the Forest for the grown-ups. Now he came to the little paths in the great expanse between the Carriage Road and the ditch where you looked across to the meadows beside the Outer Spaarne ; he followed the tracks in the dense oak wood, known only to boys ; he gathered the flowers that grew tall in the shade. Here all he could hear was the rustling of the leaves overhead and their own voices which sounded soft; he asked why there were round patches of sunlight on the moss, and Steven, looking up and following a ray of light, tried to find the source. They went down on their knees to watch the ants greeting each other as they passed, toiling, in passionate haste, to drag a dead wasp away. They put their fingers to their lips when they unex- pectedly saw a bird mounting the bark of an oak-tree and tapping with its beak. From Steven he learnt how to cut a whistle out of a sprig of elder and to blow a high-pitched note on it that silenced the throstle; they collected oak-apples to make ink from them ; they carved their name on a tree-trunk just as Laurens Coster had done. Sometimes they sat for a long time in the hemlock beside the ditch, looking so fixedly at the circles made by the water- spiders that they were startled at the sight of a cow that had been coming gradually nearer as she grazed, and now loomed up before them on the opposite bank so big that they could see a sail on the Outer Spaarne beneath her belly. And when Floris came