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The Daily Poem

Edward Lear's "The Owl and the Pussy-Cat"

The Daily Poem

Goldberry Studios

Education For Kids, Arts, Kids & Family

4.6729 Ratings

🗓️ 21 February 2025

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today’s poem is the best-remembered work of the beloved “nonsense poet” Edward Lear–a silly lyric about a serious love. The episode also features a few guest readers. Happy reading.

Edward Lear, the British poet and painter known for his absurd wit, was born on May 12, 1812, in Highgate, England, a suburb of London, and began his career as an artist at age fifteen. His father, a stockbroker of Danish origin, was sent to debtor’s prison when Lear was thirteen, forcing the young Lear to earn a living. Lear quickly gained recognition for his work and, in 1832, was hired by the London Zoological Society to execute illustrations of birds. In the same year, the Earl of Derby invited him to reside at his estate; Lear ended up staying until 1836.

Lear’s first book of poems, A Book of Nonsense (Routledge, Warne, and Routledge, 1846) was composed for the grandchildren of the Derby household. Around 1836, Lear decided to devote himself exclusively to landscape painting, although he continued to compose light verse. Between 1837 and 1847, Lear traveled extensively throughout Europe and Asia.

After his return to England, Lear’s travel journals were published in several volumes as The Illustrated Travels of a Landscape Painter. Popular and respected in his day, Lear’s travel books have largely been ignored in the twentieth century. Rather, Lear is remembered for his humorous poems, such as “The Owl and the Pussycat,” and as the creator of the form and meter of the modern limerick. Like his younger peer Lewis Carroll, Lear wrote many deeply fantastical poems about imaginary creatures, such as “The Dong with the Luminous Nose.” His books of humorous verse also include Nonsense Songs, Stories, Botany, and Alphabets (James R. Osgood and Company, 1871) and Laughable Lyrics: a Fourth Book of Nonsense Poems, Songs, Botany, Music, &c.(Robert John Bush, 1877).

Edward Lear died on January 29, 1888, in San Remo, Italy, at the age of seventy-six.

-bio via Academy of American Poets



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to The Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios.

0:08.4

I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Friday, February 21st, 2025.

0:14.1

Today's poem is by Edward Lear, and it's called The Owl and the Pussy Cat.

0:20.5

This is often grouped among Lear's nonsense poems,

0:27.2

which you can decide how just that is,

0:31.3

but it has lived a rich literary life beyond its original composition.

0:36.1

It is the birthplace of the word runcible coined by Lear for use

0:43.4

in this poem. He was a little bit like Dr. Seuss in that he was enamored of the sounds of words

0:50.0

and didn't care so much what they meant. In fact, after its appearance here, Lear uses it in several other poems

0:56.1

without really committing to any particular meaning.

1:00.3

In this poem, it's used to modify a spoon.

1:04.0

And after the publication of this poem,

1:07.4

someone was inspired to create a spoon and call it Runcible. And the Runcible Spoon is now

1:13.5

an actual entity. The precursor to the spork, a spoon with several long pokey tines on the end.

1:20.8

So there's the unlikely fruit that this poem has borne. As I said before, it's often a classed as a nonsense poem. Lear himself

1:31.8

is classed as a kind of nonsense poet. But really, I think he is a kind of forerunner to someone like

1:39.3

Dr. Seuss. His delight in words and the sounds of words, even nonsense words, as very appealing to children

1:46.2

who are really still trying to get their sea legs as far as the English language is concerned

1:51.9

and have that childlike joy and wonder coupled with an imperfect grasp of how the language

1:58.0

is supposed to sound.

1:59.1

And so funny, odd sounding words and lines are particularly appealing to them.

2:05.3

Here's the poem.

...

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