Theodore
Roethke
Theodore
Huebner Roethke hardly fits anyone’s image of the stereotypical high-minded
poet-intellectual of the 1940s through 1960s. Born in Saginaw, Michigan, his
father was a German immigrant who owned and ran a 25-acre greenhouse. Though as
a child he read a great deal and as a high school freshman he had a Red Cross
campaign speech translated into 26 languages, he suffered from issues of
abandonment and loss, and his lack of self-esteem led him to strive to be
accepted by peers. When he was 14, his father died of cancer and his uncle
committed suicide. He attended the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where he
adopted a tough, bear-like image (weighing over 225 pounds) and even developed
a fascination with gangsters. Eccentric and nonconformist—he later called
himself “odious” and “unhappy”—Roethke desired for a friend with whom he could
talk and relate his ambitions. Poet and writer James Dickey once named Roethke
the greatest of all American poets: “I don't see anyone else that has the kind
of deep, gut vitality that Roethke's got. Whitman was a great poet, but he's no
competition for Roethke.” His difficult childhood, his bouts with manic
depression, and his ceaseless search for truth through his poetry writing led
to a difficult life, but also helped to produce a remarkable body of work that
would influence future generations of American poets to pursue the mysteries of
one’s inner self. In 1923, the death of his father shaped his creative and
artistic outlooks. Being an American poet he published several volumes of award
winning and critically acclaimed poetry. Roethke is regarded as one of the most
accomplished and influential poets of his generation.
The poem is
short in its length in which a teacher reflects on the death of one of his
former students. We the audience, can tell he has lost a student as it is
stated in the title, (My Student, Thrown by a horse). He is heartbroken over
the tragic event. One thing that is unclear is the nature of the relationship
between the teacher and student. The two most common thoughts about this are
that he is either a pedophile (an adult who is sexually attracted to children)
who stalks (chases) young girls, or that he is a very sad man who is simply
reflecting on the loss of one of his students. He is acting, as a teacher
should: truly caring for his students (more specifically Jane), and in the
least romantic way possible.
“Elegy for
Jane,” subtitled “My Student, Thrown by a Horse,” is written in free verse
whose twenty-two lines are divided into four stanzas. The poem follows the
elegiac tradition insofar as it mourns the death of a loved one. In the first
two stanzas, the speaker, a man who is Jane's teacher, is speaking to a general
audience about his memories of Jane as a youthful, emotional girl. This
reminiscence juxtaposes with the last three stanzas, in which the speaker,
while standing over Jane's grave, expresses to her the sorrow he experiences
due to her death.
The first
nine lines follow the custom of honoring the deceased by describing Jane’s
gracefulness and youthful energy. Roethke describes Jane as a light, quick
animal, and the essence of the love in nature. Her neck curls (bends) are damp
(wet) as plant tendrils (stems), trailing, winding, and new. Quick and nervous
in her movements, Jane’s smile was nonetheless wide as a fish’s (“pickerel”).
Jane was also shy, for she had to be startled (amazed/frightened) into talking.
Once she started talking, however, she showed that she delighted in her
thoughts. These lines may be suggesting to Roethke’s calling on her in class
and her corresponding pleasure in answering. When she was happy, Jane was like
a bird with its tail in the wind; her song was so energetic that small branches
trembled. The courage and adventurousness that cause a tail to be immersed in
wind imply a daring that might have resulted in Jane’s is being thrown to her
death by a horse. Jane’s vitality was so inspiring that all nature rejoiced in
her cheerfulness, even gloomy natural items such as shade and mold
(rust/decay). Jane’s happiness was so beneficent that the leaves turned to
kissing.
The first
stanza also introduces a common theme to the poem: birds. Throughout the poem,
the teacher refers to Jane as three different birds: a wren, a sparrow, and a
pigeon. The significance of these birds is simple. They are all grey: a very
earthy and basic color that adequately describes the personality of Jane.
The tone of
the fourth stanza changes drastically from the first three stanzas. What were
once fond memories of a student turn into the harsh reality that she is gone.
The speaker says, “My sparrow, you are not here (14).” Throughout this stanza,
the speaker is standing over Jane’s grave, talking to her in a tone that suggests
he is speaking to a lost loved one. He also makes many references to earth and
nature such as, “Waiting like a fern (leaf/branch), my spiny shadow (15),” and
“The sides of wet stones cannot console me (16).” This line further solidifies
(hardens) that he is torn by the loss of a student.
Though it is
the shortest of the three stanzas of the poem, the fifth is the most telling of
them. The speaker begins losing his tranquility (calm) saying, “If only I could
nudge (poke at) you from this sleep, my maimed (hurt) darling (18, 19).” At
this point, the exact details of the relationship between the teacher and
student may become confusing. The last lines of the poem read, “Over this damp
grave I speak my words of love: I, with no rights in this matter, Neither
father nor lover (20, 21, 22).” The first part may be a bit misleading, but it
becomes apparent that he is not in any kind of relationship with the girl. He
claims he cannot know what it would be like to be in the shoes of her lover, or
her father for that matter. The speaker’s meaning is definite and clear. The
relationship between the teacher and the student was purely professional, and
nothing more. He had absolutely no romantic interactions with the girl, and it
is plainly that simple.
To conclude
this poem emphasises the theme of innocence when describing the young
girl, using repeated comparisons to animals and plants. The act of losing
something so pure, so innocent, so perfect, makes the loss of the girl's life
so much harder on the speaker. While it is normally prudent (careful and
sensible) to question the reliability of a narrator, it is quite evident that
the speaker in Elegy is speaking from the most deep and innermost part of his
heart. Even the title, Elegy shows that there is a certain admiration for the
dead girl, as an elegy is most often heard at a funeral, a place of utmost
respect.
The speaker
successfully presents a portrait of his thoughts as he stands at the deceased
Jane's grave on a rainy day. First, he nostalgically recalls images of Jane in
her youthful life, followed by laments about her death. Additionally, although
he is not her father or lover, he was her teacher who cared for her and admired
her. Throughout the poem, the speaker laments the loss of a person who
was filled with energy and life by detailing her emotional extremes and telling
of his pain due to her death.
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