Watership Down
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First edition cover |
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Author | Richard Adams |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Fantasy novel |
Publisher | Rex Collings |
Released | November 1972 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 413 pp (first edition, hardback) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-901720-31-3 (first edition, hardback) |
Followed by | Tales from Watership Down |
Watership Down is the title of Richard Adams's first and most successful novel: since its initial publication, it has never been out of print.[1] The novel is about a group of rabbits and is named after a hill in the north of Hampshire, England. This is also the area where Adams grew up. Initially, the story was based on a collection of tales that Adams told to his young children on trips to the countryside. The book was rejected by publishers thirteen times before finally being published in the United Kingdom by Rex Collings Ltd in 1972.
The rabbits in the story are significantly less anthropomorphized than typical fictional animals; they do not possess any technology or wear clothing, and have the physical attributes and instincts of their real-life wild counterparts. Nevertheless, they are depicted as sapient and capable of speaking to one another. Furthermore, the author has gone so far as to construct a culture for his rabbits, including a language (Lapine), proverbs, poetry and mythology. More than one chapter consists of pieces of rabbit lore.
Watership Down is often referred to as a classic example of xenofiction. Many editions also include an appendix of Lapine vocabulary. It can thus be considered not an animal fable like the works of Aesop but a genuine heroic fantasy.
Watership Down has been made into an acclaimed classic film and a television series.
[edit] Plot introduction
Watership Down tells the story of a group of rabbits who — against the wishes of their Chief Rabbit — escape from their threatened warren. The story follows their subsequent adventures. They find sanctuary in a warren on the down (for which the book is named), but the story continues after this.
[edit] Plot summary
In the Sandleford warren, Fiver, a young runt rabbit who is a seer, receives a frightening vision of his warren's imminent destruction. When he and his loving brother, Hazel, fail to convince their chief of the need to evacuate, they set out on their own with a small band of others who heeded the warning, and barely manage to elude the Warren's military caste. What follows is a perilous journey in which the band faces dangers of all varieties from all directions. While they eventually find a peaceful new home at Watership Down, they have new problems that will lead to a deadly conflict with the neighbouring warren called Efrafa, a police state led by the despotic General Woundwort.
[edit] Characters in "Watership Down"
Most of the rabbits in the book have a distinct personality.
The original group that leaves the Sandleford warren, all bucks, consists of the following. (The names are the forms that most commonly appear in the book. These are mostly nicknames: where they have an original "Lapine" name, it is given in parentheses along with its meaning in that language.)
[edit] Hazel's rabbits
- Hazel, the leader, eventually Hazel-rah, the Chief Rabbit. Quiet, but has a talent for bringing out the best in his subordinates. Unlike most chief rabbits, Hazel is not particularly large or strong but rather wins the other rabbits' devotion by making quick, intelligent decisions. Sometimes the leadership can get to his head, but, conversely, the idea of leading intimidates him.
- Fiver (Hrairoo, "Little Thousand"; hrair is any uncountable large number, and since rabbits can only count to four, the fifth kitten in a litter is the thousandth), Hazel's little brother. Small and weak but also the seer of the group. He has prophetic dreams and can sense all sorts of danger.
- Dandelion, the storyteller (an extremely important job in Lapine society) and fastest rabbit of the group.
- Blackberry, the thinker and problem-solver. Blackberry is able to understand complicated concepts, such as boats, that the other rabbits cannot even conceive.
- Bigwig (known in Lapine as Thlayli, meaning "Fur-head"), the best fighter and the strongest rabbit of the group. A member of the Owsla (military elite) of Sandleford warren. Receives his name from the unique thickening of the fur around his ears.
- Silver, with silver fur. The main fighter besides Bigwig, and also a member of the Sandleford Owsla. He is also the nephew of the Threarah, Sandleford's Chief Rabbit.
- Buckthorn, also a fighter, and known for being stolid and dependable.
- Pipkin (Hlao, "Depression in grass" affectionately Hlao-roo), small, timid and weak but also very loyal to Hazel. He often worries about things that no one else worries about.
- Speedwell, Acorn, Hawkbit, who are foot soldiers and followers rather than officers. Hawkbit is described by Hazel as being "a rather slow, stupid rabbit."
They are later joined by:
- Strawberry, from Cowslip's warren.
- Holly, former Captain of the Sandleford Owsla and a master fighter and tracker. Like Bigwig, a born second-in-command.
- Bluebell, the jokester, a rabbit of the Sandleford warren who ends up following after and protecting Holly on his journey to Watership Down. Makes jokes when things get bad, so they don't seem as significant.
- Three hutch rabbits: one buck, Boxwood, and two does, Haystack and Clover. (Another buck, Laurel, is left behind).
- Blackavar, Efrafan rebel and prisoner. This former Efraran was rejected from their Owsla despite his expert tracking skills. Tried to escape but they tear up his ears and parade him around Efrafa.
- Ten Efrafan does that leave their birthplace, only eight of which survived. Most notable among the surviving does are:
- Hyzenthlay ("Shine-dew-fur," Fur shining like dew), who is the leader of the rebellious does in Efrafa and has some of the abilities of a seer.
- Thethuthinnang (Movement of Leaves).
- Vilthuril, who later becomes Fiver's mate and the mother of his kittens, including one who by the end of the book has started to show prophetic abilities of his own.
- Groundsel, Thistle, and three other Efrafan bucks who surrender and join the warren following Efrafa's failed attack. Groundsel later becomes the first Chief Rabbit of the new warren between Efrafa and Watership Down.
[edit] Non-rabbit allies
- Kehaar, a migratory black-headed gull whose injured wing forces him to take refuge on Watership Down. He later befriends the rabbits and helps in many unexpected circumstances. He is an especial friend to Bigwig. Kehaar possesses a strange accent of his own, wherein "B" is altered to "P", "W" to "V", "J" to "Y", "TT" to "DD", and sometimes "I" to "EE" (so that "Bigwig" is pronounced "Peegveeg"). He cannot pronounce the name "Dandelion" and so refers to the rabbit of that name as "Meester Dando". In addition, Kehaar is somewhat gregarious and coarse-mouthed, talking often but with somewhat ungrammatical sentences and the use of the expression "Damn".
- The unnamed mouse whom Hazel saves from a kestrel. He returns the favour by warning the warren of the Efrafans coming to attack them.
- Lucy, the young girl who finds Hazel after he has been attacked by her cat. She represents a shift in the rabbits' perspective of all humans as enemies.
[edit] Enemies
- General Woundwort, a tyrannical Chief Rabbit and founder of Efrafa. Woundwort is obsessed with control, which he believes to be the only successful means of safety. He is also impatient and bloodthirsty, desiring no outcome to occur but the one he has set himself to accomplish. Eventually, he is killed or driven away by a dog; later generations associate him with the Black Rabbit-- the symbol of death-- and use him to warn disobedient youngsters against mischief.
- Vervain, Woundwort's lieutenant and commander of his Owslafa.
- Campion, a Captain of Owsla; a superb tracker and leader of Woundwort's Wide Patrols.
- Cowslip, a member of a warren of rabbits (known later by Hazel's group as the Tharn Warren, or Warren of the Snares) who are 'harvested' for food by a human.
- Bryony and Kingcup, these are two rabbits mentioned in Cowslip's warren. Bryony is a family rabbit that Blackberry shares with while Kingcup is mentioned by Strawberry who calls him for a meeting in the warren's great barrow.
- Silverweed, a rabbit of the Warren of the Snares. He was a poet, and told the Sandleford rabbits a song when they arrived at the warren. He terrified Fiver, "I can smell him from here. He terrifies me."
- Snowdrop, a Council member at Efrafa. An elderly rabbit, Snowdrop is referred to as 'old Snowdrop'. He appears to have been a close advisor of Woundwort and much of the warren's success was down to Snowdrop's ideas.
- Various elil' (predators) who are the enemies of all rabbits. Elil are termed 'the Thousand' or 'U embleer hrair,' the stinking (as in a fox) thousand.
- Humans are also sometimes thought to be an enemy of Watership Down, though they serve mainly to forward the plot.[citation needed]
Woundwort, Vervain, Campion, Cowslip and most of the other male characters' names are all types of native flowering plants found in England, where Watership Down is set.
[edit] Characters in rabbit lore
- El-ahrairah (literally Elil-hrair-rah, the "prince with a thousand enemies") is the folk hero at the center of most of the rabbits' stories. As time passes the adventures of real living rabbits are transformed into fantastical tales of El-ahrairah. (El-ahrairah and his stories do resemble Odysseus and his travels to some extent.)
- Rabscuttle, El-ahrairah's best friend and companion in adventure.
- Black Rabbit of Inlé, the rabbit grim reaper. A servant of Frith who ensures that all rabbits die at their appointed time.
- Frith, literally "the sun", is a god-figure who created the world and promised that rabbits would always be allowed to thrive.
- Prince Rainbow, a demigod-figure who communicates between El-ahrairah and Frith. He is always trying to beat El-ahrairah at his own devious games.
- Hufsa, a strange rabbit from another country that is a spy for Prince Rainbow.
- Yona, a hedge hog who gossips a lot, gets El-ahrairah into trouble and helps him trick Prince Rainbow.
- Hawock, a pheasant who also helps El-ahrairah trick Prince Rainbow.
- Rowsby Woof, a dog who El-ahrairah tricks into letting him take the man's cabbages.
- King Darzin, a king, species unknown though probably a hare or big rabbit, whom El-ahrairah tricks into giving him his lettuces and King Darzin swears revenge.
[edit] Major themes
The religious subtleties in the book may either parody or parallel Western religious concepts. Similarities between the Lapine folk hero El-ahrairah and the Trickster of folk mythology are apparent. The exaggeration of the heroic feats of El-ahrairah and the progressive attribution of new feats to his symbolic character, the recognition of the Sun as the god Frith in the absence of a scientific explanation of nature, and the attribution of random accidents to divine providence (such as the train death of the Efrafans on the railway track) are notable in light of the cultural development of folk religion. Feminist literary critics have attacked the book for its central (male) characters' "sexist" obsession with obtaining does to reproduce[attribution needed]. However, this seems to miss the point that although the rabbit characters' thoughts, feelings and interactions have been "humanized" for the benefit of the reader, this is not the case with their instincts; the most important of which is their long-term survival.
[edit] The Private Life of the Rabbit
Adams wrote in a USA Watership Down edition that his take on wild rabbit behaviour was much influenced by The Private Life of the Rabbit by British naturalist R. M. Lockley, although he (Adams) had already written the story in its essentials when he discovered Lockley's work. The book, first published in 1965, detailed a three-year study of wild rabbits in the United Kingdom. Lockley observed behaviours used by Adams in his books, including warrens run by Chief Rabbits who fought other rabbits off; bachelors who are integrated into warren life; and mothers who dissolve unwanted embryos prior to an inconvenient birth. After being out of print for many years, The Private Life of the Rabbit was reissued in the USA by Buccaneer Books in 2006.
[edit] Literary significance & criticism
Watership Down is notable as an ensemble story, with multiple protagonists who each serve a useful function under quietly competent leadership. Although Adams has always stated that the book was intended to be a children's story, many fans see the book as a political allegory attacking fascism and appeasement as Animal Farm attacked Stalinism. This opinion is supported by a plot involving visits to two other warrens whose political philosophies are depicted as antagonistic and repugnant. One of these is known only as Cowslip's Warren: the rabbits there grow fat on food left out for them by a local farmer, yet it is common knowledge (but never openly said) that the farmer has wire traps set out to catch the rabbits; these rabbits accept the risk of sudden death for the benefit of an easy life. The other is Efrafa, ruled with a merciless iron fist by the powerful General Woundwort who becomes the story's principal antagonist.
Myxomatosis (or in Lapine terminology, "The white blindness"), a terrible and highly infectious rabbit disease, is referred to early in the book. It was a threat that could have destroyed the Sandleford warren if not for the tough but reasonable leadership of the chief rabbit, who cast out any rabbits showing signs of sickness. The original impetus for General Woundwort keeping the Efrafan warren under tight control is to guard it against the dreaded illness. However, his strict measures went over the top and the Efrafan rabbits found themselves living under a military dictatorship where they cannot even leave the burrows without presence of guards. The underlying message (as it is often interpreted) is that societies overrun with fear are more susceptible to accepting leadership that purports to offer safety in place of liberty.
Adams has gone so far as to state that the personalities of the two principal hero rabbits, Hazel and Bigwig, are based on fellow officers he knew while a paratrooper during World War II.
The overall storyline resembles that told in Homer's Odyssey; for example, the events in Cowslip's Warren can be compared to the Lotus Eaters episode (Book IX) in The Odyssey. Comparisons have also been made to Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.
- Watership Down is Penguin Books' best selling book of all time.[citation needed]
[edit] Awards and nominations
Watership Down has become a modern classic and won the Carnegie Medal in 1972.
- In 2003, Watership Down came 42nd in a public vote for the 100 greatest books of all time taken by the BBC.[2]
[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
In 1978 the book was adapted as an acclaimed animated film, directed by Martin Rosen. The violence portrayed led many reviewers to caution that the film is not for very young children. The film generally follows the plot of the book with a few omissions. In the movie version, does are seen leaving the Sandleford warren with Hazel and the others. However, only bucks leave in the novel. The character of Violet, a doe attacked by a hawk in the film, seems to have been created just for the shock of a death within the party. In 1999, an animated television series, Watership Down, was also coproduced by Martin Rosen. Interestingly, the animated series detailed General Woundwort's terrible upbringing, which twisted his outlook; the movie presented the General simply as an antagonist. Also, while the film used adult voices, the animated series has "child" voices for some characters.
(A picture book of the animated film was also produced, comprising multiple stills from the film linked with a combination of narration and extracts from the script. This seems to be extremely rare.)
[edit] Cultural references
- The role-playing game Bunnies and Burrows is unofficially based on Watership Down.
- Watership Down has been credited by George Lucas for providing inspiration in creating a "fictional universe" in Star Wars.
- The ABC Television show Lost references Watership Down on three occasions. The fictional character Sawyer is reading the book in the episode "White Rabbit" when Shannon approaches him. The book is also referenced in the episode "Confidence Man". In the beginning of the episode Kate is walking along the beach when she sees the book and picks it up. She doesn't notice Sawyer swimming and when he sees her pick it up he comments: "Hell of a book. It's about bunnies." In season three's episode "Left Behind" Sawyer is again reading the book when Hurley (Jorge Garcia) informs Sawyer of his fellow survivor's intentions to banish him from the camp.
- The Director's Cut version of Donnie Darko includes references to and clips from the Watership Down movie.
- On The Colbert Report, Stephen Colbert keeps a copy on a bookshelf labeled "non-fiction".
- In Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, when Gromit turns on the van's radio in one scene, the song "Bright Eyes" from the Watership Down movie is heard.
- In the Stephen King novel The Stand, one of the main characters, Stu Redman, has read Watership Down and uses the book's concept of "going tharn", or freezing in catatonic panic, to describe how another character makes him feel as Stu tries to escape the Vermont plague facility holding him captive. Later, Stu says that another character, Harold Lauder reminds him of Silver, or Silverweed. In addition, the soldier that initiates the chain of events in the book is named Campion.
- In the revised version of King's novel The Gunslinger, some rabbits are described as being at silflay, which is lapine-language for grazing. Also, in The Wasteland, Eddie mentions that the name "Shardik" makes him think of rabbits, alluding to this and another of Adams' books.
- National Lampoon published a satirical parody of the book entitled "Watergate Down" in 1974, in which the rabbits were replaced by rats with names similar to those of Nixon administration officials. ("A rat is an animal with the morals of a Democrat and the ethics of a Republican.")
- Gundam model kits named after Hazel, Hazel-rah, Hrududu, and Hrairoo have been released by Bandai. Mobile weapons named Kehaar and Bigwig also appear in novels, although none exist in kit form. All of these mobile suit designs exist in Advance of Zeta: The Flag of Titans, a side story of Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam.
- Alternative metal act Atomship originally formed under the name Watership Down. Because they did not have permission, Adams made them change the name. The "Atom" was left to honor his name, and "ship" comes from the book title.
- Big Brother fanshow Big Brother's Little Brother featured in 2006 a rabbit shaped topiary in which a camera was fitted. In every show Dermot O' Leary showed highlights from this camera, preluded by himself and the audience members raising cigarette lighters and singing Bright Eyes.
- Gerry Beckley of the 1970s supergroup America penned a theme song for the "Watership Down" animated film. The song was not used for the film, but the group included it on their 1976 album "Hideaway." According to Beckley, singer/songwriter Harry Nilsson, who loved the book, helped Beckley with the song offering critiques and suggestions.
- An episode of The Goodies satirizes "Watership Down", concluding with Patrick Moore in a bunny suit silhoetted hopping along the horizon. Other bunnies (including one played by David Bellamy) are killed in humorous fashion by various hazards.
- The rock band ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead have a song called 'Prince With a Thousand Enemies' on their eponymous first album, which may or may not refer to El-ahrairah
- Underground rapper sole uses the line "run, rabbit, when they catch you they'll kill you." at the end of the chorus of his song "Tokyo". In the liner notes he states the origin of the line (Watership Down).
- In the book The Club Dumas by Arturo Pérez-Reverte, the character "Lucas Corso" recommends that the barkeep Makarova read Watership Down.
- The musical group Gravenhurst have a song called 'Flowers In Her Hair' on their mini album "Black Holes In The Sand". The song contains the line "there's a dog loose in the wood", a quote from a sequence in the "Watership Down" animated film.
[edit] Trivia
Adams' father makes a cameo appearance (as "Doctor Adams") near the end of the book, in the chapter Dea Ex Machina.
[edit] Sequel
One sequel, Tales from Watership Down, has been published. It takes place after the events in Watership Down, but does not continue the main plotline. Instead, it is a collection of short stories taking place after Watership Down and involving some of the same characters.
[edit] Editions
There have been over 300 editions of Watership Down in English - these are just a few of the ones known.
[edit] UK editions
- ISBN 0-14-030601-3 (Puffin, paperback, 1973)
- ISBN 0-14-003958-9 (Penguin, paperback, 1974)
- ISBN 0-14-036453-6 (Puffin Modern Classics, paperback, 1993)
- ISBN 0-14-118666-6 (Penguin Modern Classics, paperback, 2001)
[edit] US editions
- ISBN 0-02-700030-3 (hardcover, 1974)
- ISBN 0-606-05080-9 (prebound, 1975)
- ISBN 0-380-00428-3 (paperback, 1976, Anniversary Edition)
- ISBN 0-380-00293-0 (mass market paperback, 1976)
- ISBN 1-56849-250-2 (library binding, 1994, reprint)
- ISBN 0-684-83605-X (hardcover, 1996)
- ISBN 0-7838-8081-2 (hardcover, 1997, Large Type Edition)
- ISBN 0-06-093545-6 (paperback, 2001)
[edit] Translations
- Chinese: 魔幻的瓦特西普高原 (Rabbit's Special Watership Down)
- Czech: Daleká cesta za domovem (The Long Way Home)
- Danish: Kaninbjerget (The Rabbit Mountain)
- Dutch: Waterschapsheuvel (Watership Hill)
- Finnish: Ruohometsän Kansa (Folk of the Grass Forest)
- French: Les Garennes de Watership Down (The Warrens of Watership Down)
- German: Unten am Fluss (Down by the River)
- Hebrew: גבעת ווטרשיפ (Watership Hill)
- Hungarian: Gesztenye, a honalapító (Hazel, the Founding Father)
- Italian: La collina dei conigli (The Rabbits' Hill)
- Japanese: ウォーターシップ・ダウンのうさぎたち (Watership Down no Usagi-tachi, "The Rabbits of Watership Down")
- Korean: 워터십 다운의 토끼 (Woteosip Daunui Tokki, "Rabbits of Watership Down") and 워터십 다운의 열한 마리 토끼 (Woteosip Daunui Yeolhan Mari Tokki, "Eleven Rabbits of Watership Down")
- Norwegian: Flukten til Watership (The Escape to Watership)
- Polish: Wodnikowe wzgórze (Aquarius Hill)
- Portuguese: Era uma vez em Watership Down (Once Upon a Time in Watership Down)
- Brazilian Portuguese: A Longa Jornada (The Long Journey)
- Russian: Обитатели холмов (Dwellers of the Hills)
- Serbian: Брежуљак Вотершип/Brežuljak Voteršip (Watership Mound or Watership Ridge)
- Slovenian: Vodovnikova vesina (Watership Down)
- Spanish: La Colina de Watership (Watership Hill)
- Swedish: Den långa flykten (The Long Escape)
[edit] External links
- Bestseller database entry
- Article on the book by John D. Rateliff
- The Real Watership Down: Photographs and descriptions of the story's setting
- A Tribute to Watership Down, including Lapine Glossary
- A literary pilgrimage to Watership Down
- Watership Down publication history at the Internet Book List
- Watership Down publication history at The Internet Book Database of Fiction
- Watership Down publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- 1985 Audio Interview with Richard Adams - RealAudio (28 min. 55 sec.)
- Aerial View & Map of Watership Down (GoogleMaps)
- Essay: Life and Society on Watership Down
Richard Adams' Watership DownEdit |
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Novels: Watership Down - Tales from Watership Down |
Adaptations: Feature film - TV series |
Characters: Bigwig - Blackavar - Blackberry - Campion - Cowslip - Dandelion - Fiver - General Woundwort - Hazel - Hyzenthlay - Kehaar - Vervain - Minor characters |
Mythical/story creatures: El-ahrairah |
Locations: Efrafa - River Enborne - Railway line - Redstone - River Test - Watership Down |
Other: Chief Rabbit - Concepts in Watership Down - Lapine - Owsla |