

and all I can say for it now is that, if it hadn't been for Christopher Robin, I shouldn't have written it which, indeed, is all I can say for any of the others. and the poem came quite differently from what I intended. So I thought to myself one fine day, walking with my friend Christopher Robin, "Moo rhymes with Pooh! Surely there is a bit of poetry to be got out of that?" Well, then, I began to think about the swan on his lake and at first I thought how lucky it was that his name was Pooh and then I didn't think about that any more. Well, I should have told you that there are six cows who come down to Pooh's lake every afternoon to drink, and of course they say "Moo" as they come.

You will find some lines about a swan here, if you get as far as that, and I should have explained to you in the Note that Christopher Robin, who feeds this swan in the mornings, has given him the name of "Pooh." This is a very fine name for a swan, because, if you call him and he doesn't come (which is a thing swans are good at), then you can pretend that you were just saying "Pooh!" to show how little you wanted him. William Wordsworth, who liked to tell his readers where he was staying, and which of his friends he was walking with, and what he was thinking about, when the idea of writing his poem came to him. A t one time (but I have changed my mind now) I thought I was going to write a little Note at the top of each of these poems, in the manner of Mr.
