Friday 1 November 2013

Edgar Allen Poe, The Raven read by Christopher Lee

The poem that  inspired this blog.

An amazing version.


Lets sail away in a beautiful pea-green boat...


Edward Lear (1812 – 1888).

Lear was a writer, artist and the son of a stockbroker, well known for writing ‘nonsense’ poems which he wrote to explore the excitement of the world around us to discover ‘undreamt-of lands and wonders not only unseen but scarcely even imagined’ The Owl and the Pussycat is one such poem.

Lear gives a human quality to the animals in this poem and he writes about an owl and a pussycat who go to sea in a beautiful ‘pea green boat’ This is a impossible scenario especially when he goes on to say that they took some ‘honey, and plenty of money’ again lending very human qualities and characteristics to these two animals.
 It would be impossible to find an owl and a cat together in the first place and to have them sailing to sea makes it even more improbable.

There is a slight hint of a tongue in cheek humour to have imagined a strange sight like this. The cat that he writes about could have been his own cat ‘Foss’ on which he based this poem.

The strangeness continues when we read that ‘they took some honey, and plenty of money, wrapped up in a five pound note, and the owl manages to play a guitar and sing to the cat while looking up at the stars

 ‘What a beautiful Pussy you are!’

It is quite a sweet and romantic scenario if it wasn't so impossible in the real world.

The cat is charmed by the elegant ‘fowl’ and suggests that they get married because they have waited too long. There is just one problem, there is no ring! It seems strange for the cat who signifies the female to propose to the owl who is the male equivalent but it is showing the dominance of the woman to take the first step. Now they travel to a land for a year or so where a ‘bong-tree’ grows to find a pig who will have a ring on his nose. Again the fairy tale quality of this poem shows through to reveal a child like quality in Lear’s nature to have imagined such a situation.

The pig sells them the ring for a shilling and they set off to be married by none other than a turkey who lives on a hill. They eat mince and quince using a ‘runcible’ spoon and then walking hand in hand on the edge of the sand they dance by the light of the moon. The word ‘runcible’ does not exist in the English language and was coined for this poem adding to it’s nonsensical theme.

There might be an underlying meaning to the words in this poem where the animal characters might actually represent real people that Lear knew in his life. Or it could have been his interest in animals that made him write this poem. Some other poems include ‘The Pobble’s Toes’ and ‘The Jumblies’ and the fairytale quality of these poems was enjoyed and appreciated by children. Lear must have enjoyed cultivating this creative side of his character for their benefit.
The emphasis on the aesthetics of language and the use of techniques such as repetition, meter and rhyme are what are commonly used to distinguish English poetry from English prose. Poems often make heavy use of imagery and word association to quickly convey emotions.  It is lyrical and easy to uderstand, but the word 'runcible' and ‘Bong-tree’ does not exist in the English language and were coined for this poem adding to it's nonsensical theme. One theme of poem “The Owl and the Pussy Cat” is love/marriage.

Poetic form
This poem is Rhyme verse Forms.
Stanza I: a-b-c-b-c-d-c-d-d-d-d
Stanza II: a-b-c-b-d-e-c-e-e-e
Stanza III: a-b-c-b-d-e-f-e-e-e

 
Internal rhyme
·         They took some honey, and plenty of money
·         Pussy said to the owl, you elegant fowl
·         O let us be married! Too long we have tarried
·         They sailed away, for a year and a day
·         And there in a wood a piggy-wig stood
·         They dined on mince, and slices of quince

Approximate / Half-rhyme
·         In a beautiful pea-green boat
Wrapped up in a five pound note
·         How charmingly sweet you sing
But what shall we do for a ring
·         The owl looked up to the stars above
O lovely Pussy, O Pussy, my love


·         To the land where the Bong-tree grows
With a ring at the end of his nose
·         Said the Piggy “I will”
By the Turkey who lives on the hill

The Owl and the Pussycat Rhyme