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Volume 43 • Number 2

Summer 2009



 


Style and the Mole: Domestic Aesthetics in The Wind in the Willows

by Seth Lerer

Writing to her husband's first illustrator, Graham Robertson, in 1931, Elspeth Grahame thanked him for the gift of his recently published memoirs. She called them "entrancing" and goes on to note: "The touch is so light yet so sure that whatever the subject the reading of it would be full of pleasure to any lover of English style." Lovers of English style would have been long familiar with Kenneth Grahame's Wind in the Willows, originally published in 1908 and, by 1931, available in four different editions (a new one, illustrated by Ernest Shepard would soon appear in that year). A. A. Milne's stage adaptation, Toad of Toad Hall, played to welcoming audiences in 1929, and Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, perhaps that era's greatest arbiter of English style, had ensconced Grahame with two selections in his Oxford Book of English Prose, published in 1925.


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