Most of us are probably familiar with Maya Angelou’s famous autobiography I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. But did you know that the title came from a nineteenth-century poem by the African-American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar? It is from his poem “Sympathy,” published in the 1899 collection Lyrics of the Hearthside. Its final verse …
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North and South: Objects on the Road
This past week the Rosenbach has sent objects on loan to exhibitions at two other institutions: one traveled northward to Princeton and the others headed south to Alexandria. The Princeton loan is one of our two Thomas Sully portraits of Rebecca Gratz (we lovingly refer to her as “Rebecca without the hat”). She is normally …
Dodgson Answers Revealed
Here are the answers from last week’s trivia-fest. 1) Which of the following words was NOT invented by Dodgson: Chortle Snark Galumph Telarian The answer is “telarian.” Both “chortle” and “galumph” come from Dodgson’s famous nonsense poem “Jabberwocky,” while a “snark” is a mysterious animal in his The Hunting of the Snark: an Agony in …
Dodgson Trivia
In honor of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson’s birthday this week (January 27), I’ve pulled together a quick quiz of Charles Dodgson/Alice in Wonderland trivia. Answers to come next week. Enjoy! 1) Which of the following words was NOT invented by Dodgson: Chortle Snark Galumph Telarian 2) Which of the animals in the caucus race of Alice …
Nightingale’s Notes on Nursing
One book which I was delighted, and a bit surprised, to discover on our shelves while doing shelf-reading, is Florence Nightingale’s Notes on Nursing: What it is and What it is Not. Notes on Nursing was published in 1859, after Nightingale had become a celebrity for her nursing reforms during the Crimean War. (If anyone …
Happy Hat Day
The internet tells me it’s “National Hat Day” today, January 15. I’m not really sure where this supposed holiday comes from, but it is a good excuse to show off some some of the fabulous hat-wearers in our collection. Here’s Ben Franklin in his classic fur hat. “”Dr. Benjn. Franklin, Engraved for the Select Portrait …
A Sextet of Jabberwocky
Our recent Facebook post of Benedict Cumberbatch reading Lewis Carroll’s classic “Jabberwocky” made me wonder what other fabulous renditions there might be out there. Here are a few I turned up. I will also keep track of how many versions pronounce “borogoves” incorrectly–it is a very common slip to insert and extra “r” to make …
Exploring Wonderland
As you probably know if you are a frequent reader of the Rosenblog or visitor to the Rosenbach, we have had a very busy fall with the opening of “Down the Rabbit Hole: Celebrating 150 Years of Alicein Wonderland.” Alongside this wonderful exhibition—which is on now through May 15, 2016—we presented a full fall roster …
The Yule Log
George Cruikshank, title page for The Yule Log. Glyphograph. 1954.1800.2691 This personified Yule log and its attendant sprites come from an 1847 Christmas book by L.A. Chamerovzow. Here’s what a grumbling William Makepeace Thackeray had to say about the book (and its genre) in “A Grumble About Christmas Books”: [T]he personification mania of the Mayhew …
This Is Not the Droid You’re Looking For
A long time ago (in 1868) in a galaxy close, close to our own (okay, it is our own) a young inventor created a marvelous mechanical man. Our teenage whiz is Johnny Brainerd and the story is The Steam Man of the Prairies by Edward Ellis. Edward Ellis, The Steam Man of the Prairies. New …