[Nonsense Books by Edward Lear]@TWC D-Link bookNonsense Books INTRODUCTION 8/19
The parent of modern nonsense-writers, he is distinguished from all his followers and imitators by the superior consistency with which he has adhered to his aim,--that of amusing his readers by fantastic absurdities, as void of vulgarity or cynicism as they are incapable of being made to harbor any symbolical meaning.
He "never deviates into sense;" but those who appreciate him never feel the need of such deviation. He has a genius for coining absurd names and words, which, even when they are suggested by the exigencies of his metre, have a ludicrous appropriateness to the matter in hand.
His verse is, with the exception of a certain number of cockney rhymes, wonderfully flowing and even melodious--or, as he would say, _meloobious_--while to all these qualifications for his task must finally be added the happy gift of pictorial expression, enabling him to double, nay, often to quadruple, the laughable effect of his text by an inexhaustible profusion of the quaintest designs.
Generally speaking, these designs are, as it were, an idealization of the efforts of a clever child; but now and then--as in the case of the nonsense-botany--Mr.Lear reminds us what a genuine and graceful artist he really is.
The advantage to a humorist of being able to illustrate his own text has been shown in the case of Thackeray and Mr.W.S.Gilbert, to mention two familiar examples; but in no other instance of such a combination have we discovered such geniality as is to be found in the nonsense-pictures of Mr.Lear.We have spoken above of the melodiousness of Mr.Lear's verses, a quality which renders them excellently suitable for musical setting, and which has not escaped the notice of the author himself.
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