Down the River.

London: Victor Gollancz, 1937 (December); New York: Henry Holt, 1937. "With 83 Engravings on Wood by Agnes Miller Parker." In this sequel to Through the Woods, Bates writes of the rivers of his childhood, the Ouse and the Nene, and of the many aspects of river life, both natural and human, that he appreciates: flowers, birds, otters, mills, boats, fish and fishing, ice-skating, and seasonal changes. While writing as if following a river from Northamptonshire to the sea, Bates takes time for memories of his grandfather and other relatives, observations on village life, his opposition to hunting (in general, and specifically of otters and foxes), and a history of English lace-making.

Richard Church, while finding Bates often "peevish, shrew-tempered, and inclined to scold when contradicted," nevertheless calls him "one of the most sensitive, direct, and subtle prose-writers amongst English naturalists."

A reprinting in 2014 by Little Toller features an introduction by Charles Rangely-Wilson.

Contains: The Twin Rivers, A Boy's Brook, The First River, Fish and Fishermen, The Flood, The Frost, The Second River, Water Flowers and Water Creatures, Flowers of Childhood, The Water-Mill, The Lace-Makers, Otters and Men, The Rivers of England, Down to the Sea. With the following exceptions, the essays appeared only in this collection: "The Frost" contains the essay "The Charm of Skating," first published in January 1937. "First River" contains, in slightly altered form, the 1934 essay "A Midland Portrait.""A Boy's Brook" appeared in serial form in January 1937, "The Rivers of England" was also first published in early 1937, the "The Lace-Makers" was published in 1934 in serial form, and an abridged version of "Otters and Men" was separately published in 1947.

Reviews:
The New Statesman and Nation (November 6, 1937, p. 752, Richard Church, attached)
New York Times (December 12, 1937, p. 5, attached)
The Spectator (November 19, 1937, p. 26, Edmund Blunden, attached)
Times Literary Supplement (November 6, 1937, p. 831, Brenda Colvin, attached)
Unknown periodical, October 17, 1937, Edward Shanks (attached).

ID: 
a29
Title: 
Down the River
Genre: 
Essay Collection
Page Count: 
151
Word Count: 
ca. 36700
Publisher: 
Henry Holt
Victor Gollancz
Year of Publication: 
1937
Topic: 
Northamptonshire
Document Type: 
Nature Writing
AttachmentSize
a29 New Statesman and Nation.pdf508.44 KB
a29 New York Times.pdf240.9 KB
a29 Spectator.pdf267.97 KB
a29 TLS.pdf345.57 KB
a29 Edward Shanks.pdf406.44 KB