The Wind in the Willows

Status
Not open for further replies.

allenjohnsonjr

Registered
Joined
Sep 23, 2014
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Location
Mercer Island, Washington, USA
When I was a boy, there were no antibiotics and few vaccines. Kids had all the childhood illnesses—measles, mumps, chicken pox—and bad colds or sore throats that could turn into bacterial infections were cause for concern. An outbreak of polio struck terror into parents’ hearts. The upshot of all this was that children with careful parents spent a good deal of time in bed.

My mother was too careful. Once, when I was four years old, she found me sharing a lollypop with our golden retriever, Co-Co. I would take a lick . . . then give him a lick. We were taking turns.

Mother ran in the house and called Alf Walker, the family pediatrician. Fortunately, Dr. Walker was down to earth and had a sense of humor.

“Don’t worry, honey,” he told Mother. “That dog will be just fine!”

During one of my childhood illnesses, my mother introduced me to The Wind in the Willows. I am sure my lifelong love of this book has something to do with the fact that Mother read it aloud to me, but there is more to it than that. It is a lovely work and embodies an approach to life that I have always wanted to follow.

I am sure it is odd for a sixty-two-year-old man to identify with a water rat, but Ratty, in The Wind in the Willows, is definitely my kindred spirit.

He loves the water. He loves boats. He yearns for adventure but finds himself caught in the coils of responsibility. He writes poems. He has a cozy home and is loyal to his friends.

All my life I have enjoyed boats, the beauty of nature and the warmth of home, hearth and friendship. Nowhere are these aspects of life better portrayed than in The Wind in the Willows. I had always wanted to do something associated with this beautiful book, but I had no idea what it could be. I put this dream aside and turned my attention to other interests. Years later, my old dream came back to me all by itself.

For some reason, I wrote a poem called ‘Bother and O Blow!’ based on Moley in The Wind in the Willows. It was a good poem, and I mused to my wife, “I wonder if I could write a series of poems based on The Wind in the Willows?” I decided to try. After I had written a few poems, I felt sure I could do it.

“What should I call the collection?” I asked my wife.

“A Breeze in the Willows,” my wife answered at once, giving me the perfect title.

My wife is English and we have a small cottage in the little village in Cornwall where she was raised. Our friend and neighbor there, Roger Michelle, is a wonderful potter and graphic artist. He agreed to illustrate my poems. I worked with him all one summer making sure the illustrations and poems suited each other. When the illustrations were finished, what Roger had done was better than I had dared to hope for.

I thought it would be impossible to convince a publisher in the mainstream press to publish a series of poems and illustrations based on a children’s book, but—small miracle—we did. Even though the poems are good, I am convinced that Roger Michelle’s wonderful illustrations are the reason the book got published.

In the spring of 1998, Ten Speed Press published A Breeze in the Willows. The publisher did a superb job designing the book. When the book was printed, much to my pride and joy, I found we had a little gem. I wanted to make a good effort to introduce and promote the release of our book and therein lies another story.

When A Breeze in the Willows was published, I sent out advance copies in hopes of reviews. I generated a list of publishers from my old prep school alumni directory. One of these was the publisher of the Little Rock Democrat Gazette.

He received the book at home and, not recognizing my name, sent the package to the newspaper to have it “checked out.” The paper sent the package to the main post office. By the time the post office got the package, somebody had used the word bomb. The bomb squad was called. Soon they had evacuated the post office and cordoned off two blocks around it. The police and firemen were called in. There were nine emergency vehicles. A television news truck arrived. Two men from the bomb squad suited up in body armor snuck up on my little book of poems and blew it up!

A young reporter poked through the remains of the package, found the address label and did what somebody should have done in the first place—he called me up.

After I heard what had happened and had stopped laughing, the reporter said he was writing a front-page story for the paper, and did I know why the “panic button” had been pushed? I said, “Yes” and told him about the following poem:

DANGER! OVERINFLATED TOAD*

Conceited? Yes, he’s so puffed up

One fears he may explode.

An ever-present danger when

A toad’s too full of Toad!

“Clearly,” I told the reporter, “this poem is the reason the bomb squad was called out!”
 
Status
Not open for further replies.