Wind In The Willows: Unlikely Allies 2/2
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All Comments (25)
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I'm creeped out...creeped out satans are very scary, very very scery you don't need to believe in satan to fall into his powers...
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@BenBanjo87 well he IS Satan...and isn't Satan supposed to be the lord of the evil, who uses the weak ones for his own plesures and then leaves them to rott.
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Toad: There was a jolly good reason for me being in the broom cupboared
Rat: You were scared to death
Toad: yes I was scared to death....*realizes what he just said*no I wasn't!
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oh heck
Hello
Gotta love those villans...
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@mrfivegold Cool! Thanks for the info.
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@Indego84 In that time in America in some areas of Britain that is the name of Satan. He would take the role of a charming human or in this case animal to use the weak minded or fool with the desperate. There are several cluses in this narative about his hideous nature. Mr. Badger was actually quite aware of his true nature and what he was metophorically or actually but what he said at the end was actually similar to many writings of Old or Mister Scratch. However that is my opinion.
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@mrfivegold Who is Mr. Scratch?
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@Thomas5880 The White weasle don't fool me no sir... he don't fool me... he is no weasle... He is Mr. Scratch if I remember right, and I always remember right.
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Badger was quite right saying that the White Weasel would come back in some other form but not in their lifetime. It's possible he represented all that is evil and negetive within, when beaten he retreated to the darkness that spawned him. Good thing our friends stopped him before he could go onto BIGGER things! Thanks for the episode!
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@Punki80 spot on!
Chief: "Mr Toad?"
Toad: "Yes?"
Chief: "Shuddup."
Zakerandsaisu 3 years ago 13
Yeah it is. I think it's interesting how the weasels, as the working-classes, have always been portrayed as the villains; and yet now an upper-class-dialected individual is shown as an even worse antagonist.
BenBanjo87 3 years ago 8