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Humpty Dumpty

Humpty Dumpty is a character in an English nursery rhyme, probably originally a riddle and one of the best known in the English-speaking world. He is typically portrayed as an anthropomorphic egg, though he is not explicitly described as such. The first recorded versions of the rhyme date from late eighteenth-century England and the tune from 1870 in James William Elliott's National Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Songs.[1] Its origins are obscure, and several theories have been advanced to suggest original meanings.

"Humpty Dumpty"
Illustration by W. W. Denslow, 1904
Nursery rhyme
Published1797

Humpty Dumpty was popularized in the United States on Broadway by actor George L. Fox in the pantomime musical Humpty Dumpty.[2] The show ran from 1868 to 1869, for a total of 483 performances.[3] As a character and literary allusion, Humpty Dumpty has appeared or been referred to in many works of literature and popular culture, particularly English author Lewis Carroll's 1871 book Through the Looking-Glass, in which he was described as an egg. The rhyme is listed in the Roud Folk Song Index as No. 13026.

Lyrics and melody

The rhyme is one of the best known in the English language. The common text from 1882 is:[4]

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall.
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the king's horses and all the king's men
Couldn't put Humpty together again.

It is a single quatrain with external rhymes[5] that follow the pattern of AABB and with a trochaic metre, which is common in nursery rhymes.[6] The melody commonly associated with the rhyme was first recorded by composer and nursery rhyme collector James William Elliott in his National Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Songs (London, 1870), as outlined below:[7]

 

Origins

 
Illustration from Walter Crane's Mother Goose's Nursery Rhymes (1877), showing Humpty Dumpty as a boy
.

The earliest known version was published in Samuel Arnold's Juvenile Amusements in 1797[1] with the lyrics:[8]

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
Four-score Men and Four-score more,
Could not make Humpty Dumpty where he was before.

William Carey Richards (1818–1892) quoted the poem in 1843, commenting, "when we were five years old ... the following parallel lines... were propounded as a riddle ... Humpty-dumpty, reader, is the Dutch or something else for an egg".[9]

A manuscript addition to a copy of Mother Goose's Melody published in 1803 has the modern version with a different last line: "Could not set Humpty Dumpty up again".[8] It was published in 1810 in a version of Gammer Gurton's Garland.[10] (Note: Original spelling variations left intact.)

Humpty Dumpty sate on a wall,
Humpti Dumpti had a great fall;
Threescore men and threescore more,
Cannot place Humpty dumpty as he was before.

In 1842, James Orchard Halliwell published a collected version as:[11]

Humpty Dumpty lay in a beck.
With all his sinews around his neck;
Forty Doctors and forty wrights
Couldn't put Humpty Dumpty to rights!

The modern-day version of this nursery rhyme, as known throughout the UK since at least the mid-twentieth century, is as follows:

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall;
All the King's horses
And all the King's men,
Couldn't put Humpty together again.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, in the 17th century, the term "humpty dumpty" referred to a drink of brandy boiled with ale.[8] The riddle probably exploited, for misdirection, the fact that "humpty dumpty" was also eighteenth-century reduplicative slang for a short and clumsy person.[12] The riddle may depend upon the assumption that a clumsy person falling off a wall might not be irreparably damaged, whereas an egg would be. The rhyme is no longer posed as a riddle, since the answer is now so well known. Similar riddles have been recorded by folklorists in other languages, such as "Boule Boule" in French, "Lille Trille" in Swedish and Norwegian, and "Runtzelken-Puntzelken" or "Humpelken-Pumpelken" in different parts of Germany—although none is as widely known as Humpty Dumpty is in English.[8][13]

Meaning

 
Humpty Dumpty, shown as a riddle with answer, in a 1902 Mother Goose story book by W. W. Denslow
 
Poster advertising a pantomime version at the Olympic Theatre in New York 1868, starring George L. Fox

The rhyme does not explicitly state that the subject is an egg, possibly because it may have been originally posed as a riddle.[8] There are also various theories of an original "Humpty Dumpty". One, advanced by Katherine Elwes Thomas in 1930[14] and adopted by Robert Ripley,[8] posits that Humpty Dumpty is King Richard III of England, depicted as hunchbacked in Tudor histories and particularly in Shakespeare's play, and who was defeated, despite his armies, at Bosworth Field in 1485.

In 1785, Francis Grose's Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue noted that a "Humpty Dumpty" was "a short clumsey [sic] person of either sex, also ale boiled with brandy"; no mention was made of the rhyme.[15]

Punch in 1842 suggested jocularly that the rhyme was a metaphor for the downfall of Cardinal Wolsey; just as Wolsey was not buried in his intended tomb, so Humpty Dumpty was not buried in his shell.[16]

Professor David Daube suggested in The Oxford Magazine of 16 February 1956 that Humpty Dumpty was a "tortoise" siege engine, an armored frame, used unsuccessfully to approach the walls of the Parliamentary-held city of Gloucester in 1643 during the Siege of Gloucester in the English Civil War. This was on the basis of a contemporary account of the attack, but without evidence that the rhyme was connected.[17] The theory was part of an anonymous series of articles on the origin of nursery rhymes and was widely acclaimed in academia,[18] but it was derided by others as "ingenuity for ingenuity's sake" and declared to be a spoof.[19][20] The link was nevertheless popularized by a children's opera All the King's Men by Richard Rodney Bennett, first performed in 1969.[21][22]

From 1996, the website of the Colchester tourist board attributed the origin of the rhyme to a cannon recorded as used from the church of St Mary-at-the-Wall by the Royalist defenders in the siege of 1648.[23] In 1648, Colchester was a walled town with a castle and several churches and was protected by the city wall. The story given was that a large cannon, which the website claimed was colloquially called Humpty Dumpty, was strategically placed on the wall. A shot from a Parliamentary cannon succeeded in damaging the wall beneath Humpty Dumpty, which caused the cannon to tumble to the ground. The Royalists (or Cavaliers, "all the King's men") attempted to raise Humpty Dumpty on to another part of the wall, but the cannon was so heavy that "All the King's horses and all the King's men couldn't put Humpty together again". Author Albert Jack claimed in his 2008 book Pop Goes the Weasel: The Secret Meanings of Nursery Rhymes that there were two other verses supporting this claim.[24] Elsewhere, he claimed to have found them in an "old dusty library, [in] an even older book",[25] but did not state what the book was or where it was found. It has been pointed out that the two additional verses are not in the style of the seventeenth century or of the existing rhyme, and that they do not fit with the earliest printed versions of the rhyme, which do not mention horses and men.[23]

Adaptations

American actor George L. Fox (1825–1877) helped to popularise the nursery rhyme character in nineteenth-century stage productions of pantomime versions, music, and rhyme.[26] The character is also a common literary allusion, particularly to refer to a person in an insecure position, something that would be difficult to reconstruct once broken, or a short and fat person.[27]

Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass

 
Humpty Dumpty and Alice, from Through the Looking-Glass. Illustration by John Tenniel.

Humpty Dumpty also makes an appearance in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass (1871). There Alice remarks that Humpty is "exactly like an egg", which Humpty finds to be "very provoking" in the looking-glass world. Alice clarifies that she said he looks like an egg, not that he is one. They then go on discuss semantics and pragmatics[28] when Humpty Dumpty says, "my name means the shape I am".[29]

A. J. Larner suggested that Carroll's Humpty Dumpty had prosopagnosia on the basis of his description of his finding faces hard to recognise:[30]

"The face is what one goes by, generally," Alice remarked in a thoughtful tone.

"That's just what I complain of," said Humpty Dumpty. "Your face is the same as everybody has—the two eyes,—" (marking their places in the air with his thumb) "nose in the middle, mouth under. It's always the same. Now if you had the two eyes on the same side of the nose, for instance—or the mouth at the top—that would be some help."

James Joyce's Finnegans Wake

James Joyce used the story of Humpty Dumpty as a recurring motif of the Fall of Man in the 1939 novel Finnegans Wake.[31][32] One of the most easily recognizable references is at the end of the second chapter, in the first verse of the Ballad of Persse O'Reilly:

Have you heard of one Humpty Dumpty
How he fell with a roll and a rumble
And curled up like Lord Olofa Crumple
By the butt of the Magazine Wall,
(Chorus) Of the Magazine Wall,
Hump, helmet and all?

In science

Humpty Dumpty has been used to demonstrate the second law of thermodynamics. The law describes a process known as entropy, a measure of the number of specific ways in which a system may be arranged, often taken to be a measure of "disorder". The higher the entropy, the higher the disorder. After his fall and subsequent shattering, the inability to put him together again is representative of this principle, as it would be highly unlikely (though not impossible) to return him to his earlier state of lower entropy, as the entropy of an isolated system never decreases.[33][34][35]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Emily Upton (24 April 2013). "The Origin of Humpty Dumpty". What I Learned Today. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  2. ^ Kenrick, John (2017). Musical Theatre: A History. Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781474267021. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Humpty Dumpty". IBDB.com. Internet Broadway Database.
  4. ^ Francis Bartlett Kellogg, ed. (1882). Yale Songs. A Collection of Songs in Use by the Glee Club and Students of Yale College. Shepard & Kellogg. p. 72.
  5. ^ J. Smith, Poetry Writing (Teacher Created Resources, 2002), ISBN 0-7439-3273-0, p. 95.
  6. ^ P. Hunt, ed., International Companion Encyclopedia of Children's Literature (London: Routledge, 2004), ISBN 0-203-16812-7, p. 174.
  7. ^ J. J. Fuld, The Book of World-Famous Music: Classical, Popular, and Folk (Courier Dover Publications, 5th ed., 2000), ISBN 0-486-41475-2, p. 502.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Opie & Opie (1997), pp. 213–215.
  9. ^ Richards, William Carey (March–April 1844). "Monthly chat with readers and correspondents". The Orion. Penfield, Georgia. II (5 & 6): 371.
  10. ^ Joseph Ritson, Gammer Gurton's Garland: or, the Nursery Parnassus; a Choice Collection of Pretty Songs and Verses, for the Amusement of All Little Good Children Who Can Neither Read Nor Run (London: Harding and Wright, 1810), p. 36.
  11. ^ J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps, The Nursery Rhymes of England (John Russell Smith, 6th ed., 1870), p. 122.
  12. ^ E. Partridge and P. Beale, Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (Routledge, 8th ed., 2002), ISBN 0-415-29189-5, p. 582.
  13. ^ Lina Eckenstein (1906). Comparative Studies in Nursery Rhymes. pp. 106–107. OL 7164972M. Retrieved 30 January 2018 – via archive.org.
  14. ^ E. Commins, Lessons from Mother Goose (Lack Worth, Fl: Humanics, 1988), ISBN 0-89334-110-X, p. 23.
  15. ^ Grose, Francis (1785). A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue. S. Hooper. pp. 90–.
  16. ^ "Juvenile Biography No IV: Humpty Dumpty". Punch. 3: 202. July–December 1842.
  17. ^ "Nursery Rhymes and History", The Oxford Magazine, vol. 74 (1956), pp. 230–232, 272–274 and 310–312; reprinted in: Calum M. Carmichael, ed., Collected Works of David Daube, vol. 4, "Ethics and Other Writings" (Berkeley, CA: Robbins Collection, 2009), ISBN 978-1-882239-15-3, pp. 365–366.
  18. ^ Alan Rodger: "Obituary: Professor David Daube". Independent.co.uk. 5 March 1999. The Independent, 5 March 1999.
  19. ^ I. Opie, 'Playground rhymes and the oral tradition', in P. Hunt, S. G. Bannister Ray, International Companion Encyclopedia of Children's Literature (London: Routledge, 2004), ISBN 0-203-16812-7, p. 76.
  20. ^ Iona and Peter Opie, ed. (1997) [1951]. The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-19-860088-6.
  21. ^ C. M. Carmichael (2004). Ideas and the Man: remembering David Daube. Studien zur europäischen Rechtsgeschichte. Vol. 177. Frankfurt: Vittorio Klostermann. pp. 103–104. ISBN 3-465-03363-9.
  22. ^ "Sir Richard Rodney Bennett: All the King's Men". Universal Edition. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  23. ^ a b "Putting the "dump" in Humpty Dumpty". The BS Historian. 11 October 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  24. ^ A. Jack, Pop Goes the Weasel: The Secret Meanings of Nursery Rhymes (London: Allen Lane, 2008), ISBN 1-84614-144-3.
  25. ^ Jack, Albert (30 September 2009). . Penguin Blog (USA) - Penguin Group (USA). Archived from the original on 27 February 2010.
  26. ^ L. Senelick, The Age and Stage of George L. Fox 1825–1877 (University of Iowa Press, 1999), ISBN 0877456844.
  27. ^ E. Webber and M. Feinsilber, Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Allusions (Merriam-Webster, 1999), ISBN 0-87779-628-9, pp. 277–78.
  28. ^ F. R. Palmer, Semantics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2nd ed., 1981), ISBN 0-521-28376-0, p. 8.
  29. ^ L. Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass (Raleigh, North Carolina: Hayes Barton Press, 1872), ISBN 1-59377-216-5, p. 72.
  30. ^ A. J. Larner (1998). "Lewis Carroll's Humpty Dumpty: an early report of prosopagnosia?". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. 75 (7): 1063. doi:10.1136/jnnp.2003.027599. PMC 1739130. PMID 15201376.
  31. ^ J. S. Atherton, The Books at the Wake: A Study of Literary Allusions in James Joyce's Finnegans Wake (1959, SIU Press, 2009), ISBN 0-8093-2933-6, p. 126.
  32. ^ Worthington, Mabel (1957). "Nursery Rhymes in Finnegans Wake". The Journal of American Folklore. 70 (275): 37–48. doi:10.2307/536500. JSTOR 536500.
  33. ^ Chang, Kenneth (30 July 2002). "Humpty Dumpty Restored: When Disorder Lurches Into Order". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  34. ^ Langston, Lee. (PDF). Hartford Courant. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  35. ^ Franklin, W. S. (March 1910). "The Second Law of Thermodynamics: Its Basis In Intuition and Common Sense". The Popular Science Monthly: 240.

External links

  • Library of Congress' Facsimile of the 1899 illustrated edition of Through the Looking-Glass
  • The Ballad of Persse O'Reilly
Preceded by Longest-running Broadway show
1869–1881
Succeeded by

humpty, dumpty, this, article, about, nursery, rhyme, other, uses, disambiguation, character, english, nursery, rhyme, probably, originally, riddle, best, known, english, speaking, world, typically, portrayed, anthropomorphic, though, explicitly, described, su. This article is about the nursery rhyme For other uses see Humpty Dumpty disambiguation Humpty Dumpty is a character in an English nursery rhyme probably originally a riddle and one of the best known in the English speaking world He is typically portrayed as an anthropomorphic egg though he is not explicitly described as such The first recorded versions of the rhyme date from late eighteenth century England and the tune from 1870 in James William Elliott s National Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Songs 1 Its origins are obscure and several theories have been advanced to suggest original meanings Humpty Dumpty Illustration by W W Denslow 1904Nursery rhymePublished1797Humpty Dumpty was popularized in the United States on Broadway by actor George L Fox in the pantomime musical Humpty Dumpty 2 The show ran from 1868 to 1869 for a total of 483 performances 3 As a character and literary allusion Humpty Dumpty has appeared or been referred to in many works of literature and popular culture particularly English author Lewis Carroll s 1871 book Through the Looking Glass in which he was described as an egg The rhyme is listed in the Roud Folk Song Index as No 13026 Contents 1 Lyrics and melody 2 Origins 3 Meaning 4 Adaptations 4 1 Lewis Carroll s Through the Looking Glass 4 2 James Joyce s Finnegans Wake 4 3 In science 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLyrics and melodyThe rhyme is one of the best known in the English language The common text from 1882 is 4 Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall Humpty Dumpty had a great fall All the king s horses and all the king s men Couldn t put Humpty together again It is a single quatrain with external rhymes 5 that follow the pattern of AABB and with a trochaic metre which is common in nursery rhymes 6 The melody commonly associated with the rhyme was first recorded by composer and nursery rhyme collector James William Elliott in his National Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Songs London 1870 as outlined below 7 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Origins nbsp Illustration from Walter Crane s Mother Goose s Nursery Rhymes 1877 showing Humpty Dumpty as a boy source source source The earliest known version was published in Samuel Arnold s Juvenile Amusements in 1797 1 with the lyrics 8 Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall Humpty Dumpty had a great fall Four score Men and Four score more Could not make Humpty Dumpty where he was before William Carey Richards 1818 1892 quoted the poem in 1843 commenting when we were five years old the following parallel lines were propounded as a riddle Humpty dumpty reader is the Dutch or something else for an egg 9 A manuscript addition to a copy of Mother Goose s Melody published in 1803 has the modern version with a different last line Could not set Humpty Dumpty up again 8 It was published in 1810 in a version of Gammer Gurton s Garland 10 Note Original spelling variations left intact Humpty Dumpty sate on a wall Humpti Dumpti had a great fall Threescore men and threescore more Cannot place Humpty dumpty as he was before In 1842 James Orchard Halliwell published a collected version as 11 Humpty Dumpty lay in a beck With all his sinews around his neck Forty Doctors and forty wrights Couldn t put Humpty Dumpty to rights The modern day version of this nursery rhyme as known throughout the UK since at least the mid twentieth century is as follows Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall Humpty Dumpty had a great fall All the King s horses And all the King s men Couldn t put Humpty together again According to the Oxford English Dictionary in the 17th century the term humpty dumpty referred to a drink of brandy boiled with ale 8 The riddle probably exploited for misdirection the fact that humpty dumpty was also eighteenth century reduplicative slang for a short and clumsy person 12 The riddle may depend upon the assumption that a clumsy person falling off a wall might not be irreparably damaged whereas an egg would be The rhyme is no longer posed as a riddle since the answer is now so well known Similar riddles have been recorded by folklorists in other languages such as Boule Boule in French Lille Trille in Swedish and Norwegian and Runtzelken Puntzelken or Humpelken Pumpelken in different parts of Germany although none is as widely known as Humpty Dumpty is in English 8 13 Meaning nbsp Humpty Dumpty shown as a riddle with answer in a 1902 Mother Goose story book by W W Denslow nbsp Poster advertising a pantomime version at the Olympic Theatre in New York 1868 starring George L FoxThe rhyme does not explicitly state that the subject is an egg possibly because it may have been originally posed as a riddle 8 There are also various theories of an original Humpty Dumpty One advanced by Katherine Elwes Thomas in 1930 14 and adopted by Robert Ripley 8 posits that Humpty Dumpty is King Richard III of England depicted as hunchbacked in Tudor histories and particularly in Shakespeare s play and who was defeated despite his armies at Bosworth Field in 1485 In 1785 Francis Grose s Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue noted that a Humpty Dumpty was a short clumsey sic person of either sex also ale boiled with brandy no mention was made of the rhyme 15 Punch in 1842 suggested jocularly that the rhyme was a metaphor for the downfall of Cardinal Wolsey just as Wolsey was not buried in his intended tomb so Humpty Dumpty was not buried in his shell 16 Professor David Daube suggested in The Oxford Magazine of 16 February 1956 that Humpty Dumpty was a tortoise siege engine an armored frame used unsuccessfully to approach the walls of the Parliamentary held city of Gloucester in 1643 during the Siege of Gloucester in the English Civil War This was on the basis of a contemporary account of the attack but without evidence that the rhyme was connected 17 The theory was part of an anonymous series of articles on the origin of nursery rhymes and was widely acclaimed in academia 18 but it was derided by others as ingenuity for ingenuity s sake and declared to be a spoof 19 20 The link was nevertheless popularized by a children s opera All the King s Men by Richard Rodney Bennett first performed in 1969 21 22 From 1996 the website of the Colchester tourist board attributed the origin of the rhyme to a cannon recorded as used from the church of St Mary at the Wall by the Royalist defenders in the siege of 1648 23 In 1648 Colchester was a walled town with a castle and several churches and was protected by the city wall The story given was that a large cannon which the website claimed was colloquially called Humpty Dumpty was strategically placed on the wall A shot from a Parliamentary cannon succeeded in damaging the wall beneath Humpty Dumpty which caused the cannon to tumble to the ground The Royalists or Cavaliers all the King s men attempted to raise Humpty Dumpty on to another part of the wall but the cannon was so heavy that All the King s horses and all the King s men couldn t put Humpty together again Author Albert Jack claimed in his 2008 book Pop Goes the Weasel The Secret Meanings of Nursery Rhymes that there were two other verses supporting this claim 24 Elsewhere he claimed to have found them in an old dusty library in an even older book 25 but did not state what the book was or where it was found It has been pointed out that the two additional verses are not in the style of the seventeenth century or of the existing rhyme and that they do not fit with the earliest printed versions of the rhyme which do not mention horses and men 23 AdaptationsAmerican actor George L Fox 1825 1877 helped to popularise the nursery rhyme character in nineteenth century stage productions of pantomime versions music and rhyme 26 The character is also a common literary allusion particularly to refer to a person in an insecure position something that would be difficult to reconstruct once broken or a short and fat person 27 Lewis Carroll s Through the Looking Glass nbsp Humpty Dumpty and Alice from Through the Looking Glass Illustration by John Tenniel Humpty Dumpty also makes an appearance in Lewis Carroll s Through the Looking Glass 1871 There Alice remarks that Humpty is exactly like an egg which Humpty finds to be very provoking in the looking glass world Alice clarifies that she said he looks like an egg not that he is one They then go on discuss semantics and pragmatics 28 when Humpty Dumpty says my name means the shape I am 29 A J Larner suggested that Carroll s Humpty Dumpty had prosopagnosia on the basis of his description of his finding faces hard to recognise 30 The face is what one goes by generally Alice remarked in a thoughtful tone That s just what I complain of said Humpty Dumpty Your face is the same as everybody has the two eyes marking their places in the air with his thumb nose in the middle mouth under It s always the same Now if you had the two eyes on the same side of the nose for instance or the mouth at the top that would be some help James Joyce s Finnegans Wake James Joyce used the story of Humpty Dumpty as a recurring motif of the Fall of Man in the 1939 novel Finnegans Wake 31 32 One of the most easily recognizable references is at the end of the second chapter in the first verse of the Ballad of Persse O Reilly Have you heard of one Humpty Dumpty How he fell with a roll and a rumble And curled up like Lord Olofa Crumple By the butt of the Magazine Wall Chorus Of the Magazine Wall Hump helmet and all In science Humpty Dumpty has been used to demonstrate the second law of thermodynamics The law describes a process known as entropy a measure of the number of specific ways in which a system may be arranged often taken to be a measure of disorder The higher the entropy the higher the disorder After his fall and subsequent shattering the inability to put him together again is representative of this principle as it would be highly unlikely though not impossible to return him to his earlier state of lower entropy as the entropy of an isolated system never decreases 33 34 35 See also nbsp Children s literature portalList of nursery rhymesReferences a b Emily Upton 24 April 2013 The Origin of Humpty Dumpty What I Learned Today Retrieved 19 September 2015 Kenrick John 2017 Musical Theatre A History Bloomsbury ISBN 9781474267021 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Humpty Dumpty IBDB com Internet Broadway Database Francis Bartlett Kellogg ed 1882 Yale Songs A Collection of Songs in Use by the Glee Club and Students of Yale College Shepard amp Kellogg p 72 J Smith Poetry Writing Teacher Created Resources 2002 ISBN 0 7439 3273 0 p 95 P Hunt ed International Companion Encyclopedia of Children s Literature London Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 203 16812 7 p 174 J J Fuld The Book of World Famous Music Classical Popular and Folk Courier Dover Publications 5th ed 2000 ISBN 0 486 41475 2 p 502 a b c d e f Opie amp Opie 1997 pp 213 215 Richards William Carey March April 1844 Monthly chat with readers and correspondents The Orion Penfield Georgia II 5 amp 6 371 Joseph Ritson Gammer Gurton s Garland or the Nursery Parnassus a Choice Collection of Pretty Songs and Verses for the Amusement of All Little Good Children Who Can Neither Read Nor Run London Harding and Wright 1810 p 36 J O Halliwell Phillipps The Nursery Rhymes of England John Russell Smith 6th ed 1870 p 122 E Partridge and P Beale Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English Routledge 8th ed 2002 ISBN 0 415 29189 5 p 582 Lina Eckenstein 1906 Comparative Studies in Nursery Rhymes pp 106 107 OL 7164972M Retrieved 30 January 2018 via archive org E Commins Lessons from Mother Goose Lack Worth Fl Humanics 1988 ISBN 0 89334 110 X p 23 Grose Francis 1785 A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue S Hooper pp 90 Juvenile Biography No IV Humpty Dumpty Punch 3 202 July December 1842 Nursery Rhymes and History The Oxford Magazine vol 74 1956 pp 230 232 272 274 and 310 312 reprinted in Calum M Carmichael ed Collected Works of David Daube vol 4 Ethics and Other Writings Berkeley CA Robbins Collection 2009 ISBN 978 1 882239 15 3 pp 365 366 Alan Rodger Obituary Professor David Daube Independent co uk 5 March 1999 The Independent 5 March 1999 I Opie Playground rhymes and the oral tradition in P Hunt S G Bannister Ray International Companion Encyclopedia of Children s Literature London Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 203 16812 7 p 76 Iona and Peter Opie ed 1997 1951 The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 254 ISBN 978 0 19 860088 6 C M Carmichael 2004 Ideas and the Man remembering David Daube Studien zur europaischen Rechtsgeschichte Vol 177 Frankfurt Vittorio Klostermann pp 103 104 ISBN 3 465 03363 9 Sir Richard Rodney Bennett All the King s Men Universal Edition Retrieved 18 September 2012 a b Putting the dump in Humpty Dumpty The BS Historian 11 October 2008 Retrieved 13 January 2024 A Jack Pop Goes the Weasel The Secret Meanings of Nursery Rhymes London Allen Lane 2008 ISBN 1 84614 144 3 Jack Albert 30 September 2009 The Real Story of Humpty Dumpty Penguin Blog USA Penguin Group USA Archived from the original on 27 February 2010 L Senelick The Age and Stage of George L Fox 1825 1877 University of Iowa Press 1999 ISBN 0877456844 E Webber and M Feinsilber Merriam Webster s Dictionary of Allusions Merriam Webster 1999 ISBN 0 87779 628 9 pp 277 78 F R Palmer Semantics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2nd ed 1981 ISBN 0 521 28376 0 p 8 L Carroll Through the Looking Glass Raleigh North Carolina Hayes Barton Press 1872 ISBN 1 59377 216 5 p 72 A J Larner 1998 Lewis Carroll s Humpty Dumpty an early report of prosopagnosia Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 75 7 1063 doi 10 1136 jnnp 2003 027599 PMC 1739130 PMID 15201376 J S Atherton The Books at the Wake A Study of Literary Allusions in James Joyce s Finnegans Wake 1959 SIU Press 2009 ISBN 0 8093 2933 6 p 126 Worthington Mabel 1957 Nursery Rhymes in Finnegans Wake The Journal of American Folklore 70 275 37 48 doi 10 2307 536500 JSTOR 536500 Chang Kenneth 30 July 2002 Humpty Dumpty Restored When Disorder Lurches Into Order The New York Times Retrieved 2 May 2013 Langston Lee Part III The Second Law of Thermodynamics PDF Hartford Courant Archived from the original PDF on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 2 May 2013 Franklin W S March 1910 The Second Law of Thermodynamics Its Basis In Intuition and Common Sense The Popular Science Monthly 240 External linksLibrary of Congress Facsimile of the 1899 illustrated edition of Through the Looking Glass The Ballad of Persse O ReillyPreceded byThe Black Crook Longest running Broadway show1869 1881 Succeeded byHazel Kirke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Humpty Dumpty amp oldid 1195253094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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