Complete Works of Kenneth Grahame

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by Kenneth Grahame


  ‘Love from

  ‘PENELOPE’

  And from that of Miss Ann Spencer Watt (who had lived, as maid, with Mr and Mrs. Grahame for many years) I take these words: ‘I’ve so often compared other people with Mr. Grahame and wondered why there were so few real Gentlemen in the world.’

  Lastly, in a letter, written by Mr. Graham Robertson, I read:

  ‘... he wrote what he wished when he wished and he wrote no more than he wished, and this very fastidiousness will probably win him an enduring name.

  ‘The pictures of Leonardo da Vinci are less prized for their beauty than because only about five of them exist; if the lost poems of Sappho were found it would be a serious blow to that lady’s reputation; in fact nothing can obscure an artist’s merit like over-production. In Kenneth Grahame’s work there is no need to winnow the wheat from the chaff; he has left us nothing but the purest golden grain, and his mere handful of writings have swept round the world on a gathering wave of love and admiration for the man who would give nothing short of his best, and whose best is, perhaps, about as near perfection as may be compassed by our poor mortality.

  ‘Now he has gone from beside the much-loved river. Now he has traced to their source the windings of another river, that River that “went out from Eden Of printed words these which Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, writing from Fowey, addressed to the Editor of The Times, seem to express, in obituary, all that is called for here concerning Sir Arthur’s old friend and to be, in epitome, what I have meant this book to be — a picture of Kenneth Grahame:

  ‘In the obituaries of Kenneth Grahame one misses (though friendship may be exacting) full recognition of his personal charm and the beauty — there is no other word — of his character. This, of course, could be divined in his books, few, yet in their way, surely, classical; but he avoided publicity always, in later years kept deeper retirement under a great sorrow; and so, perhaps, as these books must by their nature have attracted many readers towards a further intimacy of which he was shy, a word or two about him may be acceptable to them and pardonable by his spirit. One does not, anyhow, wish to go out of this world without acknowledging one of the best things found in it.

  ‘He came to these parts and to this house (from which he was afterwards married) a little more than thirty years ago; convalescent from a severe illness. Lazy afternoons at sea completed his recovery and made me acquainted with a man who combined all enviable gifts and yet so perfectly as to soften all envy away in affection. Noble in looks, yet modest in bearing; with flashes of wit that played at call around any subject, lambent as summer lightning, never hurting, and with silences that half-revealed things beyond reach of words, he seemed at once a child and a king. Withal he was eminently a “man’s man” and keen on all manly sports: a man, too, who — as Secretary of the Bank of England — knew much of practical affairs and could judge them incisively if with amusement, while his own mind kept its loyalty to sweet thoughts, great manners, and a quiet disdain of anything meaner than these. I must remember him as a “classical” man, perfectly aware of himself as “at best a noble plaything of the gods”, whose will he seemed to understand through his gift of interpreting childhood.’

  THE CHILDREN’S ADVOCATE: KENNETH GRAHAME by W. M. Parker

  THE charm that is Carroll and the charm that is Barrie — yes, but these charms are already taken for granted. But the charm that is Grahame is not, perhaps, so popularly known and acknowledged. For the satisfactory education of the very young child, at least three courses of child books should be introduced into the elementary classes in every school curriculum — nay, it should be made positively compulsory by Act of Parliament. Beginning with Edward Lear’s “Book of Nonsense,” there should follow a course of “Alice in Wonderland,” “Through the Looking-Glass,” and “Peter Pan,” and then a final course of the classics, Thackeray’s “The Rose and the Ring” and Stevenson’s “Child’s Garden of Verse.” It is inconceivable to think of a youngster passing through childhood entirely unfamiliar with these wonderful reflections of the child mind and the child’s way of looking at things, and not the least important channels for conveying these reflections are the works of Mr. Kenneth Grahame.

  Mr. Kenneth Grahame was born in Edinburgh in 1859, the son of the late Mr. J. C. Grahame, advocate, and great-grandson of Archibald Grahame of Dalmarnock, Lanarkshire, and Drumquhassil, Stirlingshire, and Glasgow. After being educated at St. Edward’s School, Oxford, he was for some fifteen years acting secretary and secretary to the Bank of England, but abandoned London for a country life in 1908, and has lived mostly in Berkshire. It is interesting to note that he served seven years in the London Scottish. (For these biographical facts I am deeply indebted to the courtesy of Mr. John Lane (the original publisher of Mr. Kenneth Grahame’s books), from whom I obtained them.)

  Three years after his first published work, “The Headswoman,” a short satirical tale, there appeared a veritable harvest of a quiet mind in the essays called “Pagan Papers.” He leisurely scatters these fugitive essays on our lap with a freedom, an abandon, a health that might be the envy of the gipsy, the vagabond, or any open-air vagrant as well as of the assiduous bookman who knows his Nature from books. “The Rural Pan (An April Essay)” is superlatively beautiful in its conception and writing. A personal touch of humour increases interest in “Marginalia,” where the author records how, in a certain book, he once drew on one side of the page a number of negroes, “swart as sucked lead-pencil could limn them,” and how easy it was by a touch of the pen to change “battle” into “bottle” in a reference, in his Roman History, to the battle of Magnesia. Suggestions of Elizabethan prose embroider the ideas embodied in “Deus Terminus” and “Of Smoking.” The Stevenson outlook is happily captured in “Loafing,” and the bloom of “The White Poppy” is as deeply tinged with pure prose poetry as is “The Fairy Wicket.”

  “An Autumn Encounter” with a scarecrow shows grotesque originality. A certain rude revelry in Pan and in things Pagan is contained in the jubilant essay of “Orion.” — it is the irresistible clarion call of the cloven-hoofed, the horned, the goat-like figure of Pan as symbolised in the star, Orion — the Hunter.

  It was by his far-famed “The Golden Age,” however, that Mr. Kenneth Grahame’s powers rose to pre-eminence. It was hailed by Swinburne as “one of the few books which are well-nigh too praiseworthy for praise.” He remarked that “the fit reader finds himself a child again while reading it. Immortality should be the reward — but it must have been the birthright — of this happy genius... Praise would be as superfluous as analysis would be impertinent.” That criticism places Mr. Grahame very high indeed, but by no means too high. Any one who is capable of revelling in the music and beauty of the elements will readily understand how Swinburne would appreciate, for instance, “A Holiday,” with the magnificent rush and sweep in the opening description of “the masterful wind and awakening Nature.” It is in this first scene that Mr. Grahame introduces us to the little girl, Charlotte, one of the four children who form the character-group in both this book and the almost equally superb “Dream Days,” the other children being Edward, Harold, and Selina — not to speak of the unobtrusive part of brother played by the author himself in the first person singular. The idiosyncrasies of each child are clearly presented without any undue insistence on the part of the author. Who has not heard of the intolerable tyranny of the Olympians, the grown-ups? “Children heed no minor distinctions. To them the inhabited world is composed of the two main divisions — children and upgrown people; the latter in no way superior to the former — only hopelessly different.” The brother, in the first person singular, remarks to Edward, “I never can make out what people come here to tea for. They can have their own tea at home if they like — they’re not poor people — with jam and things, and drink out of their saucer, and suck their fingers, and enjoy themselves; but they come here from a long way off, and sit up straight with their feet off the bars of their chairs, and have one cup, an
d talk the same sort of stuff every time”; to which Harold adds that society people come out into the garden, and pat his head—” I wish people wouldn’t do that” — and one of them asked him to pick her a flower. “The world, as known to me,” says the brother of the first person singular, addressing his readers, “was spread with food each several mid-day, and the particular table one sat at seemed a matter of no importance.” But Olympian tyranny o’erleapt itself when Harold “found himself shut up in the schoolroom after hours, merely for insisting that 7 times 7 amounted to 47. The injustice of it seemed so flagrant. Why not 47 as much as 49? One number was no prettier than the other to look at, and it was evidently only a matter of arbitrary taste and preference; and, anyhow, it had always been 47 to him, and would be to the end of time.”

  In the pages of these two books we live over again our erstwhile manly attitude of revolt and our glad, precipitate escape to day dreams, for, “as a rule, indeed, grownup people are fairly correct on matters of fact; it is in the higher gift of imagination that they are so sadly to seek.” The cycle of the seasons forms an ever-present background to whatever incident takes place, whether it be when the evening church service is shorter than usual because “the vicar, as he ascended the pulpit steps,” dropped two pages out of his sermon-case; or whether it be when, in his made-up story to the new curate, on whose “spooning” with Aunt Maria he had been ordered, by Edward, to spy, Harolds fictitious burglars are said to have “vanished silently into the laurels, with horrid implications!”

  Then in “Dream Days” Mr. Kenneth Grahame takes us so near to the tender hearts and wondering minds, the adventurous spirits and whimsical humours of children that after we have read the last words of the book we feel we have to rub our fists against our eyelids or pinch ourselves at some part of our person to realize if we are really awake in a material world or if it be true that we are once more the children of fleeting days of glory. Who is not the richer spiritually for having read “Its Walls were as of Jasper,”

  “The Magic Ring,” and “The Reluctant Dragon” in “Dream Days”? Mr. Kenneth Grahame draws upon a furtive, insinuating winsomeness, and the tablets of his memory are deeply engraved with words and notes of sweet music that chime again and again the rose-winged hours of eternal childhood, be it in “Pagan Papers” or in “The Golden Age,” in “Dream Days” or in his latest book, “The Wind in the Willows.” For the most part, Mr. Kenneth Grahame’s backgrounds are, first, a pastoral landscape that is replete with here a saturnalia of whirling leaves and there an orgy and riot of spring-blossom on the laughing hedgerows, and, secondly, a quiet pleasaunce with visions that lurk among the garden shadows, and dance upon the lush grass and round the mignonette or the meadowsweet — a homely, old-world seclusion at peace with its sometimes noisy, inhabitants. The muse that presides is a jealously-guarded Mistress of Ceremonies, and childish homage will brook no intrusion into her hallowed precincts by hopeless outsiders; but often after a day of sunshine the evening light announces a change, and banks of dark cloud loom in the distance and stealthily steal up from the horizon. Of course, there may always be the chance, in Mr. Kenneth Grahame’s books, that the Olympian “gulfs will wash us down,” but it is far more frequent that in children’s company “we touch the Happy Isles.” Even on a day of pitiless rain there are pranks enough and to spare to while away the time in forgetful mood, absorbed in make-believe argosies and pirate escapades, in visions of dream palaces, or in the quaint spectacle of Harold as a muffin-man “ringing an imaginary bell and offering airy muffins of his own make to a bustling, thronging crowd of his own creation.”

  Mr. Grahame’s humour is light and subtle, yet shining clear as a crystal. His prose combines in an exceptional way an unrivalled spontaneity of vision with a mature command of the most gracefully resilient style imaginable. Not only so; there is woven into the prose-texture innumerable tenderly poetic imageries and figures of speech that entrance and enthral to the utmost degree. Had one been unaware that he was one of the elect few who contributed to that famous illustrated quarterly of the eighteen-nineties, The Yellow Book, one might have guessed as much, for at that period he must somehow have caught the bright, happy lustre from that Yellow Book, the golden hue of sunshine that permeates all his work. In fine, the “bright-enamelled” pageantry of Nature when related so harmoniously and so intimately, so nearly and so humanly to child-life must ever ring a responsive echo in us — that is to say, if beneath our breasts a child’s heart beats out its exultations and its despairs, if in our minds a child’s imagination plays out its long games of delight and hides those sensitive, hidden sufferings that only children and the child-like among us experience in their journey, be it ever so rough, through the world towards the ultimate Hills of Joy. It is on the crest of these Hills that Mr. Kenneth Grahame has erected his triumphal arch, and upon its rich stonework are inscribed the indelible letters to be seen by all who come there to understand — The Triumph of the Innocents.

  The Delphi Classics Catalogue

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  Only from our website can readers purchase the special Parts Edition of our Complete Works titles. When you buy a Parts Edition, you will receive a folder of your chosen author’s works, with each novel, play, poetry collection, non-fiction book and more divided into its own special volume. This allows you to read individual novels etc. and to know precisely where you are in an eBook. For more information, please visit our Parts Edition page.

  Series One

  Anton Chekhov

  Charles Dickens

  D.H. Lawrence

  Dickensiana Volume I

  Edgar Allan Poe

  Elizabeth Gaskell

  Fyodor Dostoyevsky

  George Eliot

  H. G. Wells

  Henry James

  Ivan Turgenev

  Jack London

  James Joyce

  Jane Austen

  Joseph Conrad

  Leo Tolstoy

  Louisa May Alcott

  Mark Twain

  Oscar Wilde

  Robert Louis Stevenson

  Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

  Sir Walter Scott

  The Brontës

  Thomas Hardy

  Virginia Woolf

  Wilkie Collins

  William Makepeace Thackeray

  Series Two

  Alexander Pushkin

  Alexandre Dumas (English)

  Andrew Lang

  Anthony Trollope

  Bram Stoker

  Christopher Marlowe

  Daniel Defoe

  Edith Wharton

  F. Scott Fitzgerald

  G. K. Chesterton

  Gustave Flaubert (English)

  H. Rider Haggard

  Herman Melville

  Honoré de Balzac (English)

  J. W. von Goethe (English)

  Jules Verne

  L. Frank Baum

  Lewis Carroll

  Marcel Proust (English)

  Nathaniel Hawthorne

  Nikolai Gogol

  O. Henry

  Rudyard Kipling

  Tobias Smollett

  Victor Hugo

  William Shakespeare

  Series Three

  Ambrose Bierce

  Ann Radcliffe

  Ben Jonson

  Charles Lever

  Émile Zola

  Ford Madox Ford

  Geoffrey Chaucer

  George Gissing

  George Orwell

  Guy de Maupassant

  H. P. Lovecraft

  Henrik Ibsen

  Henry David Thoreau

  Henry Fielding

  J. M. Barrie

  James Fenimore Cooper

  John B
uchan

  John Galsworthy

  Jonathan Swift

  Kate Chopin

  Katherine Mansfield

  L. M. Montgomery

  Laurence Sterne

  Mary Shelley

  Sheridan Le Fanu

  Washington Irving

  Series Four

  Arnold Bennett

  Arthur Machen

  Beatrix Potter

  Bret Harte

  Captain Frederick Marryat

  Charles Kingsley

  Charles Reade

  G. A. Henty

  Edgar Rice Burroughs

  Edgar Wallace

  E. M. Forster

  E. Nesbit

  George Meredith

  Harriet Beecher Stowe

  Jerome K. Jerome

  John Ruskin

  Maria Edgeworth

  M. E. Braddon

  Miguel de Cervantes

  M. R. James

  R. M. Ballantyne

  Robert E. Howard

  Samuel Johnson

  Stendhal

  Stephen Crane

  Zane Grey

  Series Five

  Algernon Blackwood

  Anatole France

  Beaumont and Fletcher

  Charles Darwin

  Edward Bulwer-Lytton

  Edward Gibbon

  E. F. Benson

  Frances Hodgson Burnett

  Friedrich Nietzsche

  George Bernard Shaw

  George MacDonald

  Hilaire Belloc

  John Bunyan

  John Webster

  Margaret Oliphant

  Maxim Gorky

  Oliver Goldsmith

  Radclyffe Hall

  Robert W. Chambers

  Samuel Butler

  Samuel Richardson

  Sir Thomas Malory

  Thomas Carlyle

  William Harrison Ainsworth

  William Dean Howells

  William Morris

  Series Six

  Anthony Hope

  Aphra Behn

  Arthur Morrison

 

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