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Worse still is the unamusing man who fancies himself a wit. It is one thing to lack humour and know it, to recede gracefully into the shadows of conversation, content to observe and appreciate the hilarity of others. But it is quite another thing to proclaim oneself a comedian, to strut about in social gatherings with the air of a modern-day Wilde, oblivious to the yawns he inspires and the desperate glances cast towards the nearest exit.
The unamusing man has, in all likelihood, tried his best. He has observed the jesters, the stand-up performers, the television comedies, and he has yearned—deeply, earnestly—to replicate that joy in others. But alas, the divine spark eludes him. His jokes are but shadows of the real thing—facsimiles at best, travesties at worst.
In closing, let us be grateful for the genuinely amusing among us, those rare creatures who wield humour as a surgeon wields a scalpel or a poet his pen. And let us also have patience for the others—the well-meaning, the laughless, the ones whose jokes die quietly in the drawing room air.
For is there not something almost noble in the attempt, however doomed, to bring joy?
Even if they are, unequivocally and irrevocably, not funny.