Alice PDF
Alice PDF
Alice PDF
Contents
Alice in Wonderland Book Notes.................................................................................................. 1
Contents...................................................................................................................................... 2
Author/Context............................................................................................................................. 3
Plot Summary.............................................................................................................................. 5
Major Characters......................................................................................................................... 7
Objects/Places........................................................................................................................... 10
Quotes....................................................................................................................................... 12
Topic Tracking: Identity.............................................................................................................. 16
Topic Tracking: Knowledge........................................................................................................ 18
Topic Tracking: Meaning............................................................................................................ 20
Introductory Poem...................................................................................................................... 22
Chapter 1: Down the Rabbit Hole.............................................................................................. 23
Chapter 2: The Pool of Tears..................................................................................................... 25
Chapter 3: A Caucus-Race and a Long Tale.............................................................................. 27
Chapter 4: The Rabbit Sends in Little Bill................................................................................... 28
Chapter 5: Advice from a Caterpillar.......................................................................................... 30
Chapter 6: Pig and Pepper......................................................................................................... 32
Chapter 7: A Mad Tea-Party....................................................................................................... 34
Chapter 8: The Queen's Croquet-Ground.................................................................................. 36
Chapter 9: The Mock Turtle's Story............................................................................................ 38
Chapter 10: The Lobster Quadrille............................................................................................. 40
Chapter 11: Who Stole the Tarts?.............................................................................................. 42
Chapter 12: Alice's Evidence..................................................................................................... 44
Author/Context
The man the world would come to know as Lewis Carroll was born Charles Lutwidge
Dodgson on January 27, 1832, in Daresbury, in England's Cheshire county. His parents
were from good North Country families, and his father was a clergyman. He was the
third of eleven children, and the eldest son. During his childhood, Lewis Carroll
entertained his brothers and sisters with games he invented and with stories and verses
from family magazines that he edited, illustrated, and largely wrote.
At the age of 12, Carroll went off to school. It seems that he was a hardworking student
but he did not enjoy life at boarding school. Carroll was quite shy and reclusive, in part
due to a stammer. He distinguished himself in mathematics, and went on to study at
Oxford's Christ Church at the age of 19. The Oxford where Carroll spent his college
years was not quite the staid institution of previous generations. Oxford in Carroll's time
was the site of heated debates over such issues as church reform and Charles Darwin's
Origin of Species. Carroll himself tended to be orthodox and conservative in his beliefs.
After taking his degree, Carroll became a teacher of mathematics at Christ Church,
where he lived until almost the end of his life. At Oxford, Carroll made a name for
himself as a freelance humorist, parodist, and versifier. His pseudonym first appeared in
1856. (The name Lewis Carroll was derived from a Latinized version of Charles
Lutwidge-Carolus Ludovic.)
Though he did well at writing, Carroll was not well suited for the teaching profession. He
disliked lecturing both undergraduates and boarding school boys. In the classroom, he
had a very difficult time keeping order. Carroll hated disorder and tried to keep his own
life in meticulous order; for example, he kept a detailed log of every letter he wrote and
received during his adult life. Carroll's bad experiences at teaching may have
contributed in part for his distaste of boys. He once wrote, "I am fond of little children
(except boys)."
Some of the little children he knew and loved best at Oxford were the daughters of
Henry Liddell, the dean of Christ Church. One of these daughters, Alice Liddell, was the
first in a long line of what Carroll called his "child-friends." In an age in which young girls
were sentimentalized as emblems of purity and beauty, Carroll regarded little girls with
great adoration, almost worship.
On a boating outing in July of 1862 with a teaching colleague and three of the Liddell
children, Carroll told a story so entertaining that Alice, for whom the story's heroine was
named, begged Carroll to write it down for her. Carroll agreed, and he later expanded
upon the tale to create Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, which was illustrated by John
Tenniel and published in 1865.
Carroll wrote other books, such as the nonsense poem The Hunting of the Snark and
the didactic children's tale Sylvie and Bruno, as well as books and pamphlets on
mathematical theory which are almost forgotten today. He is best known for Alice and its
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sequel, Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There. These two books
broke from traditional children's literature, which was expected to be realistic,
educational, and above all, moral. In most children's books before Alice, authors
condescended toward their young readers and did not provide much opportunity for a
child to use his or her imagination. Carroll encouraged imagination and was quite
determined that Alice's Adventure's in Wonderland would not have a moral purpose.
In addition to his professions of author and mathematician, Carroll was a talented
amateur photographer and an ordained deacon of the Church of England. He was a
celebrated author in his lifetime, but as he grew older he avoided attention and
preferred that people not realize that Charles Dodgson the private person was Lewis
Carroll the author. He died on January 14, 1898 in Guildford, England.
Bibliography
Carroll, Lewis. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. New York: Dover Publications, Inc.,
1993.
Cohen, Morton N. Lewis Carroll and Alice: 1832-1982. New York: The Peirpont Morgan
Library, 1982.
Gardner, Martin, ed. The Annotated Alice. New York: Bramhall House, 1960.
Kelly, Richard. Lewis Carroll. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1977.
Pudney, John. Lewis Carroll and His World. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1976.
Taylor, Alexander L. The White Knight. London: Oliver & Boyd, 1952.
Plot Summary
Alice is very bored and sleepy while sitting with her older sister outside, until she sees a
White Rabbit looking at his watch and talking to himself. She follows the Rabbit down a
very deep rabbit hole and ends up far beneath the ground in a hall with a tiny locked
door that leads to a beautiful garden. She eats and drinks things that make her change
in size, but she is still unable to get through the door into the garden.
When she becomes huge, she cries in frustration and when she shrinks, she is small
enough to swim around in a pool made of her own tears. In the pool, she encounters
many creatures, including a Mouse. The creatures and Alice manage to get out of the
pool and dry off, but Alice is soon left alone.
Alice finds the Rabbit's house and grows huge after drinking a strange liquid. She
terrifies the rabbit and his neighbors and grows very small again after fanning herself.
Alice then comes across a Caterpillar smoking a hookah. He irritates Alice and asks her
to recite poetry, which she cannot do properly. The Caterpillar informs Alice that eating
one side of the mushroom he is sitting on will make her larger but eating the other side
will make her smaller. Alice is still trying to become the right size to get into the garden.
She comes to a house in the woods, where a Duchess, her ugly baby, her hostile Cook,
and her Cheshire Cat reside. The kitchen is full of pepper and dishes which were hurled
in anger. Alice tries to save the baby from this environment, but the baby soon turns into
a pig, so she is forced to let it go. The Cheshire Cat appears, grins at Alice, and
recommends that she visit the Mad Hatter or the March Hare. The Cheshire Cat
vanishes and reappears suddenly. Finally, he disappears gradually so only his grin
remains.
Alice goes to the March Hare's house, where she finds a tea-party going on. Alice sits
down at the table with the Hare, the Hatter, and the Dormouse. She finds them rude and
quickly becomes annoyed with them, so she leaves. She decides to go through a door
in a tree and again finds herself in the room with the tiny door leading to the garden.
This time she manages to get into the garden.
In the garden she comes across three gardeners painting white roses red. They are
afraid of being executed by the Queen of Hearts. Suddenly the Queen and her
entourage of playing cards appear. The Queen invites Alice to play croquet, and Alice
joins a very strange game. She soon learns that the Duchess is to be executed. The
Cheshire Cat's head appears above the ground and causes quite a stir.
The Duchess is brought from prison to settle matters and begins talking with Alice about
the moral of everything. The Queen then decides Alice should go meet the Mock Turtle;
she is escorted by the Gryphon. Alice learns the Mock Turtle's history and sees a dance
called the Lobster Quadrille. Alice again tries to recite poetry with little success.
The Gryphon whisks Alice back to court when they hear that the trial is beginning. The
Knave of Hearts is on trial for stealing the Queen's tarts. Alice is excited to be in court
and to hear the testimony of the Hatter and the Cook. Alice herself is called to testify
after she has inexplicably grown larger again. Alice is impertinent and the King orders
her to leave the court, but she refuses. She is outraged by the unfairness of the court's
proceedings and provokes the Queen to order her execution. Alice tells the court that
they're nothing but a pack of cards, and they rise up and attack her.
At this point, Alice realizes that she has been asleep for a long time in her sister's lap.
She tells her sister about the events of her marvelous dream and then goes in to tea.
Her sister is captivated by the dream and imagines Alice as a grown woman who will
still have a child-like sense of wonder.
Major Characters
Alice: A little girl, probably 7 years old. She has an amazing dream about changing size
and meeting various strange creatures underground in Wonderland. Alice is curious,
intelligent, trusting, and ready to accept the impossible. She can be quite bold;
additionally, she tends to take herself seriously and sometimes has a rather quick
temper.
White Rabbit: A rabbit wearing a waistcoat and pocket watch scampers past Alice at
the beginning of the story. Alice follows the White Rabbit into Wonderland. The Rabbit is
rather timid and nervous. He meets Alice again at his house and at the Queen's
croquet-grounds where he serves as the herald at the trial of the Knave of Hearts.
Caterpillar : A large, blue, hookah-smoking caterpillar. He treats Alice with contempt
and makes her angry, but he helps her to grow to the height she wants to be by telling
her about the special properties of the mushroom he sits on.
Duchess: Hideously ugly in the illustrations by John Tenniel, the Duchess is hostile
when she first meets Alice, but quite pleasant later on. The Duchess believes that
everything has a moral, and she speaks in moralizing clichs.
Cheshire Cat: The Duchess' perpetually grinning cat. The cat speaks to Alice, but not
to anyone else in the story. He informs Alice that he is insane. The Cheshire Cat can
disappear and reappear suddenly, he can disappear very slowly, and he can appear as
just a floating head. 'Grins like a Cheshire cat' was a common saying in England when
Alice was written.
March Hare: A hare who lives in a house shaped like a hare's head. The Mad Tea Party
is held on his lawn. At the trial, he contradicts the evidence presented by the Mad
Hatter. At the time Alice meets him, he has been mad for two months. Alice doesn't care
for him. In Carroll's time, 'Mad as a march hare' was a common phrase alluding to the
frenzied behavior of hares in March, their mating season.
Mad Hatter: A hatter who continually has tea with the March Hare and the Dormouse
because for him it is always six o'clock (tea-time). He quickly offends Alice. Two months
before meeting Alice, he gave a concert for the Queen that ended badly. He is called as
a witness at the trial of the Knave of Hearts. 'Mad as a hatter' was also a common
expression in 19th century England, probably because many hatters did go mad from
exposure to mercury, which was used in the process of making felt hats.
Queen of Hearts: The savage, domineering queen whose realm includes the garden.
She is literally a playing card. She constantly issues orders to behead someone or
other. Alice doesn't like her at all. The Queen sends Alice to meet the Gryphon and the
Mock Turtle. At the trial, the Knave of Hearts is accused of stealing her tarts.
Mock Turtle: The Mock Turtle is always sad and depressed, and usually he's sighing or
sobbing. He used to be a real turtle, but now he's a mock turtle, which, as the Queen
explains, is what mock turtle soup is made from. (Mock turtle soup is imitation green
turtle soup and is often made from veal-hence John Tenniel's illustration of a turtle with
a calf's head and hooves.) The Mock Turtle loves to reminisce about his schooldays,
and he teaches Alice the Lobster Quadrille.
Gryphon: A gryphon is a mythical monster, part lion and part eagle. This Gryphon takes
Alice to meet the Mock Turtle and then ushers her off to the trial. He is amused by the
illusions of other characters. He speaks in a Cockney accent and, like many of the other
characters, he loves puns. Like the Mock Turtle, he is nostalgic about his days at school
and he joins in the Lobster Quadrille.
Minor Characters
Alice's sister: Alice's older sister, who reads a book without illustrations or dialogue
while sitting on the bank with Alice at the beginning of the book. Alice falls asleep with
her head in her sister's lap and has the dream about Wonderland. When Alice awakes,
she tells her sister about her dream, and the book closes with her sister daydreaming
about what Alice will be like as a grown-up.
Dinah: Alice's cat. Dinah never actually appears in Alice, but as Alice has her
adventures she often misses Dinah or talks about her.
Mouse: A French mouse who falls into the pool of Alice's tears. He is easily offended.
He tells Alice his tale, which appears in Alice printed in the shape of a tail.
Mary Ann: The White Rabbit's maid. She never actually appears, but at one point the
Rabbit mistakes Alice for Mary Ann.
Bill the Lizard: A hapless, somewhat stupid lizard. He first appears in the story when
Alice, having grown huge, is blocking all of the entrances to the White Rabbit's housethe Rabbit sends Bill down the chimney, but Alice kicks him back out. Bill is also one of
the jurors at the trial, where Alice takes away his chalk and accidentally stuffs him
upside-down into the jury box.
Pig-Baby: The Duchess' ugly, squealing baby boy. Alice takes him from the Duchess to
take care of him, but she lets him go when he actually turns into a pig before her eyes.
Cook: The Duchess' belligerent, violent cook. When Alice first sees her, she is making
soup and using so much pepper that it fills the air of the Duchess' house. The cook is a
hostile witness at the Knave's trial.
Dormouse: A guest at the Mad Tea Party. The Dormouse is always either asleep or
falling asleep, despite the efforts of the Mad Hatter and the March Hare to keep him
awake. The Dormouse tells Alice a story about three little girls in a treacle well. He
appears again at the trial of the Knave of Hearts. (Dormice are nocturnal, hibernating
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rodents found in Europe and Britain. The word 'dormouse' is derived from the Latin
dormire, which means 'to sleep.')
Three Gardeners: Three playing cards in the service of the Queen of Hearts. They are
spades-numbers Two, Five, and Seven-who paint white roses red in an effort to cover
up their mistake of planting the wrong kind of rose tree. They are placed under a
sentence of execution by the Queen.
King of Hearts: Kinder than his wife, the King of Hearts quietly pardons everyone who
has been sentenced to death when the Queen leaves the croquet grounds. He serves
as the judge at the Knave's trial, although he doesn't seem to know much about court
proceedings.
Knave of Hearts: In the King and Queen's court processions, the Knave serves as a
crown-bearer. He is tried for stealing tarts made by the Queen. Despite reasonable
efforts to prove himself innocent, the King and the court are determined to pronounce
him guilty.
Objects/Places
Rabbit hole: The entrance through which Alice follows the White Rabbit into
Wonderland. The hole is initially straight like a tunnel, but then it suddenly opens into a
shaft that goes straight down into the earth like a well. The sides of the well are lined
with cupboards, bookshelves, and pictures.
Golden key: The key to the tiny door. Alice finds the key on a little table made of glass.
She accidentally leaves the key on the table when she becomes tiny, so she is not able
to reach it to unlock the door and enter the garden. Later in the story, when she finally
manages to enter the garden, she does so by using this key.
Tiny door: The entranceway to the garden, the tiny door is located behind a curtain in a
long hallway filled with doors. It is about 15 inches high and can only be opened with the
tiny golden key.
Garden: The most beautiful garden imaginable. Alice sees this garden, with bright
flowers and fountains, through the tiny door soon after she arrives in Wonderland. She
longs to get out into the garden, but she is unable to do so until after she leaves the
Mad Tea Party. The garden is part of the realm of the King and Queen of Hearts.
Bottle marked DRINK ME: This little bottle with a paper label appears on the little glass
table while Alice is trying to get through the tiny door. The bottle is not marked 'Poison,'
so Alice drinks its contents, which make her shrink to a height of 10 inches.
Cake marked EAT ME: Alice finds this tiny cake in a glass box underneath the table
made of glass. On the cake, 'EAT ME' is spelled out using currants. Eating the cake
makes Alice grow to a height of more than 9 feet.
Fan: The White Rabbit drops his gloves and his fan in terror when he sees 9-foot-tall
Alice. When Alice absent-mindedly fans herself with the Rabbit's fan, she quickly shrinks
to a tiny size.
Little bottle : Alice finds this bottle in the White Rabbit's house. It has no label at all;
however, when Alice drinks it, she immediately grows almost too large to fit in the
house.
Little cakes: When Alice fills up the Rabbit's house and prevents him from entering, he
and his neighbors throw pebbles at her. When the pebbles hit the floor, they turn into
little cakes. Alice eats one and shrinks to a height of 3 inches.
Mushroom: The Caterpillar's seat. The Caterpillar instructs Alice that eating one side of
the mushroom will make her larger and that the other will make her smaller. Alice grabs
a handful from each side, and throughout the rest of her adventures, whenever she
wants to grow or shrink to a particular size, she nibbles at the appropriate handful of
mushroom.
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Mad Hatter's Watch: A pocket-watch that tells the day of the month. It runs two days
behind, even though the March Hare tried to fix it with butter. The Hatter explains that
Time controls all clocks, and because he and Time quarreled, in the Hatter's world it is
always tea-time.
Door in tree: Alice sees a tree in the woods with a little door in it. She goes through the
door and finds herself in the hallway with the entrance to the garden, which she is finally
able to enter.
Rose tree: A tree with white roses that the Queen's gardeners paint red with the hope of
tricking her into believing that the tree is the red-rose tree that she ordered.
Croquet ground and equipment: The strangest croquet ground and croquet
equipment Alice has ever seen. The ground is full of ridges and furrows. The croquet
balls are living hedgehogs who have no desire to be used as balls, and the croquet
mallets are equally uncooperative live flamingoes. Some of the playing cards, the
soldiers, bend over to form the wickets.
Lobster Quadrille: A song and a dance that the Mock Turtle and the Gryphon learned
when they were young. The dance goes something like this: two lines are formed on the
seashore, and each dancer, with a lobster for a partner, goes through some steps; then
everyone throws the lobsters as far out to sea as possible, swims after them, and
returns to land with a new lobster.
Letter : The evidence presented in the trial of the Knave. It is not addressed to anyone,
is not in the Knave's handwriting, and is actually a set of nonsense verses. The King
and Queen of Hearts believe that the Knave is guilty based upon this evidence.
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Quotes
Quote 1: "'what is the use of a book,' thought Alice, 'without pictures or conversations?'"
Chapter 1, pg. 1
Quote 2: "'Oh my ears and whiskers, how late it's getting!'" Chapter 1, pg. 3
Quote 4: "'I wonder if I've been changed in the night? Let me think: was I the same
when I got up this morning? I almost think I can remember feeling a little different. But if
I'm not the same, the next question is 'Who in the world am I?' Ah, that's the great
puzzle!'" Chapter 2, pg. 8
Quote 6: "'Speak English!' said the Eaglet. 'I don't know the meaning of half those long
words, and I don't believe you do either!'" Chapter 3, pg. 14
Quote 7: "'I can't explain myself, I'm afraid, Sir,' said Alice, 'because I'm not myself you
see.'" Chapter 5, pg. 28
Quote 8: "'You are old, Father William,' the young man said,
'And your hair has become very white;
And yet you incessantly stand on your head-Do you think, at your age, it is right?'
"'In my youth," said his father, 'I took to the law,
And argued each case with my wife;
And the muscular strength which it gave to my jaw,
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Quote 10: "'If everybody minded their own business,' the Duchess said, in a hoarse
growl, 'the world would go around a great deal faster than it does.'" Chapter 6, pg. 39
Quote 11: "'If it had grown up,' she said to herself, 'it would have made a dreadfully ugly
child; but it makes rather a handsome pig, I think.'" Chapter 6, pg. 41
Quote 14: "'Twinkle, twinkle, little bat!/How I wonder what you're at.'" Chapter 7, pg. 47
Quote 15: "'I've had nothing yet,' Alice replied in an offended tone, 'so I can't take more.'
"'You mean you ca'n't take less,' said the Hatter, 'it's very easy to take more than
nothing.' Chapter 7, pg. 48
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Quote 18: "'Take care of the sense, and the sounds will take care of themselves.'"
Chapter 9, pg. 60
Quote 19: "'We called him Tortoise because he taught us.'" Chapter 9, pg. 63
Quote 20: "'Reeling and Writhing, of course, to begin with,' the Mock Turtle replied; 'and
then the different branches of arithmetic--Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and
Derision.'" Chapter 9, pg. 65
Quote 21: "'Will you walk a little faster?' said a whiting to a snail,
'There's a porpoise close behind us and he's treading on my tail.
See how eagerly the lobsters and the turtles all advance!
They are waiting on the shingle--will you come and join the dance?
Will you, won't you, will you, won't you, will you join the dance?'" Chapter 10, pp. 67-8
Quote 22: "''Tis the voice of the Lobster: I heard him declare
"You have baked me to brown, I must sugar my hair."'" Chapter 10, pg. 70
Quote 23: "'Well, I never heard it before,' said the Mock Turtle; 'but it sounds uncommon
nonsense.'" Chapter 10, pg. 70
Quote 24: "'Soup of the evening, beautiful soup!'" Chapter 10, pg. 72
Quote 25: "'Begin at the beginning,' the King said, very gravely, 'and go on till you come
to the end: then stop.'" Chapter 12, pg. 81
Quote 26: "'I don't believe there's an atom of meaning in it.'" Chapter 12, pg. 82
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Quote 28: "'You're nothing but a pack of cards!'" Chapter 12, pg. 83
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Identity 2: Alice's identity is not clear to the White Rabbit either, because he mistakes
Alice for his maid, Mary Ann. Alice is so surprised that she doesn't get a chance to tell
the Rabbit who she actually is and decides she should pretend to be Mary Ann.
Identity 3: When Alice meets the Caterpillar, he wants to know who she is, and he
demands that she explain herself. Alice replies that the thing she really can't explain is
herself because she isn't herself. She has changed so much recently, she says, that she
simply cannot answer who she is. She is pretty sure that she is someone else because
she can't stay the same size for long and she can't remember the things that she used
to know.
Identity 4: In one of her many changes in size, Alice finds that her neck has grown
enormously long. A frightened Pigeon assumes Alice is a serpent because that's what
she looks like. Alice insists that she is a little girl (though she herself starts to doubt that
that is what she really is after changing so much). The Pigeon, however, continues to
believe that Alice is a serpent, both because of her appearance and because Alice
admits to eating eggs.
Identity 5: When asked by Alice where she should go next, the Cheshire Cat suggests
that she visit either the March Hare or the Mad Hatter. Alice expresses her reluctance to
be around insane people, but the Cat replies that everyone in Wonderland is mad. He
tells Alice that she too must be mad, or else she would never have come to
Wonderland. According to the Cat, to be in Wonderland is to be crazy, and the
identifying mark of an insane person is his or her presence in Wonderland.
Identity 6: The Dormouse tells a story about three little sisters named Elsie, Lacie, and
Tillie. These names are meant to refer to the Liddell sisters, to whom Carroll told the
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original story. Lacie is an anagram for Alice, the name of the middle Liddell girl. Three of
the characters in Alice are based on Alice Liddell: the title-character, Lacie, and
Secunda, who appears in the introductory poem. These three characters might be
considered three fictional versions of the same little girl.
Identity 7: The three gardeners who try to hide their mistake of planting the wrong kind
of rose trees also try to hide who they are when the Queen of Hearts appears. The
Queen demands to know who Alice is, so Alice introduces herself. Then she demands
to know who the cards are; Alice tells the Queen that it is not her business to know who
they are.
Identity 8: Upon discovering that Alice doesn't know what a Mock Turtle is, the Queen of
Hearts insists that Alice meet the Mock Turtle and hear his story. Even though she has
told Alice that Mock Turtles are what Mock Turtle Soup is made from, the Queen seems
to believe that Alice will only understand who the Mock Turtle is by hearing him tell his
life story.
Identity 9: The Gryphon asks to hear some of Alice's adventures. She agrees to tell him
the events of the day, but says that she can't really tell him what happened the day
before because she was a different person then. The Mock Turtle wants to hear about
this change of identity, but the Gryphon overrules him and says that he's more
interested in the adventures than in understanding who Alice is or has been.
Identity 10: At the trial of the Knave of Hearts, Alice understands quite a lot because she
has read about courts in the newspaper. She is able to identify the King as the judge
because he is wearing a wig.
Identity 11: The jurors at the trial have such a tenuous hold on who they are that each
one of them has to write down his name before the trial begins for fear that he'll forget it
by the time the trial is over. Alice is appalled by such stupidity.
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Knowledge 2: Here Alice exercises her book learning. She remembers typical children's
stories that teach lessons by recounting the misfortunes of foolish children who don't
know the proper things to do. Wisely, Alice checks to make sure that the bottle marked
"DRINK ME" is not also marked "poison."
Knowledge 3: Alice tries to find out if perhaps she has turned into another little girl by
testing her knowledge. She is worried that perhaps she turned into her friend Mabel,
who is not too bright. First Alice tries to recite the multiplication tables, but they come
out wrong, and then she attempts to recall her geography and poetry--both of which
also lead to failure. Based on her inability to prove to herself that she knows her
lessons, Alice fears that she has indeed become a different stupid child.
Knowledge 4: When Alice grows as big as a house, she worries that since she's grown
as large as she possibly can, she may never grow any older. If she doesn't grow to be
an adult, then she will have to learn lessons forever. To Alice, an important distinction
between children and grown-ups is that children have a lot to learn and are always
being subjected to some educational exercise while adults apparently don't have to
learn anything.
Knowledge 5: For Alice, her knowledge is a major touchstone for proving whether or not
she is the same little girl that she used to be. When the Caterpillar asks her how she
can be sure that she has changed, she explains that she can no longer recite poems
the way that she learned them. As proof, she recites "You are old, Father William,"
which is a strange parody of a real poem a nineteenth-century child might have learned.
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Knowledge 6: Alice often becomes frustrated by her encounters with the creatures of
Wonderland because many of them tend to contradict her or tell her that she is wrong or
that she doesn't know what she is talking about. She gets annoyed at the Caterpillar
when she expects him to know and understand what her experiences have been, but he
insists that he doesn't know what she is talking about. Other characters Alice meets
expect her to know certain things that she, having had different experiences, has no
way of knowing.
Knowledge 7: The Duchess assumes Alice is quite ignorant when she discovers that
Alice doesn't know that all cats can grin and that most of them do. She tells Alice, "You
don't know much...and that's a fact." (Chapter 6, pg. 39).
Knowledge 8: In an effort to show the Duchess how intelligent she is, Alice tries to
demonstrate why one of the Duchess' morals is flawed. Pleased to have an opportunity
to show off her knowledge, Alice starts to give the Duchess a lesson in astronomy. (The
Duchess is not the least bit interested in learning from Alice and threatens to have her
killed.)
Knowledge 9: The Mock Turtle and the Gryphon, both nostalgic for their school days,
emphasize the importance of a proper education. They are shocked at Alice's lack of
knowledge about basic elements of their educational system and about life under the
sea. Both of them tell Alice that she is quite stupid.
Knowledge 10: In the course of relating her adventures, Alice tells the Gryphon and the
Mock Turtle that she has been unable [unable to do what?? This is unclear]. The two
creatures are intrigued and tell her to recite a poem. Alice does, even though she is
beginning to get annoyed that everyone in Wonderland is always making her repeat her
lessons. Once again, what Alice recites is not the poem she once knew.
Knowledge 11: At the Knave's trial, Alice learns the meaning of "suppressed," a word
she had often wondered about. Carroll takes great care to explain the meaning to the
reader as well. In Wonderland, if someone is disruptive at a trial, he is suppressed by
being stuffed into a sack and sat upon. This is one of the only lessons Carroll takes
great care to teach the reader directly, and one of the only lessons that Alice comments
on learning.
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Meaning 2: The Mouse tries to tell a very boring yet important story about William the
Conqueror, but the rest of the creatures have a hard time following it. There is a bit of a
dispute over the meaning of the word "it." Then one of the birds complains that the
Mouse is telling a story full of words that his audience cannot understand--he also
accuses the Mouse of not knowing the meaning of many of the words he uses. It turns
out that this story, whose meaning is difficult to comprehend, has very little effect on any
of the listeners.
Meaning 4: The Mad Hatter, confused by Alice's speech, tells her to say what she
means. He demonstrates an important distinction between statements with apparently
identical meanings when he tells Alice that "I say what I mean" does not mean the same
thing as "I mean what I say." He reminds Alice that she wouldn't assume that "I eat what
I see" means the same thing as "I see what I eat."
Meaning 5: Now alert to shades of meaning, Alice tries to understand the Hatter, but he
doesn't seem to speak with much logic or sense. Although she understands the
meanings of each individual word he uses, Alice is often unable to find meaning in a
statement as a whole.
Meaning 6: The Duchess, who constantly moralizes everything, tells Alice to "Take care
of the sense, and the sounds will take care of themselves." That is, she advises Alice to
worry about the meanings of speech or writing first and foremost--according to her, if the
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meanings are right, then the proper form will follow as a matter of course. This moral is
actually a play on the English proverb "Take care of the pence and the pounds will take
care of themselves." Carroll often uses wordplay--especially puns--to expand or shift the
meanings of expressions.
Meaning 7: The Mock Turtle and the Gryphon are both punsters, and several times Alice
finds their puns confusing. She believes, for example, that the Mock Turtle means
"purpose" and not "porpoise" when he speaks of the importance of traveling with a
porpoise. Insulted by Alice's suggestion, the Mock Turtle assures her that he means
what he says.
Meaning 8: When Alice tries to recite a poem and it comes out all wrong, the Mock
Turtle gets quite frustrated because he can't understand it. He thinks what Alice has
recited is utter nonsense, and the Gryphon comments that there is no way Alice would
be able to explain the meaning of what she has said. The Mock Turtle exclaims that
there's no point in Alice reciting her lessons if she can't explain what she recites.
Meaning 9: Much at the trial is so ridiculous that it doesn't have much meaning. Alice
doesn't think it to be of much significance whether the jurors are heads up or tails up in
the jury box. The King of Hearts seems to be unable to tell the difference between
words opposite in meaning such as "important" and "unimportant".
Meaning 10: When the letter is presented as evidence at the trial, the King goes to great
lengths to analyze and explain the nonsensical verses; in addition, he finds the letter to
be a most important and revealing piece of evidence. Alice, however, announces that
she doesn't believe there is an atom of meaning in the verses, and she challenges all
present at the trial to explain their meaning.
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Introductory Poem
Carroll gives an account--in verse--of the day he first told the story that would become
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. On a beautiful day, he took a boat trip with three
young girls (called Prima, Secunda, and Tertia) who begged him to tell a tale with lots of
nonsense in it. He told a long tale, full of many adventures and wonders--the tale that
follows.
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After a while Alice notices a glass box underneath the table. In the box she finds a tiny
cake marked "EAT ME." Alice eats it right away, since she figures changing size will be
to her advantage whether she grows tall enough to reach the key or shrinks enough to
slip under the door and into the garden. Initially she stays the same size and is quite
surprised (even though this is usually the result of eating a tiny cake).
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runs toward the garden, but the door is locked again and the key is still on the glass
table. Her situation has not improved, and now she is quite small.
She is so small that she falls into the pool of her own tears, which she first takes for the
sea, and is afraid she will drown. She swims past a Mouse and tries to speak to it, but
he doesn't answer until she starts talking in French. Unfortunately, Alice speaks the first
sentence from her French lesson-book: Ou est ma chatte? (Where is my cat?) The
Mouse is quite agitated, and tells her (in English) he doesn't like cats at all. Alice further
offends the mouse by telling him how good her cat, Dinah, is at catching mice. When
asked to change the subject, Alice beings to talk about a dog. The Mouse, having had
enough talk of these animals, starts to swim away from Alice as fast as he can. Alice
promises not to talk about cats or dogs, and the Mouse returns and tells her that he will
explain why he hates cats and dogs when they get to the shore. Alice swims toward the
shore, and she is followed by many animals and birds that had also fallen into the pool
of tears.
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Soon the creatures outside start throwing pebbles in the window at her. These pebbles
happen to turn into little cakes after they fall on the floor, and Alice eats one. She
shrinks in size, runs out of the house, and escapes a group of animals who want to
attack her.
At this point, Alice forms a plan. First, she must return to her proper size (as she is once
again very tiny), and then she must find her way into the beautiful garden. The only
thing wrong with this plan is that Alice has absolutely no idea how to accomplish either
part of it.
Alice hears a bark overhead and looks up to see an enormous puppy peering down at
her and trying to touch her. Alice tries to comfort the dog, but she is terrified that it might
be hungry and will eat her up. She throws a little stick and the puppy plays with it; afraid
of being trampled, Alice scurries off as far and as fast as she can.
Alice fans herself and laments that she is not the right size to play with and to teach the
dog. Realizing that she really must get larger, she decides she needs to figure out what
to eat or drink to bring about a change in size. Nothing presents itself, but Alice notices
a large mushroom that is about her height. She checks underneath, around, and behind
it, but sees nothing. She stretches up to look on top and finds herself staring into the
eyes of a large blue caterpillar. This caterpillar takes no notice of Alice at all, but
continues sitting on the mushroom and smoking a long hookah.
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When Alice finishes, the Caterpillar comments that her recitation is not right. Alice
concedes that it is not quite right, as some of the words are changed from normal. The
Caterpillar retorts that her version is wrong from beginning to end, and then he asks
Alice what size she would like to be. Alice says she doesn't mind what height she is
exactly, but she doesn't like changing so often, as the Caterpillar would know. The
Caterpillar says that he doesn't know, and Alice begins to lose her temper again.
Topic Tracking: Knowledge 6
She tells the Caterpillar that she'd like to be a little larger and offends him by telling him
that three inches (his own height) is an awful height to be. Soon after, the Caterpillar
decides to take his leave of Alice and gets down off of the mushroom and crawls away.
As he goes, he comments that one side of the mushroom will make Alice taller and the
other side will make her smaller.
Alice has a hard time figuring out what the sides of a round mushroom would be, but
finally she broke off a bit of the edge with each hand. She nibbles one handful and
suddenly feels her chin hit her foot. Alarmed, she quickly eats from the other handful as
best as she can, what with her chin up against her foot. Her head shoots up, but soon
she realizes that she can no longer see her own shoulders below the treetops that
surround her neck. She realizes she can get a better idea of what's going on by moving
her neck like a snake and looking around.
She hears a hiss from a Pigeon who fears Alice because she appears to be a serpent.
Despite Alice's protests, the Pigeon continues to address her as a snake and wails
"'...those serpents! There's no pleasing them!'" Chapter 5, pg. 34
Alice tries to tell the bird that she is not a serpent, but a little girl, but even Alice herself
is not sure if she is still a little girl after having undergone so many changes in one day.
Alice finally leaves the Pigeon after telling her she doesn't want to eat the bird's raw
eggs. She remembers the two pieces of the mushroom and nibbles at them until she
finally achieves her usual height.
Topic Tracking: Identity 4
At first, being normal size seems strange, but Alice is glad to have accomplished the
first part of her plan. Now she only needs to get into the garden. While wondering how
to do this, Alice comes upon a little house about four feet high. Since Alice sees that she
is far too large to meet anyone living in such a house, she nibbles on the right-hand bit
of mushroom until she is nine inches tall.
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nose is turning up and his eyes are getting quite small. Finally it completely turns into a
pig, and Alice feels a little stupid carrying around a pig as if she's nursing it, so she lets it
run off into the woods. She concludes, "'If it had grown up...it would have made a
dreadfully ugly child; but it makes rather a handsome pig, I think.'" Chapter 6, pg. 41
Suddenly Alice sees the Cheshire Cat sitting in a tree. The Cat grins at her, so Alice
tentatively asks him where she should go next. When the Cat replies that that depends
on where Alice wants to go. She says that she doesn't care where she goes, as long as
it's somewhere. The Cat assures her that she's bound to get somewhere if she walks
long enough in any direction.
Alice tries another tactic; she inquires what kind of people live in these parts. The Cat
points in one direction and says that Mad Hatter lives there. In the other direction lives
the March Hare. Both are raving mad, the Cat explains. Alice insists that she doesn't
want to be around mad people, but the Cat insists "'we're all mad here'" and that even
Alice is mad, or she wouldn't have come. Chapter 6, pg. 41
Topic Tracking: Identity 5
The Cat goes on to ask if Alice will be playing croquet with the Queen; if so, she'll see
him there. The Cat promptly vanishes, and then reappears so he can ask what became
of the baby. He is not surprised when Alice tells him the baby became a pig, and he
vanishes again. Alice tries to decide whether it would be better to visit the Mad Hatter or
the March Hare. She figures that the March Hare might not be completely mad since the
month is May and not March. The Cat reappears again to ask whether Alice had said
"pig" or "fig". Alice expresses her annoyance at the cat's tendency to disappear and
reappear so suddenly. So this time the Cat vanishes slowly, beginning with his tail and
ending with his grin, which lingers for a while after the rest of it has disappeared.
Alice goes along her way until she comes to the house of the March Hare. She can tell
it's his because the house itself looks like a rabbit's head. She sees that she's too small
for this house, so she nibbles on the left-hand bit of mushroom until she is two feet tall.
Then she walks up to the house with trepidation.
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why these girls lived at the bottom of a well. After some thought, the Dormouse
pronounces that it was a treacle well. Alice objects that there is no such thing, and the
Dormouse threatens to end his story if she doesn't stop interrupting. The Hatter
interrupts when he decides he needs a clean cup; everybody must move down one
place. Alice continues to argue over the details of the story the Dormouse is telling, but
the Dormouse manages to confuse her into silence with a series of puns and strange
expressions.
Finally, Alice becomes disgusted by the rudeness of her three companions and,
swearing to herself that she will never return, she stalks away. She soon comes upon a
tree with a door in it and decides without much thought to enter.
Inside, she finds the long hall with the glass table. Better prepared this time, Alice takes
the golden key and unlocks the door to the garden. Then she nibbles at the mushroom
until she is a foot tall and walks into the beautiful garden.
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Soon the Queen becomes frustrated and furious and issues almost constant orders for
somebody's head to be chopped off. This begins to make Alice rather uneasy so she
decides it would probably be best to sneak away before the Queen gets angry with her.
While looking for a way to escape, Alice sees something strange in the air. It is an
appearance that gradually turns into the Cheshire Cat's grin, which asks how Alice is
doing. Finally the whole head of the cat appears and Alice complains that she doesn't
think that this game has any rules--and if it does, then no one is abiding by them fairly.
She goes on to tell the Cat that she doesn't like the Queen a bit, but when she sees the
Queen hovering nearby, she pretends to be praising her.
The King soon sidles up and asks her who this large hovering cat's head might be. He
doesn't like the look of it and declares it should be removed. The Queen tries to settle
this the way she settles everything and orders that the Cat be beheaded. Alice turns
back to the game for a while but remains confused and frustrated. Turning back toward
the Cheshire cat, she finds a crowd around it arguing over whether or not a head can be
cut off if there is no body to begin with. It falls to Alice to settle the dispute, and she
decides that, since it is the Duchess' cat, the Duchess would be the one to ask. Before
the Duchess can be fetched from prison, the cat disappears entirely and the crowd, with
nothing better to do, returns to the croquet game.
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At this point a guinea pig becomes rowdy and is suppressed. Since "suppressed" is not
an easy word, Carroll explains it: "suppressed" means that some officers shoved the
animal into a bag, closed it up, and sat on it. Alice is pleased to have learned what
"suppressed" means, since she has read the word before without understanding it.
Topic Tracking: Knowledge 11
Frustrated, the King tells the Hatter that if he doesn't know anything more, he may stand
down, or if he can't stand any lower, he may sit down. The Hatter runs off before he can
be executed.
Next on the witness stand is the Duchess' Cook. She refuses to give her evidence, and
the King seems ready to give up. The White Rabbit, however, reminds him that it is
traditional practice at trials to get some information from each witness, so the King
presses the issue. The Cook informs the court that tarts are made mostly of pepper. The
Dormouse calls out from the back that tarts are made from treacle, and in the confusion
created by suppressing the Dormouse and throwing him out, the Cook slips away. The
White Rabbit calls the next witness, who is Alice herself, much to her surprise.
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cannot swim. The King goes on with his incriminating interpretation of the poem. He
wonders about a line in which a women has fits. He assures the Queen that she never
has fits, and tells her that the words don't fit her. His majesty is quite annoyed when he
has to explain to the court that he had made a witty pun. Once again, the King asks for
a verdict.
The Queen contests this judicial procedure by pronouncing, "'Sentence first--verdict
afterwards.'" Chapter 12, pg. 83 Outraged by this, Alice tells the Queen that it's
nonsense to have the sentence first. Then, when ordered to hold her tongue, Alice
refuses. This of course prompts the Queen to order Alice's execution. But Alice is not at
all frightened, and she tells her majesty and the court, "'You're nothing but a pack of
cards!'" Chapter 12, pg. 83
This brings the whole pack flying at her. Alice screams and tries to push them away until
she realizes that she is lying with her head in her sister's lap. Once fully awake, Alice
tells her sister about all of the adventures in her dream. Her sister sends Alice back to
the house before it gets too late, but she remains on the bank and thinks about all of
Alice's wonderful adventures. Alice's sister begins to daydream about Alice and about
the creatures in Alice's dream. She thinks she hears the White Rabbit as he hurries past
and the Mouse as he splashes around; she believes she hears the rattle of cups at the
mad tea-party, the death-sentences of the Queen, the squeals of the pig-baby, the
shrieks of the Gryphon, and so on. Alice's sister almost believes that she is in
Wonderland herself, but she knows that the sounds she hears are really sheep-bells, a
shepherd boy, and the noises of the farm yard. Finally, she pictures Alice as an adult
who will still have the heart of a child and will tell her own children strange and
wonderful tales like the dream of her adventures underground in Wonderland.
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