The attentive reader will notice that in this panel, as in the last two
panels, we have been undergoing what specialists in this sort of thing
call a Transition. Beginning with an ur-schoolroom redolent of the worst
Boschian horrors Christ Church has on tap, we shifted into a
theatrical backdrop of sorts, then flitted through a hasty visual
flashback of various preceding Fits and now find ourselves in a pastoral
sort of setting, evocative of an English garden party frequented by
exactly the sort of Carrollian riffraff one always finds lurking about
at such affairs.
Gosh! This Transformation business is mickle
hard to pull off, it’s certainly easier for the likes of poets such as
Lewis Carroll to shift quarters if they wish, it’s merely a question of
them upending a spare thesaurus and rummaging about with a few
adjectives and suitable prepositions. For us picture-wallahs, it’s a
whole different story! The extras have to be chosen and then costumed,
the appropriate locales have to be researched and then reproduced at
considerable expense, then there’s lighting and makeup, why, the
catering alone is an logistical boojum!
In this case, we’ve arranged for some currently unemployed peons from Alice in Wonderland
to serve drinks and snacks whilst the Fellowship of the Snark mill
around in period costumes with various Protosurrealist floozies glued to
their arms, all of ‘em muttering rhubarb-rhubarb-custard-custard to give it all that air of Carrollian verisimilitude.
Of
course, in the Good Old Days they didn’t call it a Transition, it was a
Metamorphosis back then and it was all the rage in pre-Christian
circles. You couldn’t go outside for the morning paper without bumping
into someone’s teenaged daughter bursting into foliage or regressing
into a giant spider; such goings-on were pure catnip for the poets of
that time and I think it’s safe to say that the advent of monotheism put
the kibosh on a considerable source of innocent merriment for both gods
and mortals.
All of which brings us to the semi-belated point
that in some subliminal manner, Lewis Carroll’s Anglican penchant
for Nonsense verse is really the sneaky pagan’s taste for Metamorphosis
resurgent in the usually sacrosanct domain of Logic and Semiotics! As
always, I’ll eschew further elaboration of this particular observation
out of respect for the sausage-stuffing-phobia of any decent reader
towards such crypto-Bismarckian literary goings-ons.
I shall
confine myself to remarking that Metamorphosis is a fine thing, a
double-plus-fine thing to liven up any bit of illustration or verse you
might have handy; perhaps the Beaver and Butcher’s unexpected
metamorphosis into the very best of friends is just the sort of
versification needed to bring back the salad days of wine, women and
Pagan Nonsense …
No comments:
Post a Comment