A water vole named "Ratty" is a leading character in the 1908 children's book
The Wind in the Willows by
Kenneth Grahame: the locality used in the book is believed to be
Moor Copse in
Berkshire,
England, and the character's name "Ratty" has become widely associated with the species and their riverbank habitat, as well as the misconception that they are a species of rat. There are also watervoles in the works of
Redwall by
Brian Jacques. In the comic novel and film
Cold Comfort Farm by
Stella Gibbons, one of the characters, Urk, refers to the subject of his unrequited love, Elfine Starkadder, as his little water vole. Throughout the story, Urk spends a lot of time talking to the water voles on the farm.
C. S. Calverley, a 19th-century writer of (among other things) light verse, in his poem "Shelter", beginning: By the wide lake's margin I mark'd her lie— The wide, weird lake where the alders sigh— Tells of an apparently shy, easily frightened young female by a lakeside, who in the last line of the poem, it is revealed that: For she was a water-rat.
The Rolling Stones song "Live with Me" includes the line "My best friend he shoots water rats and feeds them to his geese", referring to
Keith Richards' habit of shooting water voles in the moat of his
Redlands, West Wittering home. == References ==