Ogden Nash: Difference between revisions

m
m (revise quote template spacing)
m (removed Category:Poetry; added Category:Poets using HotCat)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{creator}}
{{Needs Image}}
{{quote|''Candy is dandy,''
''[[But Liquor Is Quicker]].'' }}
|"Reflections on Ice-Breaking" }}
 
[[Ogden Nash]] (1902-1971) was one of the great writers of American humorous poetry, noted for couplets or other poems that rhyme, but [[Painful Rhyme|the lines are of different length and irregular meter]]. He lived in Baltimore most of his life, and included several paeans to it in his work. Also noted are his series of poems set to Camille Saint-Saens' "Carnival Of The Animals".
 
He was also verified by the ''[[Guinness World Records|Guinness Book Of World Records]]'' as having composed the shortest published poem: ''"On the Antiquity of Fleas''", which consists of merely "Adam/Had'em."
 
== Tropes in Ogden Nash's work: ==
 
{{creatortropes}}
* [[Analogy Backfire]]: The poem ''The Romantic Age'', about a lovestruck teenage girl who:
{{quote|Presses lips and tosses head,
Line 24 ⟶ 25:
Unless liberties you pilfer. }}
* [[Little Did I Know]]: ''Don't Guess, Let Me Tell You''.
* [[Long Title]]: Relative to the poems they're assigned to, an often inescapable consequence of the brevity of his wit; at other times an example of his wit by themselves. Among them "On the Antiquity of Fleas", which is three times as long as the poem itself, and "To A Small Boy Standing On My Shoes While I Am Wearing Them".
* [[Missing Floor]]: ''A Tale of the Thirteenth Floor''.
* [[Painful Rhyme]]: Though done deliberately, and often lampshaded by changes in the spelling.
Line 31 ⟶ 33:
Or the Axis hates the United States,
That's how much I love you.... }}
* [[Spoiled Brat]]: The subject of "To A Small Boy Standing On My Shoes While I Am Wearing Them", at least in the eyes of the narrator.
* [[Spotlight-Stealing Title]]:
{{quote|''The Self-Effacement of Electra Thorne'':
Line 51 ⟶ 54:
And that is why your Cousin May
Fell through the parlor floor today. }}
* [[The So-Called Coward]]: ''Custard the Dragon'' is about a woman named Belinda who lived with a kitten, a mouse, a dog, and a dragon. Counter-intuitively, the kitten, mouse, and dog were all described as being very brave, while the dragon was a coward. However, when a pirate broke into the house and threatened Belinda, the three supposedly '"brave'" animals ran and hid, and Custard stood his ground, fought the pirate, and ate him.
* [[The Thing That Would Not Leave]]: ''Polterguest, My Polterguest''[https://web.archive.org/web/20180127035958/http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~keith/poems/polterguest.html\ ''Polterguest, My Polterguest''].
* [[Wendigo]]:
{{quote|The Wendigo, the Wendigo
Line 60 ⟶ 63:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:PoetryPoets]]
[[Category:The Forties]]
[[Category:Authors]]
[[Category:Ogden Nash]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]