LITERARY ODDITIES
Vengrai Parthasarathy
Proper words in proper places’ was how Jonathan Swift defined style’ in literature. That is something not hard to find. There are countless illustrations if one only looks out for them in classics by master-writers. On the other hand, some hold the opinion that it should suffice, if, depending on the effect that is sought, the words find their proper slots.
Tristram Shandy is a capricious novel by Laurence Sterne. It sets out in conversational style to tell the life story of the narrator. He tells a good deal about his not-so-normal family. In fact it is only in the third of the ten volumes that his conception is even mentioned. His association of ideas’ style is absorbing and such that in a sense he even gets to speak with the reader in asides. As he rambles on and on, he finds that he has no time to live his own life. So he quickly writes the ‘finis’ to the novel, duping its readers by a’ cock and bull story’, as a reviewer termed it. This unique novel has survived in spite of the prediction of Dr. Samuel Johnson that “nothing odd will do long”. Some are of the opinion that Tristram Shandy is the fore runner of stream of consciousness’ fiction.
GADSBY, is a novel by Ernest Wright, having fifty thousand words and none of them had the letter e’ in them. One would think it impossible to write even a paragraph without that frequently-used vowel which has such an ubiquitous presence in every kind of writing. One of many reasons adduced for this is that when we use words in the past tense, we end the word, mostly with ‘ed’. It is said that he kept that letter e’ in his typewriter tamped down to ensure that he did not even accidentally use it. An intrigued lady used an oxymoron of an epithet calling the author a’ genuine fake’
In a widely quoted poem he did not use the concluding dot or period sign and this omission was examined in depth as of special significance! To conclude: was it just a novelty or out of humility that he adopted this style? Anyway, as someone said, even he had to use capitals when referring to God’!