Poetry for Students

(WallPaper) #1
Volume 19 33

childhood desires—a son for his mother, a daugh-
ter for her father—that developed into neurotic
symptoms in adulthood, Freud argued. Childhood
was also the subject of the bestselling children’s
book of all time, The Tale of Peter Rabbit, authored
by Beatrix Potter and published in 1902.
Rilke struggled financially during this time and
restlessly traveled throughout Europe, to Worp-
swede, Italy, Scandinavia, Germany, and back to
Paris, searching for a place that could accommo-
date both his need to write and his desire for au-
thenticity in human interactions.

Critical Overview


Although “Childhood” is a frequently anthologized
Rilke poem because of its accessibility and subject
matter, very little criticism has been written on it
orThe Book of Images. Edward Snow, who has
translated the volume in its entirety, claims in his
introduction that this is because of the collection’s
“scattered, hybrid quality, which makes generaliz-
ing about it so difficult.” The collection itself ap-
peared twice, once in 1902 and again in 1906, in a
much-expanded version. Although Snow notes that
many of the poems are rough and do not live up to
Rilke’s later work, he claims, “In the most brilliant
of the poems in The Book of Images... Rilke is
uncannily confident from the first.”

Writing on Rilke in European Writers, James
Rolleston points out the significance of the collec-
tion in Rilke’s development as an artist, noting that
it “illuminates the continuity of Rilke’s maturing
process.” Critic Frank Wood agrees. In his study
of Rilke’s poetry, Rainer Maria Rilke: The Ring of
Forms, Wood claims the collection marks a transi-
tional phase in Rilke’s poetry. Comparing The Book
of ImagestoThe Book of Hours, written around the
same time, Wood says, “[The Book of Images] con-
tains some... really superb poems.... we are at
least aware that a poet, and not a stylized monk, is
speaking.”

Criticism


Chris Semansky
Semansky’s essays and reviews appear regu-
larly in journals and newspapers. In this essay, Se-
mansky considers the tone of Rilke’s poem and its
relation to his other poems on childhood.

Rilke was obsessed with loss, with the pres-
ence of death in life. His writing is invariably dark,
sad, elegiac. Elegies are laments written for the
dead. However, Rilke’s mourning was not limited
to the dead. As someone who paid minute atten-
tion to the nuances of his own feelings, perceptions,
and changes, Rilke also mourned the loss(es) of his

Childhood

Compare


&


Contrast



  • 1900–1910:In 1900, Freud publishes The In-
    terpretation of Dreams, which attempts to ex-
    plain phenomena such as sexuality and abnormal
    desires.
    Today:Freud remains popular, though many of
    his theories have been discredited.

  • 1900–1910:The December 1900 issue of the
    Ladies’ Home Journalpredicts that exercise will
    become compulsory in schools and that by the
    year 2000 those who cannot walk ten miles a
    day will be considered weaklings.


Today:Obesity is a major health problem in
both Western Europe and the Untied States, as
people eat more and exercise less.


  • 1900–1910: German philosopher Friedrich
    Nietzsche, who proclaimed “God is dead” and
    whose ideas influenced Hitler, dies.
    Today:Nietzsche’s ideas continue to influence
    philosophers and social theorists throughout the
    world.


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