![]() ![]() So to make amends to his God, and to deflate the Kabbalistic origin of the first work, he formulated something with much the same structure and tone, but without the magic. But he was deeply disturbed in the years that followed as the Church and what came to be called spiritualism diverged. Fortunately for him, it was characterized as the sort of nonsense genre created by Edward Lear. In that original, he had dabbled in the mix of logic and mysticism that he thought respectable. In 1871, A deacon logician at Oxford published a sequel to his surprisingly popular children's story. ![]()
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