Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Cautionary Tales for Children
Cautionary Tales for Children | Hilaire Belloc
7 posts | 5 read | 13 to read
One of Hilaire Belloc's most famous works, "Cautionary Tales for Children" satirizes a genre of admonitory children's literature popular in England in the late 18th and 19th centuries. The seven stories contained in this work are macabre parodies of childhood lessons, and will entertain more sophisticated readers who can appreciate these tales of disproportionate punishment. Presented in a classic picture book style, illustrators have captured the foibles of children like Jim, who let go of his nurse's hand and was eaten by a lion; Matilda, who told lies, and was burned to death; and Henry King who swallowed string. The consequences range from naughty children being whimsically eaten by lions, to stern reprimands for a boy who fires a loaded gun at his sister. Originally written nearly a century ago, Belloc's sprightly verses are a quick and cathartic read for teenagers, and reflect a trend of literature that is still popular today.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
EadieB
Cautionary Tales for Children | Edward Gorey, Hilaire Belloc
post image
Eggs I‘m always a fan of the witty and irreverent🤗🤗📖❤️ 5y
44 likes1 comment
blurb
Waynegjr
Cautionary Tales for Children | Edward Gorey, Hilaire Belloc
post image

36 likes3 stack adds
blurb
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
post image

Fun Fact: 3rd graders love the cautionary poetry of Hilaire Belloc, first published in 1907. #PoetryWednesday

33 likes1 stack add
blurb
Centique
post image

#rocktober #littlelies

Whenever I think of lies, Matilda comes first to mind. I loved this poem with the glee only 8 year olds can have about characters meeting a dreadful end! So I memorised it and performed it as often as anyone would let me. 😂 My poor parents!

I hope it‘s not too tiny to read!

Cinfhen I‘m impressed if you memorized all that at 8 🙌🏻💕 7y
Centique @Cinfhen might have been a bit older when I memorised it but I was certainly painful to listen to 😜 7y
BarbaraBB What a fantastic poem and how impressive that you memorized it. Roald Dahl is the best! 7y
See All 7 Comments
Reggie That ending....I think would have terrified me as a kid. I‘m impressed you memorized it. 7y
Centique @BarbaraBB thanks! It‘s actually by Hillaire Belloc. My mother had his books and no Roald Dahl at all. I didn‘t read Dahl‘s Matilda until this year but I loved it! 7y
Centique @Reggie that‘s so interesting! And look at you now reading the really scary stuff and me being a scaredy cat! 😂🤣 I always liked memorising poems in case there was an emergency and I was suddenly needed on stage or something. Ridiculous child! 😜 7y
BarbaraBB Oh really? I read Matilda and thought this poem would be by Dahl as well. Still great though! 7y
47 likes7 comments
review
Bradleygirl
post image
Pickpick

#blissfulsigh #ghastly This was as ridiculous and amazing as anticipated.

blurb
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
post image

3rd grade already read and loved "Jim, Who Ran Away from Nurse, and Was Eaten by a Lion". The cautionary poems of Hilaire Belloc walk that perfect line between kid friendly and gruesome, and they're great for teaching Author's Purpose. #PoetryWednesday

23 likes1 stack add
review
kellsbells
post image
Pickpick

Delightfully grim poems perfectly matched with Edward Gorey's illustrations. #Gorey4Ever