Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Essay on Nonsense Language in Carrolls Jabberwocky -- Carroll Jabberw
The Importance of Nonsense  address and Sounds in Carrolls Jabberwocky   Wn a bby fst ts 2 kmnikt the wrds snd gibberish.  No one knows what the baby is  difficult to  set up. The poem, Jabberwocky, written by Lewis Carroll, uses meaningless speech to either frustrate or amuse the  guideer. When trying to pronounce the  bunk  nomenclature in the poem, the sounds of the  discussions come out as gibberish. The sounds are the important element of the poem. Often,  great deal like to hear poets read in  wordings they  hindquartersnot understand. A woman  exit a reading by the Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz said she was glad hed read some of his work in Polish because the language sounded exciting, like  one dollar bill hooves over cobblestones.   Sometimes a poem can mean  elflike or nothing, yet the stimulus of words alone wins our attention. Some poets can even invent words themselves. Carroll combines two words (portmanteau) into one word to compose those weird sounds and words in the poe   m. In a  odd  focusing the meaningless words combine with recognizable words to  bring into being a poem almost comprehensible. The language and sounds allow a  commentator to reflect back on the concept of how to communicate Carrolls theme of survial of the fittest, and  in addition the battle between animals, Carroll creates a battle for the reader to understand the language and sounds.   For an animal or reader to survive in Carolls poem it  must kill  in the first place being killed, or understand the language before reaching the end. The setting of such survival is the forest, and Carolls forest is a  legerdemain land where words are foreign to the reader. He left it dead, and with its  signal He went galumphing back, (Carroll, 36) has reference to survival of the fittest. The head becomes the trophy of ...  ...tree, (Carroll, 36) describes the actual  cleverness of using a tree for camouflage. The tree is the Dumdum and covers up the hunters stupidity. Is the Jabberwocky  virt   uous? The forest people could have invented a wise tale  almost the creature for amusement. What the hunter killed was part imagination and part real the way Carrolls poem is.   The sounds and nonsense language are important elements of the poem. At the  aforesaid(prenominal) time, we can use the grammar of the sentence to help us imagine the meanings of the nonsense words. The poem is playful and frustrating at the same time. We might say it plustrate.  Works Cited  Carroll, Lewis. Jabberwocky. The Discovery Of Poetry. 2nd Edition. Ed. Frances Mayes. Orlando Harcourt Brace & Company, 1987.  Hunter, Paul J. Footnote. The Norton Introduction to Poetry. sixth Edition. Chicago Norton, 1996.                     
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