Consider
Charles Lamb as a personal essayist with reference to ‘The Superannuated Man’
and ‘Dream Children: A Reverie’. /How does Charles Lamb successfully transform
episodes of personal life into literary pieces of universal interest in his
essays?
Both in its matter and
form an essay must be a clear and intimate expression of the writer, his likes
and dislikes as well all the traits of his identity and individuality. That is
the principle criteria of an essay and this is eminently true in case of Montaigne,
the father of the essay and Charles Lamb, one of the greatest English essayists
as well. The essays of Charles lamb are very personal that the English
literature ever produced. They give us a panoramic view or idea of Lamb, the
man and his character, his time and his world. Charles Lamb was a product of
the romantic age and hence, his essays bear the stamp of subjectivity, Lamb
himself claimed his essays to be nothing but a heart to heart talk with his
readers and admirers. That is why his essays are constantly autobiographical
having personal note in each and every line. The personal ‘I’ is surely
prominent everywhere which gave his Essays
of Elia a special charm and attention of almost every pages of almost all
his essays.
Essays
of Elia like his poem are not merely a short analysis of
subject or a mere epitome. They have rather picturised the writer’s own mind. “No essayist is more egotistical than Lamb,”
said Ainger, “but no egotist can be so
artless and yet so artful, so tearful and yet mirthful, so pedantic and yet so
human.” Lamb’s egotism is not his vanity, as a matter of fact; there is no
sign of vanity in his essays. He simply talked of what he knew best.......................................................................................
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.