Christopher Robin Milne

Christopher Robin Milne (21 August 1920 – 20 April 1996) was an English author and bookseller and the only child of author A. A. Milne. As a child, he was the basis of the character Christopher Robin in his father's Winnie-the-Pooh stories and in two books of poems.

Christopher Robin Milne
Milne in 1928
Born(1920-08-21)21 August 1920
Died20 April 1996(1996-04-20) (aged 75)
Totnes, Devon, England
Other namesBilly Moon (childhood nickname)
EducationGibbs School
Boxgrove Preparatory School
Stowe School
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • playwright
  • poet
Years active1920–1975
Known forGiving his name to Christopher Robin in Winnie-the-Pooh
Spouse
Lesley de Sélincourt
(m. 1948)
ChildrenClare Milne (1956–2012)
Parent(s)A. A. Milne
Daphne de Sélincourt
RelativesAubrey de Sélincourt (uncle)

Early life

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Christopher Robin Milne was born at 11 Mallord Street, Chelsea, London (renumbered as 13 Mallord Street in 1924), on 21 August 1920, to author Alan Alexander Milne and Daphne (née de Sélincourt) Milne. Milne speculated that he was an only child because "he had been a long time coming." From an early age, Milne was cared for by his nanny Olive "Nou" Rand Brockwell, until May 1930, when he entered boarding school. Milne called her Nou, and stated "Apart from her fortnight's holiday every September, we had not been out of each other's sight for more than a few hours at a time", and "we lived together in a large nursery on the top floor."[1]

Milne's father explained that "Rosemary" was the intended name of their firstborn child, if it was a girl. Realizing that it was going to be a boy, he decided on "Billy", but without the intention of actually christening him William. Instead, each parent chose a name; hence his legal name was Christopher Robin. Within the family, he was referred to as "Billy Moon", a combination of his nickname and his childhood mispronunciation of Milne.[2] From 1929 onwards, he would simply be referred to as Christopher, and he later stated that it was "the only name I feel to be really mine."[3][4]

 
The real stuffed toys which were owned by Christopher Robin Milne and featured in the Winnie-the-Pooh stories. They have been on display in the New York Public Library in New York City since 1987, with the exception of Roo, who was lost when Christopher Robin was 9 years old. According to the New York Public Library's website, the items have been on display in the Children's Center at 42nd Street, in the "main branch" of the library (the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street), since early 2009. In 2023 they were displayed in the Polonsky Exhibition.[5]

On his first birthday on 21 August 1921, Milne received an Alpha Farnell teddy bear, which he later named Edward. Eeyore was a Christmas present in 1921 and Piglet arrived undated. Edward, along with a real Canadian black bear named Winnipeg that Milne saw at London Zoo,[6][7] eventually became the inspiration for the Winnie-the-Pooh character.

Milne spoke self-deprecatingly of his own intellect, "I may have been on the dim side", or "not very bright". He also described himself as being "good with his hands" and possessing a Meccano set. His self-descriptions included "girlish", since he had long hair and wore "girlish clothes", and being "very shy and 'un-self-possessed'".[8]

An early childhood friend was Anne Darlington, also an only child, who, as Milne described it, was for his parents "the Rosemary that I wasn't." Darlington had a toy monkey, Jumbo, as dear to her as Pooh was to Milne. Several poems by Milne's father, and several illustrations by E. H. Shepard, feature Darlington and Milne, notably "Buttercup Days", in which their relative hair colours (brown and golden blond) and their mutual affection is noted (the illustration to this latter poem, from Now We Are Six, also features the cottage at Cotchford Farm). To Milne's parents, Darlington was, and remained to her death, the daughter that Milne wasn't, and Daphne long held fond hopes that Darlington and Milne would marry.[9]

In 1925, Milne's father bought Cotchford Farm, near the Ashdown Forest in East Sussex. Though still living in London, the family would spend weekends, Easter, and summer holidays there. As Milne described it, "So there we were in 1925 with a cottage, a little bit of garden, a lot of jungle, two fields, a river, and then all the green, hilly countryside beyond, meadows and woods, waiting to be explored." The place became the inspiration for fiction, with Milne stating, "Gill's Lap that inspired Galleon's Lap, the group of pine trees on the other side of the main road that became the Six Pine Trees, the bridge over the river at Posingford that became Pooh-sticks Bridge," and a nearby "ancient walnut tree" became Pooh's House. His toys, Pooh, Eeyore, Piglet, plus two invented characters, Owl and Rabbit, came to life through Milne and his mother, to the point where his father could write stories about them. Kanga, Roo, and Tigger were later presents from his parents.[10][11]

Of this time, Milne states, "I loved my Nanny, I loved Cotchford. I also quite liked being Christopher Robin and being famous."[12]

When his nanny departed when he was nine, Milne's relationship with his father grew. As he put it, "For nearly ten years I had clung to Nanny. For nearly ten more years I was to cling to him, adoring him as I had adored Nanny, so that he too became almost a part of me ..."[citation needed]

When Milne eventually wrote his memoirs, he dedicated them to Olive Rand Brockwell: "Alice to millions, but Nou to me".[13]

Schooling

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At age six, Milne and Darlington attended Miss Walters' school. On 15 January 1929, Milne started at Gibbs, a boys' day school in Sloane Square, London. In May 1930, he started boarding school at Boxgrove School near Guildford. Of his time at boarding school, Milne said, "For it was now that began that love-hate relationship with my fictional namesake that has continued to this day."[14] His father's books were popular, and they were well known by his schoolmates, which made Milne a target of bullying by the other children.[15][16] Milne later described the poem "Vespers" – about the toddler Christopher Robin saying his evening prayers – as "the one [work] that has brought me over the years more toe-curling, fist-clenching, lip-biting embarrassment than any other."[17][16]

Milne earned a mathematics scholarship at Stowe School, where he was relentlessly bullied, and wrote: "It seemed to me almost that my father had got to where he was by climbing upon my infant shoulders, that he had filched from me my good name and had left me with the empty fame of being his son."[18][19] He went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1939.[20][21]

Adult life

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When World War II started, Milne left his studies and tried to join the British Army, but failed the medical examination. His father used his influence to allow Milne to join as a sapper in the 2nd Training Battalion of the Royal Engineers. He was commissioned in July 1942, and was posted to the Middle East and then to Italy, where he was wounded as a platoon commander the following year. After the war he returned to Cambridge University and completed a degree in English.[22]

At 26, he was a very well-educated ex-army officer from a privileged family. He spent a period in London trying to readjust to "civvy street" by finding gainful employment, but his social status worked against him. He explored several career avenues, each one ending in a fruitless cul-de-sac. This was an unhappy and directionless period, sometimes referred to as his 'Downwards' turn. Of this idle interlude he commented "How hateful it is to have too little to do." But he entered an altogether more personally fulfilling chapter of his life: marriage, and rather strangely, as a successful bookshop owner.[23]

On 11 April 1948, Milne became engaged to Lesley de Sélincourt, a first cousin on his mother's side and daughter of the translator Aubrey de Sélincourt, and they married on 24 July 1948.

In 1951, he and his wife moved to Dartmouth, and opened The Harbour Bookshop on 25 August. This turned out to be a success, although his mother had thought the decision odd, as Milne did not seem to like "business", and as a bookseller he would have to meet fans of his father's work.[24][25] The shop was closed by its most recent owners in September 2011.[26]

Milne occasionally visited his father when the elder Milne became ill. After his father died, Milne never returned to Cotchford Farm. His mother eventually sold the farm and moved back to London after disposing of his father's personal possessions. Milne, who did not want any part of his father's royalties, decided to write a book about his childhood. As Milne describes it, that book, The Enchanted Places, "combined to lift me from under the shadow of my father and of Christopher Robin, and to my surprise and pleasure I found myself standing beside them in the sunshine able to look them both in the eye".[23]

Following her husband's death, Daphne Milne had little further contact with her son, did not see him during the last 15 years of her life and refused to see him on her deathbed.[27]

A few months after his father's death in 1956, Milne's daughter Clare was born and diagnosed with severe cerebral palsy.

Milne gave the original stuffed animals that inspired the Pooh characters to the books' editor, who in turn donated them to the New York Public Library; Marjorie Taylor recounts in her book Imaginary Companions and the Children Who Create Them how many were disappointed at this, and Milne had to explain that he preferred to concentrate on the things that currently interested him.[28] He disliked the idea of Winnie-the-Pooh being commercialised.[29]

Death

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Milne, who lived with myasthenia gravis for some years, died in his sleep on 20 April 1996 in Totnes, Devon, at a hospital, aged 75.[30] Following his death, he was described by one newspaper as a "dedicated atheist".[31]

Family

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Milne had one child, a daughter named Clare,[30] who had cerebral palsy. In adult life, she led several charitable campaigns for the condition, including the Clare Milne Trust.[32] She died in 2012, at the age of 56, of a heart abnormality.[33]

Portrayal

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Milne is portrayed by Will Tilston and Alex Lawther in Goodbye Christopher Robin, a 2017 film which was "inspired by" his relationship with his father.

Bibliography

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  • —— (1974). The Enchanted Places. Eyre Methuen. ISBN 0413-31710-2.
  • —— (1979). The Path Through the Trees. New York: E. P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-17630-6.
  • —— (1982). The Hollow on the Hill. Methuen. ISBN 978-0-413-51270-3.
  • —— (1985). The Windfall. Methuen. ISBN 0-413-58960-9.
  • —— (1988). The Open Garden. Methuen. ISBN 0-413-40800-0.

References

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  1. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 19, 21, 55, 97, 104.
  2. ^ "10 Things You Never Knew about Christopher Robin". Pan Macmillan. Archived from the original on 24 March 2019. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  3. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 17–18.
  4. ^ Milne 2017, p. 233.
  5. ^ "Winnie-the-Pooh and Friends". NY Public Library. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  6. ^ "History of Winnie the Pooh". Just-Pooh.com. Archived from the original on 28 July 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  7. ^ "Winnie". Historica Minutes: The Historica Foundation of Canada. Retrieved 30 May 2008.
  8. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 37–41, 96.
  9. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 22–24.
  10. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 42, 55, 58, 65, 77, 127.
  11. ^ Milne 2017, p. 240.
  12. ^ Milne 1975, p. 92.
  13. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 122, 137, 141, 159.
  14. ^ Milne 1975, p. 97.
  15. ^ "The Real Christopher Robin On Being Immortalized In Literature". HuffPost. 30 January 2015. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  16. ^ a b "The Real Christopher Robin was Bullied because of Winnie the Pooh". The Vintage News. 25 January 2018. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  17. ^ "The True Story Behind Winnie the Pooh and 'Goodbye Christopher Robin'". Time. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  18. ^ "Obituary: Christopher Milne". The Independent. 23 April 1996. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  19. ^ Boyce, Frank Cottrell (23 September 2017). "AA Milne, Christopher Robin and the curse of Winnie-the-Pooh". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  20. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 23, 49, 90–91, 121.
  21. ^ Milne 1979, pp. 3–5.
  22. ^ Milne 1979, pp. 13–21, 104, 116–118.
  23. ^ a b Last, Kevin J. (2023). Remembering Christopher Robin: Escaping Winnie-the-Pooh. Unicorn Publishing Group. ISBN 9781911397649.
  24. ^ Milne 1975, pp. 167–168.
  25. ^ Milne 1979, pp. 107, 129–133, 147.
  26. ^ "Christopher Robin's Dartmouth bookshop to close". 20 September 2011.
  27. ^ Thwaite 1990, pp. 485, 542.
  28. ^ Taylor, Marjorie (1999). Imaginary Companions and the Children who Create Them. Oxford University Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-0195077049.
  29. ^ Heathcote, Graham (31 August 1980). "Christopher Robin turns 60". Kingman Daily Milner. p. 10.
  30. ^ a b Thwaite, Ann. "Obituary: Christopher Milne". The Independent. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  31. ^ Ferguson, Euan (28 April 1996). "Robin's gone, but swallows linger on". The Observer. p. 14. The books live on. But in real life, Toad is dead; Alice is dead; Peter Pan and Wendy are long flown; and now, Christopher Robin, a 'sweet and decent' man who overcame a childhood in which he was haunted by Pooh and taunted by peers, has left without saying his prayers – he was a dedicated atheist – aged 75.
  32. ^ "Supporting disability projects in Devon and Cornwall with grants". The Clare Milne Trust. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  33. ^ Sumner, Stephen. "Beloved children's author's legacy lives on". Sidmouth Herald. Retrieved 17 June 2017.

Sources

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