Article 5ESD4 Off with their heads! Why are Lewis Carroll misquotes so common online?

Off with their heads! Why are Lewis Carroll misquotes so common online?

by
Alison Flood
from World news | The Guardian on (#5ESD4)

Following a recent similar Royal Mint slip-up, the Westminster Collection's new 50p coins have sent Carroll experts down an internet rabbit hole to source false quotes

As Oscar Wilde famously never said, don't trust Goodreads as a source for quotes. A month after the Royal Mint released a new 2 coin to celebrate HG Wells with an inaccurate quotation (and a tripod with four legs), Alice in Wonderland author Lewis Carroll is the latest to be immortalised in currency through words they never wrote.

A collection of 50p coins celebrating 150 years since the conclusion of Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland tales has been released by the Westminster Collection, who described them as featuring the characters' best known quotes". Unfortunately, eagle-eyed experts spotted that, though some of the lines feature on Goodreads and numerous inspirational posters, they were never penned by Carroll.

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