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Edward Lear
- Biographical Essays
- Ship of Fools. All Aboard!
- Lear’s Diaries
- A Chronology of Lear’s Life
- EL. Landscape Painter and Poet
- Bibliographies and Links
- The Edward Lear 2012 Celebrations
- Letters to the Caetani Family
On Lear and Nonsense
- A Very Good Children’s Book (1865)
- Nonsense Verse, &c. (1880)
- Word-Twisting Versus Nonsense (1887)
- Concerning Nonsense (1889)
- Delightful Nonsense (1890)
- G.K. Chesterton, A Defence of Nonsense (1902)
- The Poems in Alice in Wonderland (1903)
- Limericks (1903)
- Ian Malcolm on Edward Lear (1908)
- G.K. Chesterton, Two Kinds of Paradox (1911)
- H. Jackson, Masters of Nonsense (1912)
- H. Hawthorne, Edward Lear (1916)
- G.K. Chesterton, Child Psychology and Nonsense (1921)
- How Pleasant to Know Mr Lear (1932)
- G.K. Chesterton, Both Sides of the Looking-Glass (1933)
- G.K. Chesterton, Humour (1938)
- G. Orwell, Nonsense Poetry (1945)
- George Orwell, Funny, But Not Vulgar (1945)
- Michele Sala, Lear’s Nonsense: Beyond Children’s Literature
- More Articles
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- Comics (68)
- Cruikshank (4)
- Dr. Seuss (22)
- Edward Gorey (15)
- Edward Lear (1,278)
- General (139)
- Gustave Verbeek (27)
- James Thurber (3)
- Lewis Carroll (68)
- Limerick (64)
- Nonsense Lyrics (29)
- Peter Newell (87)
- Podcasts (40)
- Punch (2)
- Uncategorized (17)
- WS Gilbert (1)
Author Archives: Marco Graziosi
Edward Lear and G.F. Bowen
Lear first met George Fergusson Bowen in Rome in 1847, accepted his invitation to visit Corfu, and even considered the possibility of taking a post at the University of Corfu. In a letter to Ann during his first visit to … Continue reading
Posted in Edward Lear
Tagged biography, Corfu, diaries, Edward Lear, exhibitions, Rome
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Here we go!
Just a short post to see that the new blog and the RSS feeds are working properly. For information on this new (and hopefully improved) Blog of Bosh see the About page.
Edward Lear by Ian Malcolm
You can now read Ian Malcolm’s 1908 overview of Lear’s career (mostly from the point of view of the Baring family) in the Nonsense section of the site bookshelf: Ian Malcolm, “Edward Lear.” The Cornhill Magazine, vol. 24, January 1908, … Continue reading
Posted in Comics, Edward Lear
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The Jumblies Comic
Hunt Emerson, whose comic book adaptation of Edward Lear’s “The Owl and the Pussy-cat” was mentioned in a previous post, has also posted a version of “The Jumblies,” executed as a private commission. Click on the images below to get … Continue reading
Posted in Comics, Edward Lear
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An Exile in Paradise
Derek Smith of Lear Productions informs me that their documentary on Lear’s travels in Albania and Greece, which won the Arts Silver World Medal at the 2009 New York Festivals International Television Programming and Promotion Awards, will be shown again … Continue reading
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Edward Lear and George Grove
One of the most famous of Edward Lear’s self caricatures is certainly the one in which he portrays himself while looking straight into the eyes of a strange “bug,” which is itself gazing at him. I had never cared to … Continue reading
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Polly Sleepyhead
My translation of the early episodes of Peter Newell’s Naps of Polly Sleepyhead will be in Italian libraries next week, and the publisher, orecchio acerbo, has a book trailer on YouTube: This is going to be in the Little Big … Continue reading
Posted in Comics, Peter Newell
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Verbeek's Botanies
Sunday Press has announced the availability of their new collection reprinting in full colour the whole run of Gustave Verbeek’s The Upside-Downs of Lady Lovekins and Old Man Muffaroo, the late Terrors of the Tiny Tads, as well the first … Continue reading
Posted in Edward Lear, Gustave Verbeek
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The Grave of Edward Lear
Mr. Eden Phillpotts, […] who lives in Devonshire and spends all his time in the beautiful English country, has written a book called “My Garden,” which will be published by the English Country Life. It is the thoughts of a … Continue reading
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Cassowary vs Missionary
The tragic consequences of being a missionary in Timbuctoo were the subject of one of the infrequent comic strips in Punch (22 February 1868, vol. 54, pp. 80-1). The little poem around which the story turns is known in several … Continue reading
Posted in Comics, Edward Lear, General
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