'Christopher Robin didn't say anything about fierce. He just said it had an
'It isn't their necks I mind,' said Piglet earnestly. 'It's their teeth. But if
In a little while they were all ready at the top of the Forest, and the
Expotition started. First came Christopher Robin and Rabbit, then Piglet and
Pooh; ther Kanga, with Roo in her pocket, and Owl; then Eeyore; and, at the end, in a long line, all Rabbit's friends-and-relations.
'I didn't ask them,' explained Rabbit carelessly. 'They just came. They always do. They can march at the end, after Eeyore.'
'What I say,' said Eeyore, 'is that it's unsettling. I didn't want to come on this Expo-what Pooh said. I only came to oblige. But here I am; and if I am the end of the Expo-what we're talking about-then let me be the end. But if, every time I want to sit down for a little rest, I have to brush away half a dozen of
Rabbit's smaller friends-and-relations first, then this isn't an Expo-whatever it is-at all, it's simply a Confused Noise. That's what I say.'
'I see what Eeyore means,' said Owl. 'If you ask me-'
'I'm not asking anybody,' said Eeyore. 'I'm just telling everybody. We can look for the North Pole, or we can play 'Here we go gathering Nuts and May' with the end part of an ants' nest. It's all the same to me.'
'We're starting,' said Rabbit. 'I must go.' And he hurried off to the front of
'All right,' said Eeyore. 'We're going. Only Don't Blame Me.'
So off they all went to discover the Pole. And as they walked, they chattered to each other of this and that, all except Pooh, who was making up a song.
'This is the first verse,' he said to Piglet, when he was ready with it.
'Well, if you listen, Piglet, you'll hear it.'
'How do you know I'm not listening?' Pooh couldn't answer that one, so he began
to sing.
They all went off to discover the Pole,
Owl and Piglet and Rabbit and all;