"Is there any more?" asked Pooh quickly.
Rabbit took the covers off the dishes, and said,
"No, there wasn't."
"I thought not," said Pooh, nodding to himself "Well, good-bye.
I must be going on."
So he started to climb out of the hole.
He pulled with his front paws, and pushed with his back paws, and in a little while his nose was out in the open again . . . and then his ears . . . and then his front paws . . . and then his shoulders . . . and then --
"Oh, help!" said Pooh.
"I'd better go back."
"Oh, bother!" said Pooh.
"I shall have to go on."
"I can't do either!" said Pooh.
"Oh, help and bother!"
Now, by this time Rabbit wanted to go for a walk too, and finding the front door full, he went out by the back door, and came round to Pooh, and looked at him.
"Hallo, are you stuck?" he asked.
"N-no," said Pooh carelessly. "Just resting and thinking and humming to myself."
"Here, give us a paw."
Pooh Bear stretched out a paw, and Rabbit pulled and pulled and pulled....
"0w!" cried Pooh.
"You're hurting!"
"The fact is," said Rabbit, "you're stuck."
"It all comes," said Pooh crossly, "of not having front doors big enough."
"It all comes," said Rabbit sternly, "of eating too much.
I thought at the time," said Rabbit, "only I didn't like to say anything," said Rabbit, "that one of us has eating too much," said Rabbit, "and I knew it wasn't me," he said.
"Well, well, I shall go and fetch Christopher Robin."
Christopher Robin lived at the other end of the Forest, and when he came back with Rabbit, and saw the front half of Pooh, he said,
"Silly old Bear," in such a loving voice that everybody felt quite hopeful again.
"I was just beginning to think," said Bear, sniffing slightly, "that Rabbit might never be able to use his front door again.
And I should hate that," he said.
"So should I," said Rabbit.
"Use his front door again?" said Christopher Robin.
"Of course he'll use his front door again.
"Good," said Rabbit.
"If we can't pull you out, Pooh, we might push you back."
Rabbit scratched his whiskers thoughtfully, and pointed out that, when once Pooh was pushed back, he was back, and of course nobody was more glad to see Pooh than he was, still there it was, some lived in trees and some lived underground, and --
"You mean I'd never get out?" said Pooh.
"I mean," said Rabbit, "that having got so far, it seems a pity to waste it."
Christopher Robin nodded. "Then there's only one thing to be done," he said.
"We shall have to wait for you to get thin again."
"How long does getting thin take?" asked Pooh anxiously.
"About a week, I should think."
"But I can't stay here for a week!"
"You can stay here all right, silly old Bear.
It's getting you out which is so difficult."
"We'll read to you," said Rabbit cheerfully.
"And I hope it won't snow," he added.
"And I say, old fellow, you're taking up a good deal of room in my house -- do you mind if I use your back legs as a towel-horse?
Because, I mean, there they are -- doing nothing -- and it would be very convenient just to hang the towels on them."
"A week!" said Pooh gloomily.
"What about meals?"