from the hospital and its implied threat of death and disease.
The immediate space of the classroom is evoked by Joan and by Susan B. with their respective references to âin our rowâ and âYour seat is empty.â
It should be noted, in addition, that some children are more preoccupied generally by the outdoors (âwe went skiingâ) while some are more concerned with interior spaces (the classroom, row or seat; the hospital). There is also, besides the distancing âover there,â a general, perhaps anxious, identification of the hospital with the direction âoutâ (Billy T.âs âWhen will you be out?â) in contrast to the reassuring identification of the school with âinâ and âback inâ (Mary K.).
Characters and States of Mind
The teacher, though carefully controlling the form and general content of the letters, seems to have allowed the students to follow their own desires as to specific content and style, perhaps within certain limits. This being the case, the childrenâs choices of subject matter, along with their treatment of it, may give us clues as to their different characters and temperaments.
Some children indicate a high degree of self-sufficiency, entertaining themselves (outdoor play), while others reveal some dependence on âpackagedâ or âready-madeâ entertainment (two instances of trips to the movies). Some reveal more inclination toward activity in general, whether physical or cultural (outdoor play, movies), while others are more concerned with material acquisition (Christmas presents, shopping trips); and finally, a majority of the children focus on outer-directed or interactive activities of one kind or another (play, shopping), while a small percentage seem preoccupied by certain ideas or mental states (you are gone, your seat is empty, âI just canât thinkâ).
Some show an inclination toward an interactive social world outside the family (âDiane T. and Iâ), while others are oriented more toward a domestic or familial world (shopping with Mother). Including siblings in accounts of the Christmas holiday (âMy sister got a doll carriage. My brother got a footballâ) may reveal feelings of insecurity and a need to identify with the large family unit.
Some children display boldness (âIâd yank you out of bedâ); or a quest for adventure (âThis year I went on a higher part than I used toâ); while others dwell on absence and lack (âI just canât thinkâ; and the refrain of âI miss youâ and âWe miss youâ). Some strike a sad note (Carolâs âlonesomeâ; Sallyâs âYour seat is emptyâ); or hint at a feeling of failure and/or defeat (fallen snowman, bent and broken branches); or of jealousy/envy/deprivation (another child received the box of candy). Some are peremptory in their tone (the girlsâ use of the imperative) and some are loving (Janetâs obvious fondness for her pets). Some of the children are more sensitive to difficulty and loneliness than others. But all the children are capable of expressing friendly feelings toward a classmate in an unfortunate situation, at least when they are assigned to do so.
Some of the children display contradictory traits or inner conflict, as noted in the case of Maureen above. Another case is that of Arlene: although she is eminently practical, and seems sincere in her choice of nursing as a profession, she may betray a degree of suppressed romanticism (and thus an attraction toward a less practical vocation) in her highly unusual alteration of her own name from the more down-to-earth âArleneâ to the prettier and more fanciful âArilene.â
Although the dominant mood expressed by the letters appears to be positive and optimistic, some of the childrenâs choices of subject matter and style betray a certain fear or uneasiness, or an awareness
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