This seems like a year destined to rediscover Robert Louis Stevenson. I had almost forgotten that he had been one of my favourite storytellers in boyhood - the fact that I can still rattle off the entire plots of "The Strange Case Of Dr. Jeykill and Mr. Hyde" and "Kidnapped" almost verbatim and still remember all the pivotal sequences, characters, their conversations and all the big and small moments in the narrative and their accompanying feelings was a reminder to me of just how consummately brilliant and compelling a storyteller he can still be, for us adults too. Just as I began 2020 with something new and unexpected from him, "An Inland Voyage", a beautifully, eloquently written travelogue about exciting and eventful canoeing adventures down the canals and inlets in France and Belgium, I now end my year of extraordinary reads with this lovely, lovely collection of poems and verses, literally a "child's garden of verses", that bring to life all memories of a blissful and blessed childhood, not only Stevenson's but also my own.
The poems in this elaborately illustrated and compiled edition are unquestionably unforgettable, indelible and beautifully penned and phrased. They do not have any of the epic, intense, incredible imagery of the true greats of English poetry nor do they have any of the radical symbolism of other greats like Blake, Wordsworth or our very recent post-modernist poets and thinkers. But that is unnecessary because Stevenson did not intend this collection to be these things. He intended it as a loving, affectionate, wistful ode to his most beloved childhood memories and he wished to pass on and share these memories down generations, to his son and to other young children, and even to his own grown-up cousins and siblings, who were once children like him and who had shared these fascinating adventures, experiences and feelings together with him.
There are so many vivid images that these wonderful poems, written in the simplest turns of phrase and rhyme, evoked in my mind - the blissful little observations, full of hope and happiness, at natural phenomena like sunshine, rain and shadows, whimsical but mesmerising sights and sounds of an aunt's flowing skirts or the lamplighter going on his errand at night, impromptu games of playing seamen and adventurers in staircases or on beds - and as I read them again and again, out aloud, I could feel stirred and touched by how effective is Stevenson's gift of economy - in a few verses, he is able to evoke the atmosphere, the cumulative experience of childhood, so completely and cohesively.
Then again, while a fair bit of the collection is about these simple, even unspectacular joys of childhood, there is, as to be expected with this storyteller, a deeper, more profound dimension in many of the poems too. One of them, which will always remain as my favourite Stevenson poem of all time, even predicts the theme of his greatest and darkest work; in its own light, frivolous story of a boy wondering about his shadow and its strange ways, it directly lays down the founding theme for one of the greatest stories of horror and moral complexity ever written. Read it for yourself and find out.
There are many other poems which are equally imaginative and discerning - there is one that wonders curiously about children of foreign lands, one that imagines actual battlefields with dumb soldiers, one that imagines scenes out of story-books unfolding within the walls of home (and this one will appeal to all fellow bookworms) and also one that predicts, again, Stevenson's inexhaustible thirst for travelling across the breadth of the world as well as one more, in an unexpectedly dark mood, that reveals his innermost fears of the dark. In ways like these, "A Child's Garden Of Verses" is almost like the best, the most beautiful autobiography that one can have of a writer, a memoir, a self-portrait of childhood in the most eloquent verse possible.
The collection ends, again memorably, with a pocketful of poems dedicated by Stevenson to people who were an inevitable part of his childhood and even to his own son and even further to us readers. Why compare this monumental accomplishment then to other works of poetry which this is so much more than just beautiful poetry?