
How We Got Up the Glenmutchkin Railway and how We Got out of It
is a humorous short story by Scottish writer William Edmondstoune Aytoun, first published anonymously in Blackwood’s Magazine around 1845, satirizing the speculative railway mania in Scotland during the 1840s by detailing the absurd and chaotic construction of a fictional railway line. It’s known for its vigorous fun, social commentary, and vivid depiction of the era’s industrial excitement and folly, often appearing in collections of his humorous prose.
This story is featured on this site in its entirety, containing a total of 9,844 words.

