
The plank bridge on the river Test, from upstream. |
From chapter 33, 'The Great River':
'Soon they
reached a place where the river curved round in a bend to the east, and here
they came upon the broad, shallow fall. It was no more than a foot high -
one of those artificial falls, common on the chalk streams, made to attract
trout. Several were already rising to the evening hatch of fly. Just above
the fall a plank foot bridge crossed the river. Kehaar flew up,
circled the pool and perched on the hand-rail.
'This is more sheltered and lonely than the bridge
we crossed last night...'. The five rabbits hopped slowly along the planks,
their great, sensitive ears full of the sound of the falling water. Hazel,
who was not sure of his footing, had to stop several times. When at length
he reached the farther side, he found that Fiver and Blackberry had already
gone a little way downstream below the fall, and were looking at some large
object sticking out of the bank. At first he thought that it must be a fallen
tree trunk, but as he came closer he saw that although it was certainly wooden,
it was not round, but flat, or nearly flat, with raised edges - some
man-thing....'
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