The Wind in the Willows

by

Kenneth Grahame

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Themes and Colors
Friendship and Mentorship Theme Icon
Manners, Conduct, and Consequences Theme Icon
Nature, Leisure, and the Modern World Theme Icon
Home, Identity, and Adventure Theme Icon
Greed, Arrogance, and Social Class Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Wind in the Willows, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Friendship and Mentorship

The Wind in the Willows follows four animal friends—Mole, Rat, Badger, and Toad—who live lives of luxury along an English river. As the seasons pass, the friends explore the river, go on picnics, tell stories, and venture into the nearby Wild Wood. But the novel also focuses on a more serious matter: the intervention Mole, Rat, and Badger stage when Toad (who’s wealthy and conceited) develops what his friends…

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Manners, Conduct, and Consequences

As Mole, Rat, Badger, and Toad enjoy their lives along an English river, the narration regularly offers asides telling readers that the way the animals behave is guided by “animal etiquette,” or agreed-upon ways that animals should interact with one another in their riverside society. Manners, whether they be related to animal etiquette or more human concerns (such as being modest about one’s wealth or apologizing when one has done something…

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Nature, Leisure, and the Modern World

The Wind in the Willows follows the lives of four animal friends as they explore the river and the woods where they live. For the three who live on the riverbank—Mole, Rat, and Toad—the river itself is a source of endless entertainment, awe, beauty, and even quasi-religious experiences. And for Badger, who as a larger animal can live safely in the heart of the nearby Wild Wood, the entire landscape…

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Home, Identity, and Adventure

Though The Wind in the Willows focuses heavily on the outdoors, the novel also devotes a lot of attention to the four main characters’ domestic, interior spaces. Mole begins the novel in a neat, tidy, underground home and soon joins Rat in a well-furnished house built into the riverbank. Badger lives in an extensive home built into tunnels under the Wild Wood, while wealthy and pompous Toad lives in the nicest house on the river

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Greed, Arrogance, and Social Class

Much of The Wind in the Willows focuses on Badger, Rat, and Mole’s intervention to change Toad’s rude and arrogant behavior. Toad is extremely wealthy and lives off his father’s money, in a grand (and, in his opinion, the best) estate on the river. He pursues expensive hobbies until he gets tired of them, and he constantly boasts about his wealth and insults those of lower classes. And while it’s…

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