ASSIGNMENT
Name: Maheta
Arati R.
Class: M.A.
SEM: 2
Roll no: 3
Paper: 5
(The Romantic Literature)
Topic: Charles
Lamb as an essayist
Submitted to: Department
of English
(MKBU)
Guided by: M’em
Heenaba Zala
Year:
2014-15
Batch:
2013-15
Words: 2,569
About Charles Lamb
He was born
at 10th February1775.
Died-27th
December1834
Known for1) Essay of Elia
2) Tales from
Shakespeare.
Ø Montaigne, a French writer was
the Father of the essay, and it was Francis Bacon who naturalized the new form
in English.
Ø However there is much difference
between his essays and the essays of his model.
Ø Montaigne’s essays are marked by
his tendency towards self-revaletion,a light-hearted sense of humour,and
tolerance.
Ø But Bacon in his essay is more
an adviser than a companion he is serious, objective and didactic.
Ø It has been said that the essay took
a wrong turn in the hands of Bacon for
two century.
Ø After Bacon the essay in England
went on gravitating towards the original conception held by Montaigne, but it
was only in the hands of the romantic essayist of the early 19th
century that it becomes wholly personal light and lyrical in nature.
Ø From then onwards it has seen no
essential change.
Ø The position of Lamb among these
romantic essayists is the most eminent.
Ø In fact he has been often called
the prince of all the essayist England has so far produced.
Ø Hugh Walker calls him the
essayist par excellence who should be taken as a model.
Ø It is from the essays of Lamb
that we often derive our very definition of the essay and it is with reference
to his essays as criterion of excellence that we evaluate the achievement and
merit of a given essayist.
Ø Familiarity with Lamb as a man enhances
for a reader the charm of his essays. And he is certainly the most charming of all English essays. We may not
find in him the massive genius of Bacon, or the ethereal flights (O altitude) of Thomas Browne, or the brilliant
lucidity of Addison, or the ponderous energy of Dr. Johnson, but none excels him
in the ability to charm the reader or to catch him in the
plexus of his own personality.
His Self-revelation:
What strikes one particularly about Lamb as an
essayist is his persistent readiness to reveal his everything to the reader.
The evolution of the essay from Bacon to Lamb lies primarily in its shift from
1) Objectivity to subjectivity, and
2) From formality to familiarity.
Ø Of all the essayists it is
perhaps Lamb who is the most autobiographic. His own life is for him "such
stuff as essays are made on." He could easily say what Montaigne had said
before him-"I myself am the subject of my book." The change
from objectivity to subjectivity in the English essay was,
by and large, initiated by Abraham Cowley who wrote such essays as the one
entitled.
Ø "Of Myself." Lamb with
other romantic essayists completed this change. Walter Pater observes in Appreciations; "With him,
as with Montaigne, the desire of self-portraiture is below all mere superficial
tendencies, the real motive in 'writing at all, desire closely connected with
intimacy, that modern subjectivity which may be called the Montaignesque
element in literature.
Ø In his each and every essay we
feel the vein of his subjectivity." His essays are, as it were, so many
bits of autobiography by piecing which together we can arrive at a pretty
authentic picture of his life, both external and internal.
Ø It is really impossible to think
of an essayist who is more personal than Lamb. His essays reveal him fully-in
all his whims, prejudices, past associations, and experiences. "Night
Fears" shows us Lamb as a timid, superstitious boy.
Ø "Christ's Hospital"
reveals his unpalatable experiences as a schoolboy. We are introduced to the
various members of his family in numerous essays like "My Relations'
"The Old Benchers of the Inner Temple," and "Poor
Relations."
Ø We read of the days of his
adolescence in "Mackery End in Hertfordshire." His tenderness towards
his sister Mary is revealed by "Mrs. Battle's Opinions on Whist."
Ø His professional life is
recalled in "The South-Sea House" and "The, Superannuated
Man." His sentimental memories full of pathos find expression in
"Dream Children."
Ø His prejudices come to the fore
in "Imperfect Sympathies" and "The Confessions of a
Drunkard."
Ø His gourmandize finds a humors utterance
in "A Dissertation upon Roast Pig," "Grace before Meat,"
and elsewhere. What else is left then? Very little, except an indulgence in
self-pity at the stark tragedy of his life.
Ø Nowhere does he seem to be
shedding tears at the fits of madness to which his sister Mary Bridget of the
essays) was often subject and in one of which she knifed his mother to death.
Ø The frustration of his erotic
career (Lamb remained in a state of lifelong bachelorhood imposed by himself.
To enable him to nurse his demented sister), however, is touched upon here and
there.
Ø In "Dream Children,"
for instance, his unfruitful attachment with Ann Simmons is referred
to. She got married and her children had to "call Bartram father."
Ø Lamb is engaged in a reverie
about "his children" who would have possibly been born had he been
married to Alice W-n (Ann Simmons). When the reverie is gone this is what he
finds: "...and immediately awaking, I found myself quietly seated in my
bachelor arm-chair where I had fallen asleep, with the faithful Bridget [his
sister Mary] unchanged by my side...but John L (his brother John Lamb) was gone
for ever." How touching!
Ø Lamb's excessive occupation with
himself may lead one to assume that he is too selfish or. Egocentric, or that
he is vulgar or inartistic. Far from that, Egotism with Lamb sheds its usual
offensive accoutrements. The following specific points may be noted in
this connation:
Ø
His egotism is free from vulgarity. Well does
Compton-Rickett observe: "There is no touch of vulgarity in these
intimacies; for all their frank unreserved we feel the delicate refinement of
the man's spiritual nature. Lamb omits no essential, he does not sentimentalize,
and does not brutalise his memories. He poetises them, preserving them for us
in art that can differentiate between genuine reality and crude realism."
Ø
His artistic sense of discrimination-selection and
rejection-has also to be taken into account. David Daiches maintains: "The
writer's own character is always there, flaunted before the reader, but it is
carefully prepared and controlled before it is exhibited."
Ø (iii)
Though Lamb is an egotist yet he is not self-assertive. He talks about himself
not because he thinks himself to be
important
but because he thinks himself to be the only object he knows intimately. Thus
his egotism is born of a sense of humility rather than hauteur. Samuel C. Chew
observes: "Like the entire romantic he is self-revelatory, but there
is nothing in him of the 'egotistical-sublime.' Experience had made him too
clear-sighted to take any individual, least of all himself, too seriously. The
admissions of his own weaknesses, follies, and prejudices are so many humorous
warnings to his readers.
v The Note of Familiarity:
Ø Lamb's contribution to
the English essay also lies in his changing the general tone from
formality to familiarity. This change was to be accepted by all the essayists
to follow.
Ø "Never", says Compton-Rickett
"was any man more intimate in print than he. He has made
of chatter a fine art."
Ø Lamb disarms the reader at once
with his button holding familiarity.
Ø He plays with him in a puckish
manner, no doubt, but he is always ready to take him into confidence and to
exchange heart-beats with him.
Ø In the essays of the writers before him we are
aware of a well-marked distance between the writer and ourselves. Bacon and
Addison perch themselves, as it were, on a pedestal, and cast pearls before the
readers standing below.
Ø In Cowley, the distance between the reader and
writer narrows down-but it is there still. It was left for Lamb to abolish this
distance altogether.
Ø He often addresses the reader
("dear reader") as if he were addressing a bosom friend. He makes
nonsense of the proverbial English insularity and "talks" to the
readers as "a friend and man" (as Thackeray said he did in his
novels). This note of intimacy is quite pleasing, for Lamb is the best of
friends.
v No Didacticism:
Ø He is a friend, and not a
teacher. Lamb shed once and for all the didactic approach which characterizes
the work of most essayists before him. Bacon called his essays "counsels
civil and moral.
Ø ." His didacticism is too
palpable to need a comment. Cowley was somewhat less didactic, but early in the
eighteenth century Steele and Addison-the founders of the periodical essay-set
in their papers the moralistic, mentor-like tone for all the periodical
essayists to come.
Ø Even such "a rake among
scholars and a scholar among rakes" as Steele arrogated to himself the air
of a teacher and reformer. This didactic tendency reached almost its
culmination in Dr. Johnson who in the Idler and Rambler papers
gave ponderous sermons rather than what may be called essays.
Ø Lamb is too modest to pretend to proffer moral
counsels. He never argues, dictates, or coerces. We do not find any
"philosophy of life" in his essays, though there are some personal
views and opinions flung about here and there not for examination and adoption,
but just to serve as so many ventilators to let us have a peep into his mind.
"Lamb", says Cazamian, "is not a moralist nor a psychologist,
his object is not research, analysis, or confession; he is, above all, an
artist.
Ø He has no aim save the reader's pleasure, and
his own." But though Lamb is not a downright pedagogue, he is yet full of
sound wisdom which he hides under a cloak of frivolity and tolerant good
nature.
Ø He sometimes looks like the Fool
in King Lear who’s
weird and funny words are impregnated with a hard core of surprising sanity. As
a critic avers, "though Lamb frequently donned the cap and bells, he was
more than a jester; even his jokes had kernels of wisdom."
Ø In his "Character of the Late Elia"
in which he himself gives a character-sketch of the supposedly dead Elia, he
truly observes: "He would interrupt the gravest discussion with some light
jest; and yet, perhaps not quite irrelevant in ears that could understand
it."
v The Rambling Nature of His Essays and His Lightness of Touch:
Ø The rambling nature of his essays
and his lightness of touch are some other distinguishing features of Lamb as an
essayist.
Ø He never bothers about keeping to the point.
Too often do we find him flying off at a tangent and ending at a point which we
could never have foreseen?
Ø Every road with him seems to lead to the
world's end. We often reproach Bacon for the "dispersed" nature of
his "meditations", but Lamb beats everybody in his monstrous
discursiveness.
Ø To consider some examples, first take up his
essay "The Old and the New School-master."
Ø In this essay which apparently is written for
comparing the old and new schoolmaster, the first two pages or thereabouts
contain a very humorous and exaggerated description of the author's own
ignorance.
Ø Now, we may ask, what has Lamb's
ignorance to do with the subject in hand? Then, the greater part of the essay
"Oxford in the Vacation" is devoted to the description of his friend
Dyer. Lamb's essays are seldom artistic, well-patterned wholes.
Ø They have no beginning, middle and end. Lamb
himself described his essays as "a sort of unlicked incondite
things." However, what these essays lose in artistic design they gain in
the touch of spontaneity. This is what lends them what is called "the
lyrical quality."
v
Lamb's Humors, Pathos, and Humanity:
Ø
Lamb's humour, humanity, and the sense of pathos
are all his own; and it is mainly these qualities which differentiate his
essays from those of his contemporaries. His essays are rich alike in wit,
humour, and fun.
Ø
Hall ward and Hill observe in the Introduction to
their edition of the Essays of Elia: "The
terms Wit. Humour and Fun are often confused but they are really different in
meaning.
Ø
The first is
based on intellect, the second on insight and sympathy, the third on vigor and
freshness of mind and body. Lamb's writings show all the three qualities, but
what most distinguishes him is Humour, for his sympathy is ever strong and
active."
Ø
Humour in
Lamb's essays constitutes very like an atmosphere "with linked sweetness
long drawn out."
Ø
Its Protean shapes range from frivolous puns,
impish attempts at mystification, grotesque buffoonery, and Rabelaisian
verbosity (see, for example, the description of a "poor relation") to
the subtlest ironical stroke which pierces down to the very heart of life. J.
B. Priestley observes in English
Humour: "English humour at its deepest and tenders seem in him
[Lamb] incarnate. He did not merely create it, he lived in it.
Ø
His humour is not an idle thing, but the white
flower, plucked from a most dangerous nettle."
Ø
What particularly distinguishes Lamb's humour is
its close alliance with pathos. While laughing he is always aware of the
tragedy of life-not only his life, but life in general.
Ø
That is why he often laughs through his tears.
Witness his treatment of the hard life of chimney sweepers and Christ's
Hospital boys. The descriptions are touching enough, but Lamb's treatment
provides us with a humorous medium of perception rich in prismatic effects,
which bathes the tragedy of actual life in the iridescence of mellow comedy.
Ø
The total
effect is very complex, and strikes our sensibility in a bizarre way, puzzling
us as to what is comic and what is tragic.
v
Style:
Ø
A word, lastly, about Lamb's peculiar style which
is all his own and yet not his,
as he is a tremendous borrower.
Ø
He was
extremely influenced by some "old-world" writers like Fuller and Sir
Thomas Browne.
Ø
It is natural, then, that his style is archaic. His
sentences are long and rambling, after the seventeenth-century fashion.
Ø
He uses
words many of which are obsolescent, if not obsolete. But though he
"struts in borrowed plumes", these "borrowed plumes" seem
to be all his own.
Ø
Well does a critic say: "The blossoms are
culled from other men's gardens, but their blending is all Lamb's own?"
Ø
Passing through
Lamb's imagination they become something fresh and individual. His style is a
mixture certainly of many styles, but a chemical not a mechanical
mixture."
Ø
His inspiration from old writers gives his style a
romantic coloring which is certainly intensified by his vigorous imagination.
Ø
Very like
Wordsworth he throws a fanciful veil on the common objects of life and converts
them into interesting and "romantic" shapes.
Ø
His peculiar
style is thus an asset in the process of "romanticizing" everyday
affairs and objects which otherwise would strike one with a strong feeling of
ennui.
Ø
He is
certainly a romantic essayist. What is more, he is a poet.
2)
some thoughts of charles Lammb
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