The Reservoir

by

Janet Frame

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on The Reservoir makes teaching easy.
The children are a group of schoolchildren in the village who play together by the gully. None of the children are distinguished from one another, and they tend to act and think as one entity. They love to play in and explore nature, especially near the creek, which they consider their own. Like the narrator, the Children frequently speculate about the Reservoir, though, like the narrator, they are forbidden by their parents to approach it. For a while, they content themselves with other adventures, but when the school year ends and the summer grows increasingly hot, the Children become bored. They mimic and laugh at grown-ups by playing make-believe and spying on courting couples, but they soon lose interest in these games and only look forward to starting school again. When an Infantile Paralysis (polio) epidemic prevents the school from opening, the Children’s boredom becomes desperation, and they decide to visit the Reservoir. Along the way, the Children gossip about Infantile Paralysis and bicker over how to pronounce various words, like sprained and hospital. They come across a bull in its paddock, and when it threatens to charge at them, they flee. Only then do they realize they have lost sight of their beloved creek. This briefly upsets them, so they hit the air with sticks until they forget their discontent and become cheerful again. When they finally reach the Reservoir, the Children ignore their parents’ warnings and the warning of a nearby noticeboard. They play around the Reservoir gleefully, quarreling over how to pronounce Reservoir until the sky appears to be getting dark. They run home to avoid the unknown dangers of the darkened wilderness, indicating that perhaps their courage is not as complete as they would like to think.

The Children Quotes in The Reservoir

The The Reservoir quotes below are all either spoken by The Children or refer to The Children. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Maturity Theme Icon
).
The Reservoir Quotes

[...] how important it was for birds, animals and people, especially children, to show respect! And that is why for so long we obeyed the command of the grownups and never walked as far as the forbidden Reservoir but were content to return ‘tired but happy’ (as we wrote in our school compositions) answering the question, Where did you walk today? with a suspicion of blackmail, ‘Oh, nearly, nearly to the Reservoir!’

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

And for so long we obeyed our mother's command, on our favorite walks along the gully simply following the untreated cast-off creek which we loved and which flowed day and night in our heads in all its detail [...] We knew where the water was shallow and could be paddled in, where forts could be made from the rocks; we knew the frightening deep places where the eels lurked and the weeds were tangled in gruesome shapes; we knew the jumping places, the mossy stones with their dangers, limitations, and advantages; the sparkling places where the sun trickled beside the water, upon the stones; the bogs made by roaming cattle, trapping some of them to death; their gaunt telltale bones; the little valleys with their new growth of lush grass where the creek had ‘changed its course,’ and no longer flowed.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Creek
Page Number: 2-3
Explanation and Analysis:

We swam. We wore bathing togs all day. We gave up cowboys and ranches; and baseball and sledding; and "those games" where we mimicked grown-up life, loving and divorcing each other, kissing and slapping, taking secret paramours when our husband was working out of town. Everything exhausted us.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Page Number: 4
Explanation and Analysis:

Our lessons came by post, in smudged print on rough white paper; they seemed makeshift and false, they inspired distrust, they could not compete with the lure of the sun still shining, swelling, the world would go up in cinders, the days were too long, there was nothing to do, there was nothing to do; the lessons were dull; in the front room with the navy-blue blind half down the window and the tiny splits of light showing through, and the lesson papers sometimes covered with unexplained blots of ink as if the machine which had printed them had broken down or rebelled, the lessons were even more dull.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Page Number: 6
Explanation and Analysis:

We followed the creek, whacking our sticks, gossiping and singing, but we stopped, immediately silent, when someone — sister or brother — said, ‘Let's go to the Reservoir!’

A feeling of dread seized us. We knew, as surely as we knew our names and our address Thirty-three Stour Street Ohau Otago South Island New Zealand Southern Hemisphere The World, that we would some day visit the Reservoir, but the time seemed almost as far away as leaving school, getting a job, marrying.

And then there was the agony of deciding the right time — how did one decide these things?

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Perhaps we would have to sleep there among the pine trees with the owls hooting and the old needle-filled warrens which now reached to the center of the earth where pools of molten lead bubbled, waiting to seize us if we tripped, and then there was the crying sound made by the trees, a sound of speech at its loneliest level where the meaning is felt but never explained, and it goes on and on in a kind of despair, trying to reach a point of understanding. We knew that pine trees spoke in this way.

We were lonely listening to them because we knew we could never help them to say it, whatever they were trying to say, for if the wind who was so close to them could not help them, how could we?

Oh no, we could not spend the night at the Reservoir among the pine trees.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

What is it? I wondered. They said it was a lake. I thought it was a bundle of darkness and great wheels which peeled and sliced you like an apple and drew you toward them with demonic force, in the same way that you were drawn beneath the wheels of a train if you stood too near the edge of the platform.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

Its nose was ringed which meant that its savagery was tamed, or so we thought; it could be tethered and led; even so, it had once been savage and it kept its pride, unlike the steers who pranced and huddled together and ran like water through the paddocks, made no impression, quarried no massive shape against the sky.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

We saw [the creek] now before us, and hailed it with more relief than we felt, for [...] it had undergone change, it had adopted the shape, depth, mood of foreign water, foaming in a way we did not recognize as belonging to our special creek, giving no hint of its depth. It seemed to flow close to its concealed bed, not wishing any more to communicate with us. We realized with dismay that we had suddenly lost possession of our creek. Who had taken it? Why did it not belong to us any more? We hit our sticks in the air and forgot our dismay. We grew cheerful.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Creek
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

In the Reservoir there was an appearance of neatness which concealed a disarray too frightening to be acknowledged except, without any defense, in moments of deep sleep and dreaming. The little sparkling innocent waves shone now green, now gray, petticoats, lettuce leaves; the trees sighed, and told us to be quiet, hush-sh, as if something were sleeping and should not be disturbed — perhaps that was what the trees were always telling us, to hush-sh in case we disturbed something which must never ever be awakened? What was it? Was it sleeping in the Reservoir? Was that why people were afraid of the Reservoir? Well we were not afraid of it, oh no…

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 15
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire The Reservoir LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Reservoir PDF

The Children Quotes in The Reservoir

The The Reservoir quotes below are all either spoken by The Children or refer to The Children. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Maturity Theme Icon
).
The Reservoir Quotes

[...] how important it was for birds, animals and people, especially children, to show respect! And that is why for so long we obeyed the command of the grownups and never walked as far as the forbidden Reservoir but were content to return ‘tired but happy’ (as we wrote in our school compositions) answering the question, Where did you walk today? with a suspicion of blackmail, ‘Oh, nearly, nearly to the Reservoir!’

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

And for so long we obeyed our mother's command, on our favorite walks along the gully simply following the untreated cast-off creek which we loved and which flowed day and night in our heads in all its detail [...] We knew where the water was shallow and could be paddled in, where forts could be made from the rocks; we knew the frightening deep places where the eels lurked and the weeds were tangled in gruesome shapes; we knew the jumping places, the mossy stones with their dangers, limitations, and advantages; the sparkling places where the sun trickled beside the water, upon the stones; the bogs made by roaming cattle, trapping some of them to death; their gaunt telltale bones; the little valleys with their new growth of lush grass where the creek had ‘changed its course,’ and no longer flowed.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Creek
Page Number: 2-3
Explanation and Analysis:

We swam. We wore bathing togs all day. We gave up cowboys and ranches; and baseball and sledding; and "those games" where we mimicked grown-up life, loving and divorcing each other, kissing and slapping, taking secret paramours when our husband was working out of town. Everything exhausted us.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Page Number: 4
Explanation and Analysis:

Our lessons came by post, in smudged print on rough white paper; they seemed makeshift and false, they inspired distrust, they could not compete with the lure of the sun still shining, swelling, the world would go up in cinders, the days were too long, there was nothing to do, there was nothing to do; the lessons were dull; in the front room with the navy-blue blind half down the window and the tiny splits of light showing through, and the lesson papers sometimes covered with unexplained blots of ink as if the machine which had printed them had broken down or rebelled, the lessons were even more dull.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Page Number: 6
Explanation and Analysis:

We followed the creek, whacking our sticks, gossiping and singing, but we stopped, immediately silent, when someone — sister or brother — said, ‘Let's go to the Reservoir!’

A feeling of dread seized us. We knew, as surely as we knew our names and our address Thirty-three Stour Street Ohau Otago South Island New Zealand Southern Hemisphere The World, that we would some day visit the Reservoir, but the time seemed almost as far away as leaving school, getting a job, marrying.

And then there was the agony of deciding the right time — how did one decide these things?

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Perhaps we would have to sleep there among the pine trees with the owls hooting and the old needle-filled warrens which now reached to the center of the earth where pools of molten lead bubbled, waiting to seize us if we tripped, and then there was the crying sound made by the trees, a sound of speech at its loneliest level where the meaning is felt but never explained, and it goes on and on in a kind of despair, trying to reach a point of understanding. We knew that pine trees spoke in this way.

We were lonely listening to them because we knew we could never help them to say it, whatever they were trying to say, for if the wind who was so close to them could not help them, how could we?

Oh no, we could not spend the night at the Reservoir among the pine trees.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

What is it? I wondered. They said it was a lake. I thought it was a bundle of darkness and great wheels which peeled and sliced you like an apple and drew you toward them with demonic force, in the same way that you were drawn beneath the wheels of a train if you stood too near the edge of the platform.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

Its nose was ringed which meant that its savagery was tamed, or so we thought; it could be tethered and led; even so, it had once been savage and it kept its pride, unlike the steers who pranced and huddled together and ran like water through the paddocks, made no impression, quarried no massive shape against the sky.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

We saw [the creek] now before us, and hailed it with more relief than we felt, for [...] it had undergone change, it had adopted the shape, depth, mood of foreign water, foaming in a way we did not recognize as belonging to our special creek, giving no hint of its depth. It seemed to flow close to its concealed bed, not wishing any more to communicate with us. We realized with dismay that we had suddenly lost possession of our creek. Who had taken it? Why did it not belong to us any more? We hit our sticks in the air and forgot our dismay. We grew cheerful.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Creek
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

In the Reservoir there was an appearance of neatness which concealed a disarray too frightening to be acknowledged except, without any defense, in moments of deep sleep and dreaming. The little sparkling innocent waves shone now green, now gray, petticoats, lettuce leaves; the trees sighed, and told us to be quiet, hush-sh, as if something were sleeping and should not be disturbed — perhaps that was what the trees were always telling us, to hush-sh in case we disturbed something which must never ever be awakened? What was it? Was it sleeping in the Reservoir? Was that why people were afraid of the Reservoir? Well we were not afraid of it, oh no…

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Children
Related Symbols: The Reservoir
Page Number: 15
Explanation and Analysis: