Issue #18: The Wind in the Willows

 
  • The Real Main Character

    Anyone who reads the literature of the United Kingdom comes to recognize the one character that all writers from Great Britain include in their tales, although it is almost never given a name. It is so deeply enmeshed in the fabric of both British society and its storytelling that to remove this character from a book would be to change the entire nature of the book, without altering any of the plot or dialogue.

    It is the land. The bustle and mystique of London, the beauty of the Highlands, the windswept mystery of the outer islands—every city, town or village the site of thousands of years of recorded history, all packed into an area just over half the size of California.

    For me, a kid who grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, the British Isles were literally a fairy-tale place with their rolling green meadows, their trees whose names were familiar to me only as street names, their tradition of monarchs granting land to feudal lords who in turn ruled over their lands and tenants in a relationship that has no analogue in American society, enshrined in British law as “right to roam,” meaning that anyone has the right to hike and camp in the wild places of Great Britain. The land’s mark upon its people, as evidenced by their habit of adding the word “British” to nearly anything, thereby assigning a certain superiority to it, permeates The Wind in the Willows. I suppose we are all a product of where we grew up—I consantly miss the stark beauty and comforting warmth of the desert I grew up in—but as a child, I couldn’t help but feel what Germans call “fernweh,” a feeling akin to homesickness felt for a place one has never been.

    For American writers, giving readers a sense of place can be a challenge. Thanks to television and movies, all big cities have become generic, and the US has such varied landscape that it might as well be 50 entirely different countries. Very few Americans live in the same place their great-great-grandparents lived, and many don’t even know their own family trees that far back. Perhaps that is why Americans can’t get enough of British literature.

    Kenneth Grahame was born in Edinburgh, but spent most of his childhood in Inveraray (a village in western Scotland), and then in Cookham Dean, Berkshire, where Grahame’s uncle introduced him to boating, and the inspiration for The Wind in the Willows likely took hold.

    Think for a moment what The Wind in the Willows would be without the river, the woods, or the fields—the story of four animals in a zoo would hardly have kept so many generations spellbound! I will leave you with this beautiful description of the glories of the English countryside, and the hope that after you’ve read these wonderful stories and poems, you might pick up The Wind in the Willows, and revisit its lovely places.

    The pageant of the river bank had marched steadily along, unfolding itself in scene-pictures that succeeded each other in stately procession. Purple loosestrife arrived early, shaking luxuriant tangled locks along the edge of the mirror whence its own face laughed back at it. Willow-herb, tender and wistful, like a pink sunset cloud, was not slow to follow. Comfrey, the purple hand-in-hand with the white, crept forth to take its place in the line; and at last one morning the diffident and delaying dog-rose stepped delicately on the stage, and one knew, as if string-music had announced it in stately chords that strayed into a gavotte, that June at last was here. One member of the company was still awaited; the shepherd-boy for the nymphs to woo, the knight for whom the ladies waited at the window, the prince that was to kiss the sleeping summer back to life and love. But when meadow-sweet, debonair and odorous in amber jerkin, moved graciously to his place in the group, then the play was ready to begin.

    And what a play it had been! Drowsy animals, snug in their holes while wind and rain were battering at their doors, recalled still keen mornings, an hour before sunrise, when the white mist, as yet undispersed, clung closely along the surface of the water; then the shock of the early plunge, the scamper along the bank, and the radiant transformation of earth, air, and water, when suddenly the sun was with them again, and grey was gold and colour was born and sprang out of the earth once more. They recalled the languorous siesta of hot mid-day, deep in green undergrowth, the sun striking through in tiny golden shafts and spots; the boating and bathing of the afternoon, the rambles along dusty lanes and through yellow cornfields; and the long, cool evening at last, when so many threads were gathered up, so many friendships rounded, and so many adventures planned for the morrow.

    Lise Quintana

Brian Quinn

Brian Quinn

 Toad’s Motorcar (cover)
Brian has illustrated for many diverse projects: children’s books, literary fiction anthologies, speculative fiction magazines and sci-fi, fantasy and horror magazines.


Jessica Allyson

Jessica Allyson

Mole and Niece
Jessica is a new author with work featured in an anthology published by the Writing Prompts Group on Facebook, and on Story a Day.org’s StoryFest.


Carrie L. Clickard

Carrie L. Clickard

Moley Pleasures
Carrie’s writing has appeared in Myriad LandsHavokAndromeda SpacewaysEnchanted ConversationsNightmare Stalkers and Dream WalkersSpellboundHaiku of the DeadMuse, and Underneath the Juniper Tree.


Lois Marie Harrod

Lois Marie Harrod

Rat and Mole in Hopper’s Diner in Bleak December
Lois’s 16th collection Nightmares of the Minor Poet appeared in June 2016. And She Took the Heart appeared in January 2016, Fragments from the Biography of Nemesis and the chapbook How Marlene Mae Longs for Truth appeared in 2013.


Juleigh Howard-Hobson

Juleigh Howard-Hobson

The Mouse in Chapter Two
Juleigh’s poetry has appeared in Able MuseThe LyricStar*LineFairy MagazinePolu Texni,The Alabama Literary ReviewCaduceusWeaving The TerrainPoem Revised, and The Nancy Drew Anthology.


Jenna Jaco

Jenna Jaco

Badger’s Bell Collection
Jenna is a technical writer from Texas working in visual programming and the internet of things. Her work has most recently appeared in What Fresh Witch is This? and Sweet Tree Review.


Jennifer Jenkins

Jennifer Jenkins

Dad’s Nightgown
Jennifer’s fiction has appeared in Curio MagazineHippocampus Magazine, and earned an honorable mention for Glimmertrain’s Very Short Fiction Award. She has an M.F.A. in creative writing from Wilkes University.


Amy Karon

Amy Karon

Water Rat Embarks
Amy’s poems have appeared in Eastern Iowa ReviewCricketHalf MysticBlanket SeaLagan Online, and Mystic Blue Review. She lives in San Jose.


Mary Soon Lee

Mary Soon Lee

Readers Auxilliary Meeting #43
Mary’s poetry credits include American Scholar, the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, and 119 haiku in Science. She has won the Rhysling Award and the Elgin Award.


Maya Levine

Maya Levine

The Way Home
Maya has been published twice with the Leyla Beban Short Story Contest. She will be published with the Eating Disorders Project and MoonPark Review. She enjoys The Wind in the Willows very much.


David McVey

David McVey

The Breeze in the Beeches
David lectures at New College Lanarkshire in Scotland. He has published short stories and non-fiction focusing on history and the outdoors. He enjoys supporting his home-town football team, Kirkintilloch Rob Roy FC.


Lena Ng

Lena Ng

Toad’s Birthday Extravaganza
Lena’s work has appeared in Polar Borealis MagazineSpectacle MagazineEnchanted Conversation MagazineARTPOST Magazine, and We Shall Be MonstersUnder an Autumn Moon is her short story collection.


Frances Pauli

Frances Pauli

Mr. Toad’s Funeral
Frances writes speculative and anthropomorphic fiction. She has published more than twenty novels, numerous short stories, and ebooks. Her novella, The Earth Tigers has been nominated for both a Leo and a Coyotl award.


Phoebe Wagner

Phoebe Wagner

Searching for Pan
Phoebe grew up on the Susquehanna River but now spends her days writing in Nevada’s high desert. She can be found on Twitter: @pheebs_w.


Jane Yolen

Jane Yolen

River Song: A Poetic Trilogy
Jane’s 365th and 366th books were published in March, one a picture book and one a Holocaust novel featured in a long essay in the New Yorker in July 2018. Six colleges and universities have given her honorary doctorates for her body of work.


Amanda Yskamp

Amanda Yskamp

Mole and Rat on the River
Amanda’s work has been published in such magazines as Threepenny ReviewHayden’s Ferry ReviewThe Georgia ReviewBoxcar ReviewRattapallax, and Caketrain.