Abstract

“… that peculiar love of nonsense so characteristic of the English genius. It springs only from genius as seen in the Shakespearean Fools, Lear's Book of Nonsense, Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland, and the other two inspired works of that rather prim and starchy don, who vainly tried to infuse elementary mathematics into Christ Church undergraduates.” — Henry Wood Nevinson, Rough Islanders, George Routledge and Sons, Ltd., London, 1931, pp. 227.

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