Encyclopedia

Lear, Edward

Lear, Edward, 181288, English humorist and artist. At 19 he was employed as a draftsman by the London Zoological Society; the paintings of birds that he produced for The Family of the Psittacidae (1832) were among the first color plates of animals ever published in Great Britain. Lear is best known for his illustrated limericks and nonsense verse, which were collected in A Book of Nonsense (1846), Nonsense Songs (1871), Laughable Lyrics (1877), and others. He wrote several illustrated journals of his travels through S Europe.

See biographies by A. Davidson (1938, repr. 1968), V. Noakes (1969), and P. Levi (1995); studies by V. Dehejia (1989) and J. Wullschläger (1995).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on Edward Lear from Fact Monster:

See more Encyclopedia articles on: English Literature, 19th cent.: Biographies

© 2000–2008 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster