Author Archives: Marco Graziosi

Jungle-Jangle

The Peter Newell section of nonsenselit.org now has a full-size, perfect copy of Peter Newell’s Jungle-Jangle. Thanks to Bob & Ellen Watters, who kindly contacted me and scanned the book.

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Meta: Site Update

I am going to try and upgrade the blog from WordPress 1.5 to 2.0.2 later today, so there might be problems.

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Where did Nonsense go?

One of the questions which are often asked about Nonsense is, Why did it disappear almost completely from literature after the great season of Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll? As M.B. Heyman writes in his thesis (Isles of Boshen: Edward … Continue reading

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Self-Reference in Lear s Limericks

The documents section of nonsenselit.org now contains a recent essay on Edward Lear: Winfried Nöth. “The Art of Self-Reference in Edward Lear’s Limericks.” Interdisciplinary Journal for Germanic Linguistics and Semiotic Analysis 10.1, 2005, pp. 47-66. Many thanks to professor Nöth … Continue reading

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The Owl and the Pussycat Went to See. . .

The Owl and the Pussycat Wen to See… is a musical play adapted from the verses and stories of Edward Lear by Sheila Ruskin and David Wood (who wrote the music and lyrics). The LP (Philips 6308022) was published in … Continue reading

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The Laughable Looloos

Helen Stilwell’s Laughable Looloos 1906 series is now available in full colour at Nonsense in the Early Comics.

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The Woozlebeasts

The architect, John Prentiss Benson (1865-1947), had always dreamed of becoming an artist like his older brother Frank. In 1905 he lived in Flushing NY with his wife and four children and worked at his architecture firm of Benson and … Continue reading

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American Limericks

I had just finished my previous post when I received the following article from Arthur: A New Book of Nonsense The nonsense craze started by Edward Lear in the 1840s eventually swept through the entire English speaking world. The spread, … Continue reading

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The Limerick Craze!

A number of early limerick books are now available for your online enjoyment, including the four published in the 1820s that inspired Edward Lear: The History of Sixteen Wonderful Old Women. Illustrated with as many engravings; exhibiting their principal eccentricities … Continue reading

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Three Lear Limericks

Although it may sound sacrilegious, some artists have actually chosen to re-illustrate the verses in Edward Lear’s A Book of Nonsense. These Latter Day Neo Reform Limericks keep popping up everyday in bookshops. It’s not that Lear didn’t get it, … Continue reading

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