![]() Playful windows and gatefolds imply lighthearted fun, while the troubling content could shock the uninitiated. Jim may be undisciplined, but his demise seems undeserved. Others will be aghast at the witty but grisly sequence of the attack and the sight of Jim's severed head. ![]() Publication date 1907 Publisher London : E. He prefers breaking rules, and when Jim visits the zoo, the text carps, "hildren never are allowed/ To leave their Nurses in a Crowd." Jim pays no heed, and while his distracted sitter flirts with a dandy, he breaks free: "He hadn't gone a yard when-BANG!/ With open Jaws, a Lion sprang." Belloc and Grey (Traction Man Is Here!) work in the British tradition of dark comedy, and some readers might take it in stride as a lion pops from the spread and devours the terrified Jim ("beginning at his feet"). Cautionary tales for children : designed for the admonition of children between the ages of eight and fourteen years Bookreader Item Preview. ![]() ![]() In this macabre rhyme from Belloc's Cautionary Tales for Children (1907), re-engineered with interactive elements, Jim enjoys nice meals and toys, but his eyelids droop with boredom. Schoolboy Jim is a cousin to the ill-fated urchins of Struwwelpeter and The Gashlycrumb Tinies. Hilaire Belloc (27 July 1870 16 July 1953) was a Franco-English writer and historian of the early twentieth. ![]()
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