The Little Hat
I lost my little
Hat. It had
Ribbons round and
Round it.
And this made me very sad.
And I never found it.
Dorothy Aldis, All Together, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1952
Yesterday was T.S. Eliot; today for contrast is Dorothy Aldis, whose poetry was written to be accessible to children, not to be mused over in drafty garrets, contemplated in the flickering light of the fireside or dissected in college classrooms.
Eliot(1888-1965) and Aldis(1896-1966) were basically contemporaries, both born in the midwest to wealthy families of note and both were educated in prestigious eastern private schools. We always associate T.S. Eliot with British literature, but he spent his first 25 years in the US. Perhaps their paths might have been more congruent if they had been born 50 years later. Despite Aldis's talent and opportunities, her choices may have been much more restricted than Eliot's.
Both poems are about loss. The Waste Land takes you through the landscape of death and destruction and loss. It is a stunning journey. Aldis gives you a picture of grief in less than 25 words.
For a child, loss can be such a tangible emotion. You love something and then it is gone, you look, you wait, you hope, but it never returns. Early life lessons in loss can be a treasured toy, a beloved pet, or a grandparent. It is the finality of loss that I feel right in my gut in this poem..."And I never found it." My parents, my aunts and uncles, and all 5 of my siblings are gone. This makes me very sad.
Eliot(1888-1965) and Aldis(1896-1966) were basically contemporaries, both born in the midwest to wealthy families of note and both were educated in prestigious eastern private schools. We always associate T.S. Eliot with British literature, but he spent his first 25 years in the US. Perhaps their paths might have been more congruent if they had been born 50 years later. Despite Aldis's talent and opportunities, her choices may have been much more restricted than Eliot's.
Both poems are about loss. The Waste Land takes you through the landscape of death and destruction and loss. It is a stunning journey. Aldis gives you a picture of grief in less than 25 words.
For a child, loss can be such a tangible emotion. You love something and then it is gone, you look, you wait, you hope, but it never returns. Early life lessons in loss can be a treasured toy, a beloved pet, or a grandparent. It is the finality of loss that I feel right in my gut in this poem..."And I never found it." My parents, my aunts and uncles, and all 5 of my siblings are gone. This makes me very sad.