2016 January 8

Was finally able to go to my primary care physician’s office and make an appointment because I’d finally been seen by the urologist yesterday. Passing one South Asian supermarket to visit another, I nearly collided with an attractive AB worker who was working outside the store.

Wiki activity

(“Orphant Annie,” Public Domain Super Heroes) {Reworked entire article after discovering earlier (1882) first appearance of the character.}

(“Orphant Annie,” Public Domain Super Heroes) {Added information about different versions of the 1885 poem.}

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(“Man in the Moon,” Public Domain Super Heroes) {Added information on the expanded version of James Whitcomb Riley’s 1883 poem.}

Published with additional stanzas in 1890 in Rhymes of Childhood. (Internet Archive)

(“Lassie,” Public Domain Super Heroes) {Created article for 1859 character Lassie.}

A public‐domain illustration of a collie, not specifically Lassie. | Lassie | Round the Sofa, vol. 2 (1859) | Sampson Low, Son & Co. | Elizabeth Gaskell

Origin

Lassie is the pet collie of British teenager Gregory. She is described as “ill‐favored” and “an ugly enough brute, with a white, ill‐looking face.” Gregory’s stepfather, William Preston, and half‐brother often mistreat Lassie by swatting and kicking her and so she has “apprehensive eyes” when approaching them and is portrayed as “crouching underneath [a] chair for fear of a kick or a blow.” However, when Gregory’s half‐brother gets lost in a brutal snowstorm, it is Gregory and Lassie who heroically come to the rescue. Gregory instructs him to take partial shelter under some rock, covers him with his own doffed coat, and then lies next to him to protect him from the elements. In the meantime, Lassie is sent racing homeward wearing the half‐brother’s identifiable patterned handkerchief around her neck. All the workers on their farm follow Lassie back and rescue the half‐brother, but Gregory does not survive.

Public domain literary appearance

“The Half‐Brothers,” in Round the Sofa, vol. 2, by Elizabeth Gaskell, London: Sampson Low, Son & Co., 1859. (Internet Archive)

Note

The 1859 Lassie character should not be confused with the 1938 Lassie character, also a heroic collie, that first appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. The later Lassie character, star of books, radio, movies and television, is not in the public domain.

(“Lassie,” Public Domain Super Heroes) {Added some internal links.}

See also … | Lad | Wilma West (a heroine with a collie)