LAMB AS AN ESSAYIST
Charles Lamb is entitled to a place as
an essayist just after Montaigne, Steel and Addison.
He unites many of the characteristics of each of these writers – refined and
exquisite humor, a genuine and heart-touching pathos and his own self in it.
His thoughts and meanings are often covered in simple language. Each of his
sentences is full of a number of meanings. The color of his essays is taken
from his personal life. It is inseparable from the circumstances in which it
came into being. His essays are inspired by a influence of the lively
remembrance of the past. In the essays, these events are narrated in form of a
story with a running comment on them. He adds the element of sorrow to them,
which gives him a special place in literary history.
In his own world, the connection with
Hertford and Grandmother Mrs. Field is seen. She was the house-keeper at
Blakesware, country-house. In “Dream Children”, this house is described with
its empty rooms, gardens, fish-pond, etc. Here we find the description of the
scenery around him. It is the account of his dream of the children he never
had. This marks the presence of pathetic feelings in the essays of Lamb.
In the delightful “Essays of Elia”,
Lamb is an egoist like Montaigne. What he writes here, is drawn from himself,
his experiences, reminiscences, likes, dislikes and prejudices. In the essay
“Poor Relations”, he depicts his bias of hating the poor relative, especially
the female poor relative. This view he had made from his personal life. Even
the essay “Convalescent”, shows his dislike of the busy, routine and mechanical
life in the city. He prefers to remain sick as compared to an ordinary man.
Lamb was a master of humor and pathos,
both of which are blended together in his essays, as they did in his life. This
is his unique style, which we rarely find in any other literary work of English
literature. Lamb himself says, “I do not know how, upon a subject which I began
with, treating half-seriously, I should have fallen upon a racital so eminently
painful”. His sympathy is ever strong and active. In “Poor Relations”, the opening
is full of wit but we are more inclined to cry than to laugh when we read the
story. The stories of Mr. Billet, of Lamb’s school mate W-, etc. all portray
the mixing of humor with pathos. The statement of Mr. Billet to Lamb’s aunt
“Woman, you are superannuated” and his death is the shining example of it.
Lamb’s habit of introducing
reminiscences and anecdotes in his essays is clearly seen here. Poor W- we
learn, was Lamb’s school fellow at Christ’s Church. As for Mr. Billet, he was a
relative of his father. Recollections of his brother John also appear in the
essay. Lamb had a genius for reminiscences. Thus, this essay has an
autobiographical character. Lamb is truly a ‘visualizer of memories’.
wonderfull
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