Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (23 page)

BOOK: Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
5.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

'How did you know that?'

'I didn't know it. I just thought it. A couple of times I saw Mr Ages leaving their rosebush. And I knew that Father used to visit him a lot. But I never saw him near the rosebush.'

Probably, Mrs Frisby thought, because he would have been careful always to leave through the blackberry bramble, just so we would not see him.

They sat down outside the entrance to the house, and beginning at the beginning, with her first visit to the rats, she told them all that she had seen and done, and all that Nicodemus had told her. It took a long time to tell it, and as she talked the sun sank low, turning the sky red and lighting the tops of the mountains, beyond which, somewhere, the rats of Nimh were living.

The children's eyes grew round when she told them about the escape from Nimh, and even rounder when she described her own capture and escape from the birdcage. But in the end the eyes of Teresa and Cynthia were filled with tears, and Martin and Timothy looked sad.

Teresa said: 'But Mother, that's terrible. It must have been Justin. He saved Brutus and then went back. And he was so nice.'

Mrs Frisby said: 'It may have been Justin. We can't be sure. It could have been one of the others.'

Martin said: 'I'm going to find out. I'm going to go to the Thorn Valley, somehow, someday.'

'But it's too far. And you don't know where it is.'

'No. But I'll bet Jeremy knows. Remember, he told you the rats had a clearing back in the hills. That must be in Thorn Valley.' He thought about this for a minute. Then he added: 'He might even fly me there on his back, the way he did you.'

'But we don't know where Jeremy is, either. We don't see the crows down here,' Mrs Frisby reminded him.

'No, but in the autumn, when we go back to the garden - I could find him then. If I got something shiny and put it out in the sun, he'd come to get it.'

Martin was growing excited at his idea. 'Oh, Mother,
may
I?'

'I don't know. I doubt that the rats will want visitors from the outside.'

'They wouldn't mind. After all, you helped them, and so did Father. And I wouldn't do any harm.'

'It's not something we have to decide tonight,' said Mrs Frisby. I'll think about it. And now it's late. It's time for bed.'

The sun had set. They went into the house and lay down on the soft moss Mrs Frisby had placed on the floor of their room under the roots. Outside, the brook swam quietly through the woods, and up above them the warm wind blew through the newly opened leaves of the big oak tree. They went to sleep.

Afterword

Poor Rats! They must be the least popular of all animals, both in real life and as characters in fiction. So how the American author Robert O'Brien came to adopt them as the heroes of his book is best explained in his own words:

'It happened that a friend of mine was seriously ill and was sent to the NIH (National Institute of Health) for treatment. He was required to take a daily walk, so when I visited him a few times we walked together around the NIH grounds - numerous buildings set in a park.

'One large, low building was unlike the rest, and when we asked, we were told that it was the animal production laboratory, where rats, mice, rabbits and guinea pigs are raised for use in scientific tests. The attendant we talked to said that though they had no trouble with the other animals, the rats somehow managed to get out of their cages at times. He added that when energy and intelligence were required in a test, the scientist much preferred 'wild rats' over the docile laboratory-bred variety. I am quite sure it was this conversation that put The Rats of NIMH into the back of my head - where they stayed for several years before emerging as a story.'

But however energetic and intelligent, there is still a problem in making rats the heroes of any story. Twitching noses, yellow teeth and rapid darting movements can be very alarming at first glance, although tame white rats have often been much loved pets. Wild rats also carry diseases, and have been blamed for spreading the Plague that once wiped out so many families in Europe. Although - as Nicodemus points out - rats 'never spread as many diseases as people do themselves', they are still feared as well as hated for their habit of stealing food.

In Robert O'Brien's story, rats have a much better image. Instead of behaving like rodents, they speak English, get married, have human names, and sit down on benches in order to read books. When young Isabella comes into a room, she is carrying a pencil and 'Looking at some papers as she walked'. This is no hurrying, scurrying rat: the picture is closer to an attractive, educated young woman. Just as Anna Sewell's noble horse character Black Beauty talks like a sensitive young Victorian, Robert O'Brien's rats come over as decent, family-loving humans in rat disguise. It is easy for us to side with them in their tussle against their worst oppressors: human beings in their own skins.

Readers often enjoy books that show the human race in an unflattering light. We always learn something from such fiction, ending up with a better view of our own faults as seen from the point of view of smaller beings.
Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
also teaches us to be more tolerant of other forms of life on this small planet: a lesson even more relevant now than it was in 1971, when the book first came out. All creatures play a part in our environment: scavengers such as vultures and jackals who, like rats, are also often given bad parts in stories, in fact have an important job to do clearing up after other animals.

We also know how clever and ruthless humans are when pursuing their own ends. Any animal that still manages to give us a good fight cannot help winning our respect. So the rats' escape from the laboratory and Mrs Frisby's last-minute rescue from her cage are both nail-bitingly tense, given the odds against them. No one grudges the rats their happy ending, finally escaping from an experimenter who simply wants to use them for cold-blooded scientific research. It may still be difficult for most of us to change our minds permanently about rats after finishing this story. But no reader will ever feel the same about field-mice again, having come across such a great-hearted little creature as Mrs Frisby herself.

It is always sad when a good story ends, especially when there are still some details that remain unclear. Which rats did not finally make it and how successful was the new civilization at Thorn Valley? Fortunately, two sequels are available, answering these and other questions and written by the author's daughter Jane Conly, so readers can discover more about Justin, Brutus, Timothy Frisby and Jeremy the crow. This means there are still plenty of exciting adventures to come, again often to do with the continual struggle between animals and humans for the world's remaining resources, so vital for all forms of life.

Nicholas Tucker

Some other Puffin Modern Classics
THE BORROWERS
Mary Norton
Pod, Homily and Arrietty are a family of tiny people who live beneath the floor, behind the kitchen clock. Everything they have is borrowed from the 'human beans' who don't even know they exist.
That is, until the fateful day when Arrietty makes friends with'the boy upstairs'.
CHARLOTTE'S WEB
E. B. White
This is the story of a little girl called Fern, who loves a little pig called Wilbur. And of how Wilbur's dear friend Charlotte A. Cavatica, a beautiful grey spider, saves Wilbur from the usual fate of nice fat pigs, by a wonderfully clever plan (which no one else could possibly have thought of).
THE EAGLE OF THE NINTH
Rosemary Sutcliff
Set in Roman Britain, this is the dramatic story of a young centurion's quest to find his father, who has disappeared together with the entire Ninth Legion.
So Marcus embarks on a dangerous journey, hoping not only to solve the mystery, but to find the famous Eagle, symbol of the Legion's honour.
CARRIE'S WAR
Nina Bawden
Evacuated from London to Wales during the Second World War, Carrie and her brother are sent to live with the very strict Mr Evans.
But in trying to heal the breach between Mr Evans and his estranged sister, Carrie does the worst thing she ever did in her life.
THE CHILDREN OF GREEN KNOWE
Lucy Boston
Tolly isn't looking forward to spending Christmas with his great-grandmother in her strange house, but as soon as he arrives at Green Knowe he is delighted by the very special kind of magic he finds all around him.
Indeed, far from being lonely, Tolly is caught up in a wonderful adventure with the other children who have lived there, eagerly learning about the mysterious house and its delightful secrets.
THE SILVER SWORD
Ian Serraillier
This is the story of four children's struggle to stay alive throughout the years of Nazi occupation and, afterwards, their epic journey from war-torn Poland to Switzerland in search of their parents.
Based on a true story, this is an extraordinarily moving account of life during and after the Second World War.
TOM'S MIDNIGHT GARDEN
Philippa Pearce
Sent to stay with his aunt and uncle in a dull old house without even a garden, Tom is not looking forward to his summer holiday.
But when the clock strikes thirteen at midnight, Tom opens a door to find an adventure more wonderful than he ever could have imagined.
TARKA THE OTTER
Henry Williamson
This classic story of an otter's life and death in the Devon countryside captures the feel of nature and wildlife as though it is seen through the otter's own eyes.
Its atmosphere and detail make it easy to see why Tarka has become one of the best-loved creatures in world literature.
ROLL OF THUNDER, HEAR MY CRY
Mildred D. Taylor
The Mississippi of the 1930's is a hard place for a black child to grow up in and Cassie finds it difficult to understand why the farm means so much to her father.
But she begins to reach a painful understanding when she witnesses the hatred and destruction around her and learns when it is important to fight for a principle even if it brings terrible hardships.
THE DARK IS RISING
Susan Cooper
With only four days until Christmas, plenty of snow outside and his family birthday to look forward to. Will has got everything in the world to feel happy about; but he has an overwhelming sense of foreboding.
Suddenly, as everyone else enjoys a normal Christmas, Will is caught up in a powerful and , fantastic adventure, battling against the powers of Darkness and evil that threaten to destroy the world.
All rights reserved.  No part of this book may be reproduced or 
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or 
mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by 
any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in 
writing from the Publisher.
Aladdin Paperbacks
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Copyright © 1971 by Robert C. O'Brien
All rights reserved including the right of reproduction
in whole or in part in any form.
First Aladdin Paperbacks edition, 1975
Second Aladdin Paperbacks edition, 1986
Also available in hardcover from Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Manufactured in the United States of America
30 29 28
ISBN:0-689-71068-2
BOOK: Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
5.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Bloodfire Quest by Terry Brooks
Nightwalker by Allyson James
Churchyard and Hawke by E.V. Thompson
Us by Emily Eck
Silver Mage (Book 2) by D.W. Jackson
The Deep by Helen Dunmore