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What Is The Theme of The Essay

The theme of Lamb's essay "Dream Children" is regret and loss. It describes three topics: the loss of past happiness as represented by his family home and the deaths of his grandmother and brother; his failed seven-year courtship of Alice, leaving him confused about which Alice he sees; and the children who never were since Alice did not return his love, leaving him childless in his dreams.

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Al Haram
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views1 page

What Is The Theme of The Essay

The theme of Lamb's essay "Dream Children" is regret and loss. It describes three topics: the loss of past happiness as represented by his family home and the deaths of his grandmother and brother; his failed seven-year courtship of Alice, leaving him confused about which Alice he sees; and the children who never were since Alice did not return his love, leaving him childless in his dreams.

Uploaded by

Al Haram
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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What is the theme of the essay "Dream

Children" by Charles Lamb?


The theme of Lamb's essay is regret and loss: regret for unfulfilled joy, unfulfilled
love, lost hope, lost opportunity and lost joys of life. There are three topics describing
the theme of regret and loss at work in this essay.

The first of these is the loss of past happiness as represented by the house--with its carved
mantle that a "foolish rich person pulled ... down"--and by great-grandmother Field and by
the speaker's brother John.

Both great-grandmother Field and John died painful deaths while Charles Lamb watched


on being then left alone without their presence, love and care: what he missed most was their
presence: "I missed him all day long, and knew not till then how much I had loved him."

The second topic describing regret and loss is his beloved Alice. Lamb courted her "for seven
long years" and, in the end, his suit for her love was a failure. This explains why the dream
child is named Alice and this explains why he becomes confused about which Alice, younger
or elder, he is really looking at:

turning to Alice, the soul of the first Alice looked out at her eyes with such a reality of re-
presentment, that I became in doubt which of them stood there before me, or whose that
bright hair was ...

This leads to the third thematic topic: the children who never were. In a surprise ending, in
a dramatic (and at first bewildering) twist, we learn that the children he has been telling
stories to--stories of loves and life-joys he regrets losing--are air, are a figment of a dream in
a bachelor's sleep. These are the children that would have been, that could have been, that
might have been if Alice had granted Lamb her love and if they had wed. As it is, they are but
phantoms of a dream. All he really has is "the faithful Bridget [representative of Lamb's sister
Mary] unchanged by my side."

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