Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Why Does Tom Bombadil Sing Nonsense?

 From The New Albion:

We’ve grown to love nonsense poetry in our house. Lewis Caroll, Ogden Nash, and plenty of Edward Lear. Nonsense is a wonderful place to introduce poetry to children; not because it is silly, but because good nonsense poetry is about sheer joy in language, in the words themselves, their jump and jangle. This is true of all poetry of course—poetry is language under pressure. But it is particularly true of nonsense poetry. A poorly chosen phrase can make a poem fall flat, but if it’s a nonsense poem it falls even flatter. Lewis Caroll’s “The Walrus and the Carpenter” shouldn’t work, and yet it does, because Carroll brings all these absurd, dissonant words into an accord that, somehow, he discerned in the ether.

I will confess that, sometimes (and only sometimes, and only very, very briefly) in our snatches of after dinner nonsense, I feel like one of Plato’s imagined philosopher-kings. In Plato’s Republic, the philosopher-kings are afforded leisure—scholē in the Greek, the root for “school” and “scholar”, if you can believe it. Leisure isn’t idleness. Rather, it’s the time and space to contemplate, to develop wisdom, and to consider things in themselves. Leisure is a date with Reality, a chance to be romanced by Lady Wisdom.

In fact, more than feeling like a philosopher-king, I feel… Bombadilish. (Read more.)
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