
“I don’t know,” said Dad.
- Can you think about it and someday tell Pooh and me?
- If you really, really want to.
“I really, really want Pooh,” said Christopher Robin.
He took a deep breath, grabbed his teddy bear by the leg and headed towards the door, dragging Winnie the Pooh behind him.
On the threshold he turned around and said:
-Will you come and watch me swim?
“Probably,” said Papa.
- Was Pukhov’s box of pencils better than mine?
“One to one,” Dad answered.
The boy nodded and left... and almost immediately Dad heard Winnie the Pooh going up the stairs: boom-boom-boom.

To Her ( To her )

Hand in hand we come (hand in hand we come)

Christopher Robin and I (Christopher Robin and me)

To lay this book in your lap (/to put this book on your lap) .

Say you're surprised (you say you're surprised) ?

Say it's just what you wanted (you say this is exactly what you wanted) ?

Because it"s yours- (because she's yours)

because we love you (because we love you) .

Hand in hand we come

Christopher Robin and I

To lay this book in your lap.

Say you're surprised?

Say it's just what you wanted?

Because it"s yours-

because we love you.

Introduction

If you happen to have read another book about Christopher Robin (if you happen to read if you happen to read another Christopher Robin book) , you may remember that he once had a swan (you may remember that he once had = he had swan )(or the swan had Christopher Robin, I don't know which) (or the swan had Christopher Robin, I don’t know which = What /more correct more accurate/) and that he used to call this swan Pooh (and that he called this swan Pooh; used to do - I used to do this before, used to V - means a habitual action in the past that no longer occurs in the present; pooh - / interjection uf!) . That was a long time ago (it was a long time ago») , and when we said good-bye (and when we said goodbye we said goodbye») , we took the name with us (we took the name with us = with you) , as we didn't think the swan would want it any more (since we didn’t think that the swan would want it again = because we thought that the swan would no longer need it; to want - want to need ) . Well, when Edward Bear said that he would like an exciting name all to himself (well, when Edward 1 (Teddy is a diminutive of Edward and in English “a teddy bear is Teddy bear. Therefore Edward Bear - this is already more impressive. In Russian it would correspond to Teddy Bear Mikhail Plyushevy) The bear said that he would like an exciting name just for himself) Christopher Robin said at once (Christopher Robin said right away) , without stopping to think (without stopping to think») , that he was Winnie-the-Pooh ( that he was = will Winnie the Pooh). And he was ( and he was one = became) . So, as I have explained the Pooh part (so since I explained the "Pooh" part») , I will now explain the rest of it (I'll now explain the rest of the name "the rest of it"») .

another [ə"nʌðə], once, swan

If you happen to have read another book about Christopher Robin, you may remember that he once had a swan (or the swan had Christopher Robin, I don't know which) and that he used to call this swan Pooh. That was a long time ago, and when we said good-bye, we took the name with us, as we didn't think the swan would want it any more. Well, when Edward Bear said that he would like an exciting name all to himself, Christopher Robin said at once, without stopping to think, that he was Winnie-the-Pooh. And he was. So, as I have explained the Pooh part, I will now explain the rest of it.

You can"t be in London for long without going to the Zoo (you can't be = impossible to be in London it takes a long time to go to the zoo without going to the zoo) . There are some people who begin the Zoo at the beginning, called WAYIN (there are some people who start a zoo = visit to the zoo from the beginning called INPUT 2) , and walk as quickly as they can past every cage until they get to the one called WAYOUT ( and go = pass as quickly as possible"as fast as they can past each square until/they/get to one = places, called EXIT) , but the nicest people go straight to the animal they love the most, and stay there (but the nicest people go straight to the animal/that they love the most and stay there) . So when Christopher Robin goes to the Zoo, he goes to where the Polar Bears are (so when Christopher Robin goes to the zoo he goes to where the polar = white bears/are/) , and he whispers something to the third keeper from the left, and doors are unlocked (and he whispers something to the third caretaker on the left and the doors are unlocked/with a key/; to unlock - unlock with a key) , and we wander through dark passages and up steep stairs, until at last we come to the special cage (and we wander through dark corridors and/climb steep stairs until finally/we/come to a special cage) , and the cage is opened, and out trots something brown and furry (and the cage opens and something brown and fluffy rushes out) , and with a happy cry of “Oh, Bear!” Christopher Robin rushes into his arms (and with a happy cry of "oh the bear" Christopher Robin rushes into his arms) . Now this bear's name is Winnie (and this is the name of this bear 3 It would be more correct to say “bears” since Winnie - diminutive of Winifred, but my hand doesn’t rise to say so because for me, since childhood, Vinnie has been a man’s name thanks to Pooh and Leonov) = and this bear's name is Vinny), which shows what a good name for bears it is (which shows what a good name it is for bears) , but the funny thing is that we can"t remember whether Winnie is called after Pooh, or Pooh after Winnie (but it's funny "the funny thing is that we can't remember = we don't remember, either Winnie was named "named after Pooh or Pooh after Winnie) . We did know once, but we have forgotten (we once knew but/we forgot) 4...

straight, walk, through [θru:]

You can"t be in London for long without going to the Zoo. There are some people who begin the Zoo at the beginning, called WAYIN, and walk as quickly as they can past every cage until they get to the one called WAYOUT, but the nicest people go straight to the animal they love the most, and stay there. So when Christopher Robin goes to the Zoo, he goes to where the Polar Bears are, and he whispers something to the third keeper from the left, and doors are unlocked, and we wander through dark passages and up steep stairs, until at last we come to the special cage, and the cage is opened, and out trots something brown and furry, and with a happy cry of “Oh, Bear!” Christopher Robin rushes into its arms. Now this bear"s name is Winnie, which shows what a good name for bears it is, but the funny thing is that we can"t remember whether Winnie is called after Pooh, or Pooh after Winnie. We did know once, but we have forgotten...

I had written as far as this (I/have already written to this point “as far as this») when Piglet looked up and said in his squeaky voice (when Piglet 5 (Actually, Piglet can be translated closer and funnier as Little Pig Little Pig or Little Pig, but respecting B Zakhoder for his wonderful and first I leave the translation to Piglet, especially since everyone has probably long ago become accustomed to this pig name) looked up and said in his squeaky voice; to look up - raise your eyes look up ) , “What about Me (what about me)? “My dear Piglet (my dear Piglet) "I said ( I said; to say - say talk ) , “the whole book is about you (the whole book is about you)" “So it is about Pooh ( and about Pooh; so - also too) "he squeaked ( he squeaked). You see what it is (Do you see what's the matter? "What is this») . He is jealous because he thinks Pooh is having a Grand Introduction all to himself (he is jealous because he thinks that Pooh is having a Big/Luxurious Introduction just for himself = Pooh gets a Luxurious Introduction just for him ) . Pooh is the favorite, of course, there"s no denying it (Pooh pet of course no one denies it "there's no denying it»; to deny - deny) , but Piglet comes in for a good many things which Pooh misses (but Piglet gets into a lot of things = in many ways, which Pooh doesn’t get into, but Piglet can be useful where Pooh can’t cope; to miss - miss fail to achieve miss; to come in for - come for/get something/a share of something bring upon oneself ) ; because you can"t take Pooh to school without everyone knowing it, but Piglet is so small that he slips into a pocket (because you can't take Pooh to school without everyone knowing about it without everyone knowing about it and Piglet is so small that he slips/unnoticed into his pocket) , where it is very comforting to feel him when you are not quite sure whether twice seven is twelve or twenty-two (where / it is very comforting to feel it when you are not quite sure / whether twice seven is twelve or twenty two) . Sometimes he slips out and has a good look in the ink-pot (sometimes he slips out and takes a good look at the inkwell = reaches into the inkwell ) , and in this way he has got more education than Pooh, but Pooh doesn't mind (and thus "in this way he has more education = he is more educated , than Pooh but Pooh doesn't mind) . Some have brains, and some haven"t, he says, and there it is (some have brains = some people have brains , and some don’t, he says, and there’s nothing you can do about it) .

Us? (and now everyone else is saying what about us) ” So perhaps the best thing to do is to stop writing Introductions and get on with the book (so probably the best thing to do = best stop writing the Introduction and continue the book; to get on with - continue) .

A.A.M.(Alexander Alan Milne)

I had written as far as this when Piglet looked up and said in his squeaky voice, “What about Me? “My dear Piglet,” I said, “the whole book is about you.” “So it is about Pooh,” he squeaked. You see what it is. He is jealous because he thinks Pooh is having a Grand Introduction all to himself. Pooh is the favorite, of course, there"s no denying it, but Piglet comes in for a good many things which Pooh misses; because you can"t take Pooh to school without everyone knowing it, but Piglet is so small that he slips into a pocket, where it is very comforting to feel him when you are not quite sure whether twice seven is twelve or twenty-two. Sometimes he slips out and has a good look in the ink-pot, and in this way he has got more education than Pooh, but Pooh doesn't mind. Some have brains, and some haven't, he says, and there it is.

And now all the others are saying, “What about Us? So perhaps the best thing to do is to stop writing Introductions and get on with the book.