Wednesday 28 May 2008

Michael Llewelyn Davies, 1900 - 1921, Number Four of J.M. Barrie's Five Lost Boys


4 Comments:

At 1 March 2009 at 23:05 , Blogger lizmom said...

I just finished watching the movie "Neverland" and was curious about the Davies boys. I eventually came to your website. I have enjoyed very much reading your entries. Thank you for posting them. You have quite a fascinating family history. Your willingness to share information is much appreciated. I wish you every success.
Meg Smith (Springfield, Il)

 
At 1 March 2009 at 23:08 , Blogger lizmom said...

I forgot to leave my e-mail address. I have now checked the box that makes it available to you. Thanks again.
Meg Smith

 
At 18 March 2009 at 16:24 , Blogger Henri Llewelyn Davies said...

Hi Meg,

Very many thanks for your comments - I tried to get onto your blog - lizmom - and, as you mentioned, email address, but the system wouldn't let me get any sort of view of your blog at all. Nor has it let me get onto my own blog, most of the time, for ages - some bug... Part of the reason I didn't write anything on the blog for ages and have now taken down a lot of it. Who knows if you'll ever see this, but thank you for writing anyway.

 
At 4 May 2009 at 14:42 , Blogger Swan said...

I'm a teacher at the high school level (9th-12th grade)in Texas. I've just shown the movie "Neverland" to my students. I try to stretch their minds to wonder why? and how? about a myriad of things...in this case about the story Peter Pan. Who wrote it, why, and how? I am both amazed and honored to have found this blog and to be able to share with you that your family will continue to entertain and hopefully inspire more young people though perhaps in ways not imagined at the time of the writing of Peter Pan. By finding you and emailing you, I can illustrate to them that there are often real people behind stories. Hopefully, this concept wakes up their curiosity about the bigger world around them. Too often young people become jaded too soon and lose their spirit of adventure. Earlier this year we saw the movie La Bamba and were able to contact some of the grown children of the main characters. The son of "The Big Booper," J.P. Richards, called us and talked about his love of the music of the 1950's. The magic of his call was that it made the story on the screen more real. Finding a descendent of the Llewelyn Davies boys online will amaze them. Once again, I will have a fun story for them tomorrow...."Guess who I emailed last night!" They will ask back, "Did you get an answer?"
Swan (Conroe, Texas)

 

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