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Life
McKenna, Irish Literature (1978), cites Ariadne, a Metrical Drama (1872); Rhampsinitus, An Opera Bouffe (Dublin 1873); The Moderate Man and Other Verse (1888); Atalanta (1900); also prose, Ballymuckbeg, a political satire (1892); Waggish Tales (Dublin 1897). See Obituary, Irish Book Lover, Vol. 11 (1919). SEE also Cheryl Herr, Joyces Anatomy of Culture Urbana Press, Illinois 1986).
Donald Gifford, Ulysses Annotated (Cal. UP 1988), under Turko the Terrible, viz., Ulysses 1.258; 1.260-62; 4.89; 15.4612; remarks that the pantomime, adapted from a London panto of the same title by William Brough, one by Brougham, was an instant success at the Gaiety in 1873, and updated and revived throughout the closing decades of the century. Its frame as essentialy a world of fairy-tale metamorphioses and transformations - as King Turko (Royce) and his court enjoyed the magic potential of the Fairy Rose ([Gifford, p.18). Hyland Books (Oct. 1995) lists Dublin Doggerels, 1st edn. (1877).
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