This particular Inconvenience writer’s work is always based on the 1886 edition of Confessions of an Imp.
Please note the aesthetic of the work. The layout and layering look similar to that in some of the conveniences of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
This Inconvenience writer nearly always uses the color blue for background and for lettering, and nearly always treats the source text with some kind of corrosive liquid, giving the paper a flawed appearance.
Some Convenience historians believe the writer to have been a chemist or an artist experienced in manipulating surface appearances.
It has been suggested that the writer’s fondness for blue indicates a childhood spent under wide-open blue skies, or spent near a large blue body of water.
The message of the Inconvenience, encouragement for creating dream agony, appears on a flawed surface: an intentional extra emphasis on the damaging content.
Convenience psychologists believe this emphasis on damage reflects an underlying psychosis in the writer.
I’m unconvinced.
In my scholarly opinion, the choice of a source text with the word Imp in its title reveals a more deliberately playful and harmful intention.
A Path o’ Dreams of an Imp #3
A dream does not always come to bless.
I learned to tremble &
I learned wrath in my day dreams and
it has been my fate to serve a wild fury and
to encourage the agony endured during nightmares.