Oh my goodness. I was going to say “you might have something here,” but what I really should say is “you’re right.” The frog’s a whatchamacallit, that term I learned in drama class. An objective correlative.
Wirt promised to take Greg frog-hunting and didn’t follow through, so Greg has to go and find the frog himself. (Wirt has good intentions, but Greg has to make all the effort.) Greg loves the frog and pals around with it and holds it in his arms. He calls it “our frog.” Wirt insists, “He’s not my frog.”
After the ferry trip, the frog very nearly stays with his brethren on the boat. But immediately after Wirt and Greg escape Adelaide and have to take to the road again without Beatrice, the frog, who we’ve almost forgotten about after that very intense scene beforehand, suddenly catches up to them again. It’s like a narrative reminder that Wirt and Greg still have each other–in fact, that’s all they’ve got. (And look how they react: Greg is thrilled to see him; Wirt, still racked with betrayal, couldn’t care less. It won’t help them get home any.)
Going off with the Beast, Greg leaves the frog with an unconscious Wirt and asks him to take care of it (he’s sacrificing himself, so he won’t be able to do that anymore). When Wirt goes off into the snow to find his brother, you’d think that he’d leave the frog in Beatrice’s tree and come pick him up later, since it’s a warm, safe atmosphere and he’d just have his hands full with the little guy while trying to rescue Greg. Instead he walks off cradling it like a baby (I cried).
Greg gives the frog dozens of different names throughout the story, but none of them stick. In the end, Wirt has to name the frog, and his name (a reference to the predicament that landed them in the Unknown in the first place–specifically to his own role in it, since he’s no longer blaming Greg) is the one that stays. The final scene has Greg refer to the frog as his, and Wirt corrects him: “Our frog.”
Also, the frog becomes more humanlike as the story progresses and the events of the Unknown bring the brothers closer–he’s at his most human when Wirt and Greg are on the boat, and it’s potentially the closest we’ve seen the two of them in the story (singing together and dancing around! The frog sings later and it’s like they give the frog a voice). In the final scene with Wirt and Greg we’re reminded that Greg’s frog swallowed the glowing bell that controlled Lorna’s demon, and that it’s still inside him. I think there will always be some element of the Unknown in the way these two relate to each other, since their near-death experience was what made Wirt realize how important Greg was to him.
And the ending–it turns out the frog was narrating this whole time and we had no idea! The relationship between Wirt and Greg is the heart of the story. It just took Wirt a while to figure that out.
Tag: elle
Does this make me look nonbinary?
the bisexual haircut
Zuko going into an angst coma because he made the right decision.
Cacti Cupcakes
G A Y
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meghan NO
Meghan: Aries, Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn
Friend who is trying to convince Meghan not to eat all those fudge stripes: Gemini, Cancer, Virgo, Libra, Aquarius, Pisces
Damn right I’m Meghan
The Signs as Suburban Moms
Aries: Jennifer, age 43, an alcoholic who lets her kids run wild but still shows up to school functions so it looks like she’s trying
Taurus: Ramona, age 37, a stay at home mom obsessed with interior decorating who spends over $20,000 a year at Homegoods.
Gemini: Lyn, age 38, a confident mom who flirts with married men even though she herself is married and posts too much on social media
Cancer: Pat, age 41, a loving mom who already has six kids but wants to push for one more because she loves the whole process of raising a child
Leo: Stella, age 36, a “younger” mom who is an ex Broadway star and likes to tell stories about her “dazzling” experiences on the stage and rant about how her kids are sure to follow
Virgo: Courtney, age 45, a traditional mom who doesn’t let her kids dye their hair and thinks college is the most important thing ever
Libra: Katherine, age 42, a gossiper who is obsessed with high school reunions and going to parties and socializing
Scorpio: Kelly, age 39, a widow who is doing her best to provide for the kids but is grief stricken since losing her husband
Sagittarius: Georgina, age 38, a firecracker mom who brings everyone on road trips across the country and likes to skydive
Capricorn: Susan, age 42, a self proclaimed “tiger mom” who pushes her kids to learn instruments and achieve perfect grades so they can show the world their potential
Aquarius: Harriet, age 37, an artist who keeps to herself and doesn’t really show up at PTA meetings because everybody there is boring
Pisces: Christina, age 40, a super lenient mom who won’t get mad at her kids for drinking or anything like that but rather try to understand why they did it and try to help