Im focusing on imaginative journeys for the HSC, but we keep getting told to try and tie it in with physical and inner too. "Any journey contains the three elements: physical, inner, imaginative." (Weve heard that sooo many times.)
Anyway its actually useful, no matter what kind of journey you're focusing on, to tie it in with the other two. Wind in the Willows is Toad imagining a physical journey, while you can follow Ratty's inner journey as he tries to tell Toad "No! I dont want to go!"
Look at the personification and stereotyping of the three animals.
He uses lists and exclamatory diction. The line about heath and common and rolling downs is good to remember.
Mole has no lines of dialogue in this extract, so its up to the responder to imagine his response, and thus his reaction to the proposed journey. Makes it easy to emphathise with him.
Colour imagery is used, theyre all bright too, symbols of happiness and excitement and whatnot.
The reactions are polar opposites: Toads enthusiasm and Rattys disthusiasm (i cant think of the right word). So, everyone reacts differently to the prospect of a journey.
Its not the destination thats important, but the journey itself, as is evident in the fact that Toad doesnt bother to mention a destination, but just describes the journey itself.
Good luck.