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Dream Children by Charles Lamb Summary
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Charles Lamb, English essayist and critic, was born in London in 1775. He is best known for his Essays of Elia. He studied at Christ’s Hospital where he formed a lifelong friendship with Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In 1792 Lamb joined as a clerk at East India House (the headquarters of the East India Company) and worked there until retirement in 1825. In 1796 Lamb’s sister Mary killed their mother in a fit of madness. Lamb reacted with courage and loyalty and took up the responsibility of looking after Mary.We can say that Lamb’s greatest achievements were his commendable letters and the essays that he wrote under the pseudonym Elia for London Magazine, which was founded in 1820. His style is notable as it is informal and personal. The main function of this essay was to “create” and delineate the persona of Elia. The essays bring out, with humour and sometimes with pathos, old acquaintances of Lamb. They also recall scenes from childhood and from later life, and they indulge the author’s sense of playfulness and fancy. Lamb’s first Elia essays were published separately in 1823; a second series appeared,as The Last Essays of Elia, in 1833.
Children are always curious to know about the past of their elders. They want to know how their elders were when they were children. Lamb’s children, Alice and John had the curiosity to know about their great grandmother Mrs. Field who had lived in Norfolk.
They gather around Charles Lamb with this desire and he
begins to tell them that their great-grandmother lived in a very spacious house. On a chimney piece in the house the story of the children in the wood was carved in marble. According to this story the children were killed by their uncle as he was greedy and wanted possession of the wealth these children had inherited from their parents. It was believed that the original incident was also connected with the same house. He told the children that their great grandmother did not own the mansion. She was only entrusted the duty of taking care of the mansion. She was very pious and religious minded lady. She was loved and respected by everyone. After her death the house started falling apart and all its ornaments and statues were taken away by the owner to his new house where it looked out of place. When she died, lots of people had come in for her funeral as she was a very popular lady. In her youth she had a tall, graceful and upright figure and used to be good dancer. At this Alice instinctively made a movement with her foot as if to dance. Mrs. Field, their great grandmother could not continue dancing as she was taken ill with cancer. Although it made her body weak it never weakened her spirit.