Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind In The Willows (1908)

Anoth­er throw­back to child­hood mem­o­ries this week: we’re going to be look­ing at the end­less­ly charm­ing children’s nov­el, The Wind in the Wil­lows by Ken­neth Gra­hame, first pub­lished in 1908. Who isn’t fond­ly famil­iar with Grahame’s sto­ry of Mole, Rat­ty, Bad­ger and Toad, and their adven­tures on the riv­er and in the Wild Wood? I used to get mixed up between this and a six­ties’ children’s TV show called Tales of the River­bank, which was clear­ly influ­enced by The Wind in the Wil­lows giv­en that it fea­tured anthro­po­mor­phised wood­land crea­tures like Ham­my Ham­ster and Rod­er­ick the Water Rat, mess­ing about in boats (and voiced by a suit­ably “ham­my” John­ny Mor­ris).

The nov­el was based on bed­time sto­ries told by Gra­hame to his dis­abled son, Alas­tair. Gra­hame had fre­quent boat­ing hol­i­days and on these he would write tales about char­ac­ters that in time would become Toad, Mole, Rat­ty, and Bad­ger. He lived in Cookham Dean in Berk­shire and was inspired by the farm­land, lanes and vil­lages of the area and the wood­lands of local Bisham Woods which would become the Wild Wood. In 1908, he took ear­ly retire­ment from his job at the Bank of Eng­land and moved with his wife and son to an old farm­house in Blew­bury. There, he used the sto­ries he had told Alas­tair as a basis for the man­u­script of The Wind in the Wil­lows.

The Wind in the Wil­lows, book cov­er

The plot, you will per­haps recall, begins with Mole aban­don­ing his spring-clean­ing of his hole in the ground to join Rat­ty the water vole on the bank of the riv­er, where Rat­ty inducts him into the ways of the riv­er. They vis­it Toad, the wealthy and jovial res­i­dent of Toad Hall whose obses­sion with the new-fan­gled motor­car gives Mole and Rat­ty much cause for con­cern due to Toad’s propen­si­ty to crash vehi­cles. Mole vis­its the Wild Wood, gets lost and then found by Rat­ty and the two are tak­en in by Bad­ger, who, upon learn­ing of Toad’s numer­ous car crash­es, joins the two to stage an inter­ven­tion. They place Toad under house arrest, but Toad escapes, steals a car, and ends up in gaol. So far, so Grand Theft Auto

Toad escapes from prison and winds up at Ratty’s home, where­upon Rat­ty informs him that Toad Hall is being squat­ted by weasels, stoats and fer­rets. Toad, Bad­ger, Mole and Rat­ty invade Toad Hall and dri­ve out the inter­lop­ers. Toad holds a ban­quet to cel­e­brate, mends his for­mer ways and they all live hap­pi­ly ever after. In addi­tion to this main nar­ra­tive, the book con­tains sev­er­al diver­sion­ary tales fea­tur­ing Mole and Rat­ty, such as their encounter with the god Pan in the chap­ter called The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (which Pink Floyd would use as the title of their debut stu­dio album).

Here’s an excerpt fea­tur­ing Rat­ty and Mole dur­ing their first encounter with Bad­ger and his very appeal­ing home…

THEY wait­ed patient­ly for what seemed a very long time, stamp­ing in the snow to keep their feet warm. At last they heard the sound of slow shuf­fling foot­steps approach­ing the door from the inside. It seemed, as the Mole remarked to the Rat, like some­one walk­ing in car­pet slip­pers that were too large for him and down at heel; which was intel­li­gent of Mole, because that was exact­ly what it was.

There was the noise of a bolt shot back, and the door opened a few inch­es, enough to show a long snout and a pair of sleepy blink­ing eyes.

“Now, the very next time this hap­pens,” said a gruff and sus­pi­cious voice, “I shall be exceed­ing­ly angry. Who is it this time, dis­turb­ing peo­ple on such a night? Speak up!”

“Oh, Bad­ger,” cried the Rat, “let us in, please. It’s me, Rat, and my friend Mole, and we’ve lost our way in the snow.”

“What, Rat­ty, my dear lit­tle man!” exclaimed the Bad­ger, in quite a dif­fer­ent voice. “Come along in, both of you, at once. Why, you must be per­ished. Well I nev­er! Lost in the snow! And in the Wild Wood, too, and at this time of night! But come in with you.”

The two ani­mals tum­bled over each oth­er in their eager­ness to get inside, and heard the door shut behind them with great joy and relief.

The Bad­ger, who wore a long dress­ing-gown, and whose slip­pers were indeed very down at heel, car­ried a flat can­dle­stick in his paw and had prob­a­bly been on his way to bed when their sum­mons sound­ed. He looked kind­ly down on them and pat­ted both their heads. “This is not the sort of night for small ani­mals to be out,” he said pater­nal­ly. “I’m afraid you’ve been up to some of your pranks again, Rat­ty. But come along; come into the kitchen. There’s a first-rate fire there, and sup­per and every­thing.”

He shuf­fled on in front of them, car­ry­ing the light, and they fol­lowed him, nudg­ing each oth­er in an antic­i­pat­ing sort of way, down a long, gloomy, and, to tell the truth, decid­ed­ly shab­by pas­sage, into a sort of a cen­tral hall; out of which they could dim­ly see oth­er long tun­nel-like pas­sages branch­ing, pas­sages mys­te­ri­ous and with­out appar­ent end. But there were doors in the hall as well—stout oak­en com­fort­able-look­ing doors. One of these the Bad­ger flung open, and at once they found them­selves in all the glow and warmth of a large fire-lit kitchen.

The floor was well-worn red brick, and on the wide hearth burnt a fire of logs, between two attrac­tive chim­ney-cor­ners tucked away in the wall, well out of any sus­pi­cion of draught. A cou­ple of high-backed set­tles, fac­ing each oth­er on either side of the fire, gave fur­ther sit­ting accom­mo­da­tions for the socia­bly dis­posed. In the mid­dle of the room stood a long table of plain boards placed on tres­tles, with bench­es down each side. At one end of it, where an arm-chair stood pushed back, were spread the remains of the Badger’s plain but ample sup­per. Rows of spot­less plates winked from the shelves of the dress­er at the far end of the room, and from the rafters over­head hung hams, bun­dles of dried herbs, nets of onions, and bas­kets of eggs. It seemed a place where heroes could fit­ly feast after vic­to­ry, where weary har­vesters could line up in scores along the table and keep their Har­vest Home with mirth and song, or where two or three friends of sim­ple tastes could sit about as they pleased and eat and smoke and talk in com­fort and con­tent­ment. The rud­dy brick floor smiled up at the smoky ceil­ing; the oak­en set­tles, shiny with long wear, exchanged cheer­ful glances with each oth­er; plates on the dress­er grinned at pots on the shelf, and the mer­ry fire­light flick­ered and played over every­thing with­out dis­tinc­tion.

Ken­neth Gra­hame

Camille Pissarro’s Jalais Hill, Pontoise (1867)

Camille Pis­sar­ro is the Impres­sion­ist who doesn’t quite get the same props these days as the usu­al crowd: Mon­et, Manet, Renoir, Degas, Cézanne et al. These names trip off the tongue, and jus­ti­fi­ably so due to the indeli­ble stamp they all made on the artis­tic endeav­our of Impres­sion­ism, but Pis­sar­ro was the one that they all looked up to as the old­est mem­ber and “founder” of their col­lec­tive group. It was Pis­sar­ro who real­ly helped get things off the ground and up and run­ning, so to speak, so let’s look at the inter­est­ing sto­ry of how that came to pass.

Pis­sar­ro was born in 1830 on the island of St Thomas in the Dan­ish West Indies (now US Vir­gin Islands). His father, a French nation­al of Por­tuguese Jew­ish descent, had trav­elled to St Thomas to deal with the estate of a deceased uncle. He end­ed up stay­ing, mar­ry­ing his uncle’s wid­ow and hav­ing four chil­dren with her. Accord­ing to Jew­ish law you can’t go mar­ry­ing your aunt so the fam­i­ly was ostracised, and the young Camille and his sib­lings were sent to school with the local indige­nous kids rather than to the island’s Jew­ish school.

At age twelve, Camille was sent to board­ing school in France, and returned to St Thomas with a love of art and a thor­ough ground­ing in draw­ing and paint­ing. After work­ing for this father for a few years, but being con­vinced by Dan­ish artist Fritz Mel­bye that he had a rare tal­ent, he left for Venezuela and took on paint­ing as a full-time pro­fes­sion. At twen­ty-one, he moved to Paris, work­ing as an assis­tant to Fritz’s broth­er Anton Mel­bye, and attend­ing the École des Beaux-Arts and Académie Suisse.

At the begin­ning of this peri­od Pissarro’s paint­ings were in accord with the stan­dards of the Salon, but he soon felt restrict­ed by those stan­dards. He want­ed to express the beau­ties of nature with­out adul­ter­ation. He began to leave the city and paint scenes in the coun­try­side, cap­tur­ing the dai­ly real­i­ty of vil­lage life, and paint­ing what he saw, with­out arti­fice or grandeur. This inevitably ruf­fled the feath­ers of the art world’s old guard who crit­i­cised his paint­ings as “vul­gar”.

At the Académie Suisse, how­ev­er, he met Mon­et and Cézanne, young artists whose own work was attract­ing sim­i­lar crit­i­cism, and he sym­pa­thised with them and encour­aged them. Even­tu­al­ly, oth­er Refusés (Salon rejects) joined the group and in 1873 Pis­sar­ro helped estab­lish a col­lec­tive called the “Société Anonyme des Artistes, Pein­tres, Sculp­teurs et Graveurs” which includ­ed fif­teen artists…and Impres­sion­ism was born. Let’s look at a gallery of Pis­sar­ro’s works, with promi­nence giv­en to his won­der­ful Jalais Hill, Pon­toise which marks his tran­si­tion into Impres­sion­ism.

Jalais Hill, Pon­toise (1867)
Camille Pis­sar­ro

J R R Tolkien’s The Lord Of The Rings (1955)

Just two miles up the road from me, at 2 Darn­ley Road, West Park, is a fine old semi-detached Edwar­dian dwelling which bears a blue plaque declar­ing this as the one-time home of J R R Tolkien when he was Read­er in Eng­lish at Leeds Uni­ver­si­ty in the 1920s. This was some years before The Hob­bit and The Lord of the Rings but it is still quite a thrill to know that the young Tolkien was study­ing so close to where I’m writ­ing now. I dis­cov­ered The Hob­bit whilst at school and absolute­ly loved it, and I’ll nev­er for­get the book cov­er: it was this one here, that took a few scrolls to find amongst the myr­i­ad dif­fer­ent ver­sions!

The Hob­bit

The Hob­bit turned out to be a spring­board to the much larg­er, grown-up, epic high fan­ta­sy nov­el that was The Lord of the Rings. What an amaz­ing piece of work! It is a jour­ney for the read­er just as it is a jour­ney for the char­ac­ters. It is under­pinned, of course, by an aston­ish­ing depth of schol­ar­ship on its author’s part. Tolkien stud­ied ety­mol­o­gy and philol­o­gy, and, as a keen medieval­ist, pro­duced, whilst still at Leeds and long before writ­ing his books, A Mid­dle Eng­lish Vocab­u­lary and the defin­i­tive edi­tion of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

Also whilst at Leeds, Tolkien com­plet­ed a trans­la­tion of Beowulf, which was a pow­er­ful influ­ence on his lat­er Mid­dle-earth “leg­en­dar­i­um” (this was Tolkien’s own term for his body of fic­tion­alised mythol­o­gy that would inform The Lord of the Rings). He also stud­ied the Prose Edda and Norse mythol­o­gy, as well as the Finnish Kale­vala and oth­er Scan­di­na­vian myth­ic lit­er­a­ture. Tolkien’s knowl­edge of the myr­i­ad leg­ends and myths of the Mid­dle Ages and ear­li­er would give rise to the world of Mid­dle-earth with its inhab­i­tants of hob­bits, men, elves, dwarves, wiz­ards, orcs and trolls famil­iar to Tolkien read­ers of today.

The Lord of the Rings, 1st sin­gle-vol­ume edi­tion (1968)

As most peo­ple know (but here’s a brief sum­ma­ry any­way), the sto­ry revolves around the Dark Lord Sauron, who in an ear­li­er age cre­at­ed the One Ring, allow­ing him to rule the oth­er Rings of Pow­er giv­en to men, dwarves, and elves, in his cam­paign to con­quer all of Mid­dle-earth. From home­ly begin­nings in the Shire, a hob­bit land rem­i­nis­cent of the Eng­lish coun­try­side, the sto­ry ranges across Mid­dle-earth, fol­low­ing the quest to destroy the One Ring, seen main­ly through the eyes of the hob­bits Fro­do, Sam, Mer­ry, and Pip­pin. Aid­ing the hob­bits are the wiz­ard Gan­dalf, the men Aragorn and Boromir, the elf Lego­las, and the dwarf Gim­li, who unite as the Com­pa­ny of the Ring in order to ral­ly the Free Peo­ples of Mid­dle-earth against Sauron’s armies and give Fro­do a chance to destroy the One Ring in the fires of Mount Doom.

Here’s an excerpt from the ear­li­er stages of the sto­ry (in Book 1, The Fel­low­ship of the Ring), when the hob­bits have recent­ly left their beloved Shire behind and ven­tured beyond to the town of Bree where they stay overnight in the Pranc­ing Pony inn, and meet Aragorn (Strid­er) for the first time. I choose it because it it was the first time (though not the last) of expe­ri­enc­ing a real thrill whilst read­ing it: that grad­ual tran­si­tion from a sense of fore­bod­ing about this dark stranger in the cor­ner to the real­i­sa­tion that Strid­er was in fact an ally, and a safe pair of hands at that!

Sud­den­ly Fro­do noticed that a strange-look­ing weath­er­beat­en man, sit­ting in the shad­ows near the wall, was also lis­ten­ing intent­ly to the hob­bit-talk. He had a tall tankard in front of him, and was smok­ing a long-stemmed pipe curi­ous­ly carved. His legs were stretched out before him, show­ing high boots of sup­ple leather that fit­ted him well, but had seen much wear and were now caked with mud. A trav­el-stained cloak of heavy dark-green cloth was drawn close about him, and in spite of the heat of the room he wore a hood that over­shad­owed his face; but the gleam of his eyes could be seen as he watched the hob­bits.

‘Who is that?’ Fro­do asked, when he got a chance to whis­per to Mr. But­ter­bur. ‘I don’t think you intro­duced him?’

‘Him?’ said the land­lord in an answer­ing whis­per, cock­ing an eye with­out turn­ing his head. ‘I don’t right­ly know. He is one of the wan­der­ing folk – Rangers we call them. He sel­dom talks: not but what he can tell a rare tale when he has the mind. He dis­ap­pears for a month, or a year, and then he pops up again. He was in and out pret­ty often last spring; but I haven’t seen him about late­ly. What his right name is I’ve nev­er heard: but he’s known round here as Strid­er. Goes about at a great pace on his long shanks; though he don’t tell nobody what cause he has to hur­ry. But there’s no account­ing for East and West, as we say in Bree, mean­ing the Rangers and the Shire-folk, beg­ging your par­don. Fun­ny you should ask about him.’ But at that moment Mr. But­ter­bur was called away by a demand for more ale and his last remark remained unex­plained.

Fro­do found that Strid­er was now look­ing at him, as if he had heard or guessed all that had been said. Present­ly, with a wave of his hand and a nod, he invit­ed Fro­do to come over and sit by him. As Fro­do drew near he threw back his hood, show­ing a shag­gy head of dark hair flecked with grey, and in a pale stern face a pair of keen grey eyes.

‘I am called Strid­er,’ he said in a low voice. ‘I am very pleased to meet you, Mas­ter – Under­hill, if old But­ter­bur got your name right.’

‘He did,’ said Fro­do stiffly. He felt far from com­fort­able under the stare of those keen eyes.

‘Well, Mas­ter Under­hill,’ said Strid­er, ‘if I were you, I should stop your young friends from talk­ing too much. Drink, fire, and chance-meet­ing are pleas­ant enough, but, well this isn’t the Shire. There are queer folk about. Though I say it as shouldn’t, you may think,’ he added with a wry smile, see­ing Frodo’s glance. ‘And there have been even stranger trav­ellers through Bree late­ly,’ he went on, watch­ing Frodo’s face.

Fro­do returned his gaze but said noth­ing; and Strid­er made no fur­ther sign. His atten­tion seemed sud­den­ly to be fixed on Pip­pin. To his alarm Fro­do became aware that the ridicu­lous young Took, encour­aged by his suc­cess with the fat May­or of Michel Delv­ing, was now actu­al­ly giv­ing a com­ic account of Bilbo’s farewell par­ty. He was already giv­ing an imi­ta­tion of the Speech, and was draw­ing near to the aston­ish­ing Dis­ap­pear­ance.

Fro­do was annoyed. It was a harm­less enough tale for most of the local hob­bits, no doubt: just a fun­ny sto­ry about those fun­ny peo­ple away beyond the Riv­er; but some (old But­ter­bur, for instance) knew a thing or two, and had prob­a­bly heard rumours long ago about Bilbo’s van­ish­ing. It would bring the name of Bag­gins to their minds, espe­cial­ly if there had been inquiries in Bree after that name. Fro­do fid­get­ed, won­der­ing what to do. Pip­pin was evi­dent­ly much enjoy­ing the atten­tion he was get­ting, and had become quite for­get­ful of their dan­ger. Fro­do had a sud­den fear that in his present mood he might even men­tion the Ring; and that might well be dis­as­trous.

‘You had bet­ter do some­thing quick!’ whis­pered Strid­er in his ear.

J R R Tolkien