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Unit 7: Charles Lamb-Dream Children: Critical Analysis


             (iv) The style of Lamb is                                                             Notes
                 (a) Gentle                          (b) Old-fashioned
                 (c) both (a) and (b)                (d) None of these

          7.6 Summary

          •   In Lamb’s writing wit, humour and fun are interwoven and it is humour which is most
              notable for its extreme sensitiveness to the true proportion of things. Lamb often brings out
              the two sides of a fact and causes laughter at our own previous misconceptions. Therefore it
              borders on the painful realization. Thus his humour is very nearly allied to pathos. They are
              different facts of the same gem.
          •   In his essay Dream Children: A Reverie Lamb talks of personal sorrows and joys. He gives
              expressions to his unfulfilled longings and desires. He readily enters into the world of
              fantasy and pops up stories in front of his dream children. He relates his childhood days, of
              Mrs. Field, his grandmother and John Lamb, his brother. He describes how fun he had at the
              great house and orchard in Norfolk. Of his relations he gives us full and living pictures – his
              brother John is James Elia of My Relations, but here is John L-, so handsome and spirited
              youth, and a ‘king’. John was brave, handsome and won admiration from everybody Charles’
              grandmother Mrs. Field is the other living picture. She was a good natured and religions –
              minded lady of respectable personality. Narrator’s sweet heart Alice Winterton is the other
              shadowed reality. The Dream Children, Alice and John are mere bubbles of fancy. Thus
              Lamb’s nostalgic memory transports us back to those good old days of great grandmother
              Field. But even in those romantic nostalgia the hard realities of life does not miss our eyes.
              Death, separation and suffering inject us deep-rooted pathos in our heart. Whereas Mrs.
              Field died of cancer, John Lamb died in early age. Ann Simmons has been a tale of unrequited
              love story of Charles Lamb. Notably the children are millions of ages distant of oblivion and
              Charles is not a married man but a bachelor having a reverie.
          •   In his actual life Lamb courted Ann Simmons but could not marry her, he wanted to have
              children but could not have any. Thus he strikes a very pathetic note towards the end of his
              essay when he puts the following word into the months of his imaginary children, “we are
              not of Alice, nor of thee, nor are we children at all … We are nothing, less than nothing,
              dreams. We are only what might have been”. Alice is here no other that Ann Simmons the
              girl Lamb wanted to marry, but failed to marry her. In fact, the subtitle of the essay – ‘A
              Reverie’ which literally means a daydream or a fantasy – prepares us for the pathos of the
              return to reality although the essay begins on a deceptively realistic note.
          •   Although Dream Children begins on a merry note, the dark side of life soon forces itself
              upon Lamb’s attention and the comic attitude gives way to melancholy at the end of the
              essay. Throughout the essay Lamb presents his children in such a way that we never guess
              that they are merely figments of his imagination – their movements, their reactions, their
              expressions are all realistic. It is only at the end of the essay that we realize that the entire
              episode with his children is a daydream. We are awakening by a painful realization of the
              facts.
          •   Lamb’s humour was no surface play, but the flower plucked from the nettle of peril and awe.
              In fact, Lamb’s humour and pathos take different shapes in different essays. Sometimes it is
              due to his own unfulfilled desires, sometimes it is due to the ill-fortunes of his relatives and
              friends and on some other occasions it is due to his frustration in love etc. If his Poor
              Relations begin humorously of a male and female poor relation, he later gives us a few
              pathetic examples of poor relations that had to suffer on account of poverty. Again in his The
              Praise of Chimney Sweepers Lamb sways between humour and pathos while describing the



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