An essay is something the writer writes himself. According
to Benson, since the very birth of the essay as a genre in the hands of
Montaigne, the essay has been a comfortable mixture of the personal and the
subjective, and in fact has been the most personal of all genres. The personal
touch breathes life and charm into the essay through the personality of the
essayist. The charm is evident because the essay is something the writer writes
himself where he lays bare his heart in a most confidential manner. An essay
can be on a variety of subjects but it should above all exhibit an interest in
life. It should reflect the pleasing personality of the author and also change
the outlook of the reader. Thus Benson writes, Montaigne, the father of the
essay in literature, while writing his essays is concerned with the 'man
Montaigne'. Thus the essay is a reverie for the essayist - it is a loose
sequence of thoughts, irregular in nature which dwells on the moment and allows
the writer to dwell within and correspond to himself. Montaigne employed such a
technique wonderfully while he wrote his essays, presenting a certain mood of
the mind, and infusing charm by being intimate and personal.
An essay is something the essayist does by himself. For the
essay we may go back to Cicero or Plato. Cicero dealt with abstract topics with
a romantic background. Plato discussed speculative and ethical problems of life
and tried to find a philosophical interest. The English temperament lacks the
charm of Montaigne. They are too prejudiced, secretive, closely guarded about
their privacy. But Lord Brougham proved that one can maintain privacy at the
same time display oneself.
Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici or Urn Burial contained
essays of elaborate rhetorical style. Addison in The Spectator dealt with
delicate humour. Charles Lamb dealt with the romantic and homely. De Quincy
wrote impassioned autobiography while Pater used the essay for exquisite
artistic sensation. In all these writings the common strain is the personal
element, the essay reflects the personality of the author.
An essayist is not a poet. An essayist deals to some extent
with humour. But humour is alien to poetry which is more of a sacred and solemn
mood. The poet is emotional, reverential, excitable, in search of the sublime
and the uplifted. He wants to transcend the mundane petty daily frets, the
discordant, undignified elements of life. The similarity of the essayist with
the poet is that an essayist can also make an effort to kindle emotion. But an
essayist uses the commonest materials of life and transforms simple experiences
with a fairy tale delicacy and romantic glow. Behind all forms of art whether,
whether poetry or prose lies the principle of wonder, of arrested attention. It
need not only be the sense of beauty, but also the sense of fitness,
strangeness, completeness, effective effort. The amazement a savage feels on
seeing a civilized city is not the sense of beauty but the sense of force,
mysterious resources, incredible products, unintelligible things. He also sees
the grotesque, absurd, amusing and jocose. The essayist deals with these basic
emotions. He filters out the salient matters from these instinctive emotions
and records them in impressive language.
So an essayist is a spectator of life. As catalogued in
Browning's poem "how It Strikes A Contemporary" the essayist's
material is watching the cobbler at trade, the man who slices lemon, the
coffee-roaster's brazier, the books on stalls, the bold-print posters on the
wall, a man beating his horse or cursing a woman and so on. The essayist
selects his setting, maybe a street, countryside or picture gallery. But once
he selects he has to get into the heart of it.
The essayist must have largeness of mind. He cannot simply
indulge in his activity whether of a politician or a thief with the sole
objective of making profit. He cannot be prejudiced in his favours, i.e. he
should not hate his opponents and favour his friends. If he condemns, despises,
disapproves he loses sympathy. He must have an all encompassing mind to enjoy
all he thinks worth recording, and not be narrow minded. Close jacketed persons
like a banker, social reformer, forensic pleader, fanatic, crank or puritan
cannot be an essayist. The essayist has to be broadminded but not moral. He
must be tolerant, he must discern quality, he must be concerned with the
general picture of life in connection with setting and people, not aims and
objectives.
The charm of the essayist lies in translating a sense of
good humour, graciousness, reasonable nature and in the effort to establish a
pleasant friendship with the reader. One does not read the essay for
information or definition, but to find an acceptable solution to a mass of
entangled problems which arise in our daily lives and in our relationships with
people. The essayist would take up some problem of daily life and delve into it
to find out reasons for our fitful actions, reasons for our attraction or
repulsion towards people and try to suggest a theory for it. Reading an essay a
reader should be compelled to confess that he had thought in the same vein but
had never discerned the connection. The essayist must realize that most
people's convictions are not a result of reason but a mass of jumbled up
associations, traditions, half understood phrases, loyalties, whims etc.
The essayist must consider human weakness, not human
strength. But while accepting human weakness he must try to infuse flashes of
idealism in them. He should keep in mind that human mind in spite of weakness
is capable of idealism, passionate visions, irresponsible humour which may
shoot from dull cloudy minds. The task of the essayist is to make the reader
realize his self worth, that every human mind is capable of getting hold of
something big and remote which however may not always be clear in our minds.
Human nature is indecisive, it vacillates. The confessed aim of the essayist is
to make the reader see that every person has a part to play in life, they have
an interest to take in life, that life is a game full of outlets and pulsing
channels and life is not only meant for millionaires or politicians.
The essayist therefore ultimately teaches that life is not
just about success but in fullness. Success may blur our vision of life and
make a person full of self importance. What matters is how much a person can
give than take.
The similarity between an essayist and a poet is that both
perceive the greatness of life. But the essayist works with humbler material.
The essayist is not a romancer because he does not deal with fancy but homely
material. The essayist has to detect the sublimity of life. Life is not always
exciting, not always expectant of something about to happen. There are
monotonous gaps in between. An essayist's task is to bring out something rich
and strange out of those monotonous gaps.
Thus an Essay as a genre cannot be strictly classified too.
It is like an organ prelude that can be moderated, modulated and coloured. It
is to some extent criticism of life too. It is a learning process that teaches
not to condemn the negative but perceive the fullness of life and encompass all
experience. An essayist is an interpreter of life. He is within a short compass
a combination of the historian, philosopher, poet, novelist. He observes and
analyses life, colours it with his fancy, enjoys the charm and quality of
simple things and endeavours to make others lead a better life.
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