![The Public Domain Review](/static/pdr-logo_2x-a9aa17abb46a7af84cd791867a6031ec.png)
X is for...
In 1895, the physicist Wilhelm Röntgen discovered X-rays, a groundbreaking moment in medical history which would lead to myriad improvements to people’s health. Perhaps one overlooked benefit though was in relation to mental health, specifically of those tasked with making alphabet books. How did they represent the letter X before X-rays? Xylophones, which have also been a popular choice through the twentieth century to today, are mysteriously absent in older works. Perhaps explained by the fact that, although around for millennia, the instrument didn't gain popularity in the West (with the name of “xylophone”) until the early twentieth century. So to what solutions did our industrious publishers turn?
As a figure of note, you might hope it would be your epic accomplishments that would lead to your name being uttered by students for millennia to come — not for the coincidence of the tricky letter with which your name began. But so it was for the Persian king Xerxes, who in the field of nineteenth-century alphabet books achieved what he could never quite achieve in fifth-century-BC Athens: domination. Though there was perhaps some solace in that he was likely the very first historical figure of which many a child would learn.
The Lu Lu Alphabet (1867) by Pamela Atkins Colman — Source.
The Comic Alphabet (1847) by Percy Cruikshank — Source.
Footsteps on the Road to Learning, or, The Alphabet in Rhyme (1849) — Source.
Nonsense Books (1888) by Edward Lear — Source.
The "Union" Alphabet for Children (1862) — Source.
Comic Alphabet (1836) by George Cruikshank — Source.
The Royal Picture Alphabet (ca. 1855) by John Leighton — Source.
An Alphabet Of Saints (1906) by by Robert Hugh Benson and Reginald Balfour — Source.
The Royal Alphabet (1808) — Source.
The Child's Instructor, or Picture Alphabet (1815) by Thomas Bewick — Source.
An Alphabet of Animals (1865) by A Lady — Source.
The Alphabet of Flowers and Fruit (1856) — Source.
Theodore Howard’s ABC (ca. 1880) by Theodore Howard — Source.
French abécédaire makers could lean on a curious fact relating to the prestigious École polytechnique, a grande école specialising in science and engineering — it was also known by the letter “X”. This distinctive moniker has been around since the mid-1800s, stemming from the crossed cannons depicted in its original emblem, and perhaps also a symbol of the school's scientific bent, the use of the variable x commonplace in scientific and mathematical equations.
Léon Vanier and Henri de Sta, Armée française: nouvel alphabet militaire (1883) — Source.
Jules Levy, Alphabet des bons exemples (1890) — Source.
Child's New Alphabet (1824) — Source.
Beasts, Birds and Fishes: An Alphabet for Boys & Girls (1855) by Charles H. Bennett — Source.
L’alphabet du soldat (ca. 1916) — Source.
I Will Read: Methodic and Fun Alphabet by a Dad (1926) by Robert Salles— Source.
The Cubies’ ABC (1913) by Mary Mills Lyall and Earl Harvey Lyall — Source.
An Alphabet of Indians (1900) by Emery Leverett Williams — Source.
The conveniently named XX ale makes a few appearances too. No one’s totally sure from where this unusual name stems, but possibly it was originally more akin to a crucifix and marked on the barrels by the monks to indicate that — swearing on oath — the batch was sound. It may also just simply have been an indicator of strength.
Linen ABC book; First Steps (1884) by Howard Foster — Source.
Sports Alphabet (ca. 1840) by George Cruikshank — Source.
The A B C of Drag Hunting (1917) by Grace Clarke Newton — Source.
The Absurd A.B.C (1874) by Walter Crane — Source.
The Alphabet (1831), by Caroline Lyon — Source.
Hiawatha Alphabet (1910) by Florence Holbrook — Source.
The Alphabet of Virtues (1856) — Source.
André Hellé, Alphabet de la Grande Guerre, 1914-1916 : pour les enfants de nos soldats (1917) — Source.
The Assembled Alphabet, or, Acceptance of A’s invitation (1813) by R. R and Charles Knight — Source.
Dr. Crook's Wine of Tar Alphabet (1883) — Source.
A Apple Pie (ca. 1886) by Kate Greenaway — Source.
Alphabet of Objects (ca. 1865) — Source.
Funny Alphabet (ca, 1860) by Edward P. Cogger — Source.
A Moral Alphabet (1899) by Hilaire Belloc and Basil Temple Blackwood — Source.
The Nursery Present, or, Alphabet of Pictures (1830) — Source.
Jun 12, 2019