Jellicle
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The Jellicle cats, or simply the Jellicles, are a type of feline mentioned in T. S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats.
Introduced in his poem Song of the Jellicles, they were originally depicted by Eliot as common black-and-white cats whose daytime nature is peaceful, pleasant and restive — but who possess an active love of nightlife. Specifically, Eliot mentions that they like to gather at an event called the "Jellicle Ball".
They are featured in Cats, Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical adaptation of Eliot's work, in which a subplot surrounds the disappearance of the Jellcile patriarch Old Deuteronomy. (In contrast with the poem, Webber's Jellicles possess many kinds of coat-patterns, diverse personalities and individual talents.)
The name jellicle comes from a previously unpublished poem by Eliot entitled "Pollicle Dogs and Jellicle Cats", where jellicle cats is a corruption of dear little cats and pollicle dogs of poor little dogs. [1]
[edit] References
- ^ [1] Milner, Catherine. Now Lloyd Webber puts Eliot's dogs to music. The Sunday Telegraph (London, England). January 20, 2002: 6.