![]() ![]() When I was six he was six… he needed me to escape from being fifty,” he wrote at the end of The Enchanted Place. Later in his life, Christopher Robin seemed able to reflect on what had frustrated him about the books. “The publicity that came to be attached to ‘Christopher Robin’ never seemed to affect us personally, but to concern either a character in a book or a horse that we hoped at one time would win the Derby,” Milne wrote in his 1939 autobiography. ![]() I belonged in those days to my mother rather than my father,” Christopher Robin writes in The Enchanted Place.Ĭertainly, Milne didn’t seem aware of the negative impact his books had on his son. “When a child is small it is his mother who is mainly responsible for the way he is brought up. However, that was not necessarily the full story. Robin suggests that Daphne Milne was more concerned with her socialite duties than caring for her son - whom she left almost solely in the company of his nanny, Olive, known affectionately by Christopher Robin as ‘Nou’. “ the one that has brought me over the years more toe-curling, fist-clenching, lip-biting embarrassment than any other,” he wrote. ‘Vespers’ was “disown” by Christopher Robin in his autobiography, The Enchanted Place, first published in 1974. ![]() In reality, the poem was published in Vanity Fair, however some reports suggest that Milne had told his wife she could keep the money if she managed to sell the poem to a magazine. In Robin, Daphne has her husband’s poem published in Vanity Fair without his permission or knowledge. ![]()
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