Nonsense Songs and Stories by Edward Lear
Nonsense Songs and Stories by Edward Lear, reviewed in the Guardian, July 19 1888.
Guardian Unlimited Books | Review

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Resistance is useless, honey

Resistance is useless, honey
Pooh, it’s true, manages, through byzantine byways that I will track below, to body forth the key principles of Deconstruction with uncanny fidelity. And that fact, given the apparent temporal priority of Milne over Derrida, would seem to prove the timeless pertinence of the latter’s approach to textuality. Yet what is the le�on of Derrida, that consummate rhetor of the iterable and the dehiscent, if not that clear sight, the grasping of significance, and even historical precedence (to say nothing of timeless truth) are all illusions, effects of that very diff�rance that constitutes the only legitimate object of critical scrutiny?
[Not relevant to Lear, perhaps, but funny and nonsensical all the same.]
Guardian Unlimited Books | Review

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The Tomfoolery Show

The Tomfoolery Show
The Tomfoolery Show was a short-lived collection of animated shorts based on the nonsensical poetry of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, with occasional nods to other literary classics by Ogden Nash and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Yesterdayland Saturday Morning TV
ONE OF those bizarre half-remembered cartoons produced by Rankin/Bass in conjunction with British cartoon studio Halas And Batchelo, the humour on the show centered around riddles, puns, and nonsensical jokes, with the titular Tom Foolery, a long-legged ball thing, a Yongy Bongy Bo, a chicken being hit by a jigsaw piece, all based around the poems of Edward Lear with characters such as Fastidious Fish and The Ubiquitous Umbrella Maker. “We’re putting on the nonsense, The funny stuff and nonsense, With riddles, jokes and silly things, It’s all Tomfoolery….”
TV Cream [search for ‘tomfoolery’, you can also download a couple of themes from the program in mp3.]

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Pea Green Boat

Pea Green Boat
“This is my first mid-30s, pretentious one-man show,” says Stewart Lee in an apologetic intro to Pea Green Boat. This isn’t stand-up, he warns, so prepare not to laugh. The preamble promises some daring dramatic experiment. In fact, this solo delve into Edward Lear’s most famous poem is sweet and very funny – but doesn’t deviate greatly from the stand-up with which Lee made his name.
Guardian Unlimited | Arts reviews | Stewart Lee, Traverse, Edinburgh (23 August 2002)

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An Edward Lear Society?

An Edward Lear Society?, An e-mail from Vivien Noakes
Dear Learites,
Kenneth Oultram, who lives in Cheshire, is hoping to organise an Edward Lear Society, since none exists. He has called an inaugural meeting this Saturday, September 7th, at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, but has had a very disappointing response, largely I think because almost no one knows about it.
The Walker currently has a wonderful exhibition about Lord Derby�s menagerie and Lear�s involvement with it � �The Earl and the Pussy-cat� � which closes this weekend (it has an excellent catalogue), and I understand that the plan is that anyone interested should meet at the Gallery at noon. There will then be a tour of the exhibition conducted by the organiser � Dr Clem Fisher � followed by lunch. In the afternoon it is scheduled that Robert Peck � who is writing about Lear�s birds � will give a lecture, but I am not sure what the situation is about this if the turnout is very low.
I have spoken to Mr Oultram this evening and said that I would post news of this on the website. If anyone is interested in speaking to him, either about Saturday�s programme or about founding a Society at some point, his home number is 01606 781 731 and his work number is 01606 891 303.
Best wishes,
Vivien

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The Earl and the Pussycat

icLiverpool – The Earl and the Pussycat
FANS of limerick-creator Edward Lear have a final chance to view a fascinating exhibition charting his links with a Victorian earl.
icLiverpool (30 August 2002)

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Th'impervious horrors of a Lear shore

PO’BMC: Th’impervious horrors of a Lear shore
“T’is a truth universally acknowledged that a sea captain in possession of three noisy children is in want of a ship,” said Stephen as he sat in Sir Joseph’s office one morning happily pinning butterflies to a piece of card.
“Mmmm,” said Sir Joseph noncommitally, thinking his friend had been reading too much.
“A beautiful pea-green one,” Stephen added after a moment.

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The Straight Dope: What's a runcible spoon?

The Straight Dope: What’s a runcible spoon?
Dear Cecil:
What’s a runcible spoon? –Theogr, via AOL
Dear Theo:
I can’t believe you have to ask this. A runcible spoon is a utensil suitable for runciation. This of course is in contrast to an irruncible spoon, which one runciates at one’s peril.

But skeptics pointed out that Lear’s drawings of runcible spoons gave no indication of tines or cutting edges. Also the use of a runcible spoon for the pedestrian purpose of eating pickles seemed at odds with the refined original menu of mince and quince. And why should one require a spoon with a cutting edge for quince that, Lear tells us, has already been sliced?
Modern students of runciosity believe that while it may have been inspired by the word “rouncival” (apparently meaning gigantic), runcibilization as we know it today was the invention of Edward Lear.
But the runcible-spoon-as-pickle-fork idea has taken firm root. One sighs, but what can you do? I expect the discovery of the Bong-tree any day.
[Thanks to John Verity.]

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The Lady of Shalotte by Alfred Lord Tennisanyone

The Lady of Shalotte by Alfred Lord Tennisanyone (with a bob of the head to Edward Lear and “The Akond of Swat.”)
Winner of the Poetry Parody Contest at the Julia A. Moore Poetry Festival – Peoples’ Choice Award 2000.

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A little light versifying

David McKie: A little light versifying
Lear celebrates, even venerates, absurdity, especially absurdity practised in the face of public scorn…
The reversionary limerick, as practised by Lear, failed to catch on because it needed a Lear to fashion it.
[A review of Routledge’s recent facsimile reprint of the 1861 Book of Nonsense.Thanks to Julie Rybicki.]
Guardian Unlimited

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