Songs of Childhood

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WALTER RAMAL

Songs of Childhood

by Walter Ramal
[Walter de la Mare]

with a preface
for the Garland edition by

Anthony Hecht

Garland Publishing, Inc., New York & London

1976


Bibliographical note:

This facsimile has been made
from a copy in the
Beinecke Library of Yale University.
(Iq.D373.902)

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
De La Mare, Walter John, 1873-1956.
      Songs of childhood.

(Classics of children's literature, 1621-1932)

Reprint of the 1902 ed. published by Longmans, Green, London, New York.

"Walter de la Mare (1873-1956), bibliography of his books for children": p.

SUMMARY: A collection of forty-seven poems about subjects and experiences familiar to children.

[1. English poetry]    I. Title.    II. Series.
[PR6007.E3S6 1976]    821'.9'12    75-32200
ISBN 0-8240-2310-2

Printed in the United States of America


Preface

The Romantic poets rediscovered a pastoral and Biblical dream: that a child was the most innocent and the wisest of us all. Wordsworth hailed him as "Mighty Prophet! Seer blest!" And in the next generation Victorian novelists took that dream seriously enough to make children the heroes and heroines of their most searching fictions. There had been no "children's literature" to speak of before, except for the oral and "popular" tradition, including lullabies and Mother Goose, some of which go back as far as Tudor and even medieval times.

Children's literature today is an immense and complex domain; and leaving aside for the present the works composed by children themselves, what remains varies tremendously in skill and delight, as well as in subtlety and intention. So I shall also set aside those minimal "vocabulary-building" tales and verses whose small virtues are rarely more than therapeutic, and direct myself only to that specialized but most important category—poems written by a skilled and adult poet but addressed to an audience of children who are likely to be read to until they are skillful enough to read the same verses for themselves.

The dangers for the poet in addressing so composite an audience are enormous: cuteness, coyness, archness and condescension are only the most obvious ones. Some great writers of children's verse—Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear—have successfully hedged themselves against these dangers by insistent comedy and parody (Carroll's "serious" children's verse is maudlin and embarrassing). By this means they have contrived what the child will take as lovely, unintimidating, mysterious, rational nonsense, and what the adult will recognize as a travesty or burlesque of something very edgy indeed. Thus, Lear's "The Dong with the Luminous Nose" and Carroll's "Jabberwocky" are, respectively, bright and disguised versions of gothic terror and misery on the one hand, and medieval knightly exploit on the other, both rendered innocuous for the nursery and ridiculous for the adult. The risks of seriousness have been successfully avoided.

The poetry of Walter de la Mare sings boldly and beautifully without any of these hedges and condescensions. His work has the honest candor of the border ballads and the fairy tales: as well as unmitigated joys, they are full of the dangers and horrors and sorrows that every child soon knows to be part of the world, however vainly parents try to veil them. A child's curiosity about the forbidden will insist on being satisfied; and better by verse than otherwise. This poetry is also musically astute and demanding; it may surprise and alert the parental reader; and it has its share of archaisms and poeticisms, which, contrary to adult surmise, bemuse and fascinate children. And it must be admitted that it is also relentlessly British; but then, so is much good children's literature.

As a poet (he was also a gifted novelist and short-story writer) de la Mare was praised by T. S. Eliot ("the delicate, invisible web you wove") and by W. H. Auden ("there are no good poems which are only for children"). His technical and linguistic skills are not, as Auden rightly points out, a matter of indifference to children, who are in the very business of learning language, as well as other facts of life, and who are particularly sensitive to verbal rhythms, as Iona and Peter Opie have splendidly demonstrated in The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren.

Just as important, this is a poetry of charms and spells, witches and dwarfs, ogres and fairies, full of dangers, omens, riddles and triumphs. In "The Ogre," for example, two sleeping children are about to be plucked by an enormous ogre from their home:

Into their dreams no shadow fell

Of his disastrous thumb

Groping discreet, and gradual,

Across the quiet room.

But he is stopped, spellbound, abashed and defeated by the mother of the children, who is in another room and, all unaware of the danger, is singing a version of the Coventry Carol (which, in its original, is addressed to the Christ Child) as a lullaby to her new-born baby.

I would guess that any child fortunate enough to grow up with these poems ringing in memory's ear might have a remarkable reservoir of music and excitement available to him. That is not a small gift.

Anthony Hecht

ANTHONY HECHT teaches in the English Department of the University of Rochester. He is the author of several books of poetry, of which the most recent are The Hard Hours (1967) and Aesopic (1968). His poems appear in many anthologies and he has contributed to the Hudson Review, the New York Review of Books, Quarterly Review of Literature, and other periodicals. He also translated (with Helen H. Bacon) Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes (1973).

WALTER DE LA MARE (1873-1956)

Bibliography of His Books for Children
(Poetry):

  • Songs of Childhood. London 1902.
  • A Child's Day: a Book of Rhymes to Pictures by C. W. Cadby. London 1912.
  • Peacock Pie: a Book of Rhymes. London 1913.
  • Down-adown-derry: a Book of Fairy Poems. London 1922.
  • Stuff and Nonsense. London 1927.
  • Poems for Children. London [1930].
  • This Year, Next Year. London 1937.
  • Bells and Grass. London 1941.
  • Collected Rhymes and Verses. London 1944.

Bibliography of His Books for Children
(Stories, Plays):

  • The Three Mulla-mulgars. London 1910.
  • Crossings; a Fairy Play, with Music by E. A. Gibbs. London 1921.
  • Story and Rhyme. London 1921.
  • Broomsticks and Other Tales. London 1925.
  • Miss Jemima. Oxford [1925].
  • Told Again: Traditional Tales. Oxford 1927.
  • Readings: Traditional Tales 1925-1928. Oxford 1928.
  • Old Joe. Oxford [1927].
  • Stories from the Bible. London 1929.
  • The Lord Fish and Other Tales. London [1933].
  • The Old Lion and Other Stories. London 1942.
  • The Magic Jacket and Other Stories. London 1943.
  • The Scarecrow and Other Stories. London 1944.
  • The Dutch Cheese and Other Stories. London 1946.
  • Collected Stories for Children. London 1947.

Selected References:

  • Atkins, John W. H. Walter de la Mare: an Exploration. London [1947].
  • Clark, L. Walter de la Mare (a Bodley monograph). London 1960.
  • McCrosson, D. R. Walter de la Mare. New York 1966.

SONGS OF CHILDHOOD

Under the Dock Leaves
Under the Dock Leaves,
by Richard Doyle.

Songs of Childhood

By

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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