THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS AND WHAT ALICE FOUND THERE BY LEWIS CARROLL
WITH FIFTY ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN TENNIEL. NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
LONDON: MACMILLAN AND CO., LTD. 1899
ONE thing was certain,
that the white kitten had had nothing to do with it -- it was the black kitten’s
fault entirely. For the white kitten had been having its face washed by the old
cat, for the last quarter of an hour (and bearing it pretty well, considering);
so you see that it couldn’t have had any hand in the mischief.
The way Dinah washed
her children’s faces was like this: first she held the poor thing down by its
ear with one paw, and then with the other paw she rubbed its face all over, the
wrong way, beginning at the nose: and just now, as I said, she was hard at work
on the white kitten, which was lying quite still and trying to purr -- no doubt
feeling that it was all meant for its good.
But the black kitten
had been finished with earlier in the afternoon, and so, while Alice was
sitting curled up in a corner of the great arm-chair, half talking to herself
and half asleep, the kitten had been having a grand game of romps with the ball
of worsted Alice had been trying to wind up, and had been rolling it up and
down till it had all come undone again; and there it was spread over the
hearth-rug, all knots and tangles, with the kitten running after its own tail
in the middle.
"Oh, you wicked,
wicked little thing!" cried Alice, catching up the kitten, and giving it a
little kiss to make it understand that it was in disgrace. "Really, Dinah
ought to have taught you better manners! You ought, Dinah, you know you
ought!" she added, looking reproachfully at the old cat, and speaking in as
cross a voice as she could manage -- and then she scrambled back into the
arm-chair, taking the kitten and worsted with her, and began winding up the
ball again. But she didn’t get on very fast, as she was talking all the time,
sometimes to the kitten, and sometimes to herself. Kitty sat very demurely on
her knee, pretending to watch the progress of the winding, and now and then
putting out one paw and gently touching the ball, as if it would be glad to
help if it might.
"Do you know what
to-morrow is, Kitty?" Alice began. "You’d have guessed if you’d been
up in the window with me -- only Dinah was making you tidy, so you couldn’t. I
was watching the boys getting in sticks for the bonfire -- and it wants plenty
of sticks, Kitty! Only it got so cold, and it snowed so, they had to leave off.
Never mind, Kitty, we’ll go and see the bonfire to-morrow." Here Alice
wound two or three turns of the worsted round the kitten’s neck, just to see
how it would look: this led to a scramble, in which the ball rolled down upon
the floor, and yards and yards of it got unwound again.
"Do you know, I
was so angry, Kitty," Alice went on, as soon as they were comfortably
settled again, "when I saw all the mischief you had been doing, I was very
nearly opening the window, and putting you out into the snow! And you deserved
it, you little mischievous darling! What have you got to say for yourself? Now
don’t interrupt me!" she went on, holding up one finger. "I’m going
to tell you all your faults. Number one: you squeaked twice while Dinah was
washing your face this morinng. Now you can’t deny it, Kitty, for I heard you!
What’s that you say?" (pretending that the kitten was speaking). "Her
paw went into your eye? Well, that’s your fault, for keeping your eyes open --
if you’d shut them tight up, it wouldn’t have happened. Now don’t make any more
excuses, but listen! Number two: you pulled Snowdrop away by the tail just as I
had put down the saucer of milk before her! What, you were thirsty, were you?
How do you know she wasn’t thirsty too? Now for number three: you unwound every
bit of the worsted while I wasn’t looking!
"That’s three
faults, Kitty, and you’ve not been punished for any of them yet. You know I’m
saving up all your punishments for Wednesday week -- suppose they had saved up
all my puinshments!" she went on, talking more to herself than the kitten.
"What would they do at the end of a year? I should be sent off to prison,
I suppose, when the day came. Or -- let me see -- suppose each punishment was
to be going without a dinner: then, when the miserable day came, I should have
to go without fifty dinners at once! Well, I shouldn’t mind that much! I’d far
rather go without them than eat them!
"Do you hear the
snow against the windowpanes, Kitty? How nice and soft it sounds! Just as if
some one was kissing the window all over outside, I wonder if the snow loves
the trees and fields, that it kisses them so gently? And then it covers them up
snug, you know, with a white quilt; and perhaps it says, "Go to sleep,
darlings, till the summer comes again.’ And when they wake up in the summer,
Kitty, they dress themselves all in green, and dance about -- whenever the wind
blows -- oh, that’s very pretty!" cried Alice, dropping the ball of
worsted to clap her hands. "And I do so wish it was true! I’m sure the
woods look sleepy in the autumn, when the leaves are getting brown.
"Kitty, can you
play chess? Now, don’t smile, my dear, I’m asking it seriously. Because, when
we were playing just now, you watched just as if you understood it: and when I
said ’Check!’ you purred! Well, it was a nice check, Kitty, and really I might
have won, if it hadn’t been for that nasty Knight, that came wriggling down
among my pieces. Kitty, dear, let’s pretend -- -" And here I wish I could
tell you half the things Alice used to say, beginning with her favourite phrase
"Let’s pretend." She had had quite a long argument with her sister
only the day before -- all because Alice had begun with "Let’s pretend we’re
kings and queens"; and her sister, who liked being very exact, had argued
that they couldn’t because there were only two of them, and Alice had been
reduced at last to say, "Well, you can be one of them then, and I’ll be
all the rest." And once she had really frightened her old nurse by
shouting suddenly in her ear, "Nurse! Do let’s pretend that I’m a hungry
hyaena, and you’re a bone!"
But this is taking us
away from Alice’s speech to the kitten. "Let’s pretend that you’re the Red
Queen Kitty! Do you know, I think, if you sat up and folded your arms, you’d look
exactly like her. Now do try, there’s a dear!" And Alice got the Red Queen
off the table, and set it up before the kitten as a model for it to imitate:
however, the thing didn’t succeed, principally, Alice said, because the kitten
wouldn’t fold its arms properly. So, to punish it, she held it up to the
Looking-glass, that it might see how sulky it was " -- and if you’re not
good directly," she added, "I’ll put you through into Looking-glass
House. How would you like that?
"Now, if you’ll
only attend, Kitty, and not talk so much, I’ll tell you all my ideas about
Looking-glass House. First, there’s the room you can see through the glass --
that’s just the same as our drawing-room, only the things go the other way. I
can see all of it when I get upon a chair -- all but the bit just behind the
fireplace. Oh! I do so wish I could see that bit! I want so much to know
whether they’ve a fire in the winter: you never can tell, you’ know, unless our
fire smokes, and then smoke comes up in that room too -- but that may be only
pretence, just to make it look as if they had a fire. Well then, the books are
something like our books, only the words go the wrong way; I know that, because
I’ve held up one of our books to the glass, and then they hold up one in the
other room.
"How would you
like to live in Looking-glass House, Kitty? I wonder if they’d give you milk,
there? Perhaps Looking-glass milk isn’t good to drink -- but oh, Kitty! now we
come to the passage. You can just see a little peep of the passage in
Looking-glass House, if you leave the door of our passage as far as you can
see, only you know it may be quite different on beyond. Oh, Kitty! how nice it
would be if we could only get through into Looking-glass House! I’m sure it’s
got, oh! such beautiful things in it! Let’s pretend there’s a way of getting
through into it somehow, Kitty. Let’s pretend the glass has got soft like
gauze, so that we can get through. Why, it’s turning into a sort of mist now, I
declare! It’ll be easy enough to get through -- -" She was up on the
chimney-piece while she said this, though she hardly knew how she had got
there. And certainly the glass was beginning to melt away, just like a bright
silvery mist.
In another moment Alice
was through the glass, and had jumped lightly down into the Looking-glass room.
The very first thing she did was to look whether there was a fire in the
fireplace, and she was quite pleased to find that there was a real one and
lazing away as brightly as the one she had left behind. "So I shall be as
warm here as I was in the old room," thought Alice: "warmer, in fact,
because there’ll be no one here to scold me away from the fire. Oh, what fun it’ll
be, when they see me through the glass in here, and can’t get at me!"
Then she began looking
about, and noticed that what could be seen from the old room was quite common
and uninteresting, but that all the rest was as different as possible. For
instance, the pictures on the wall next the fire seemed to be all alive, and
the very clock on the chimney-piece (you know you can only see the back of it
in the Looking-glass) had got the face of a little old man, and grinned at her.
"They don’t keep
this room so tidy as the other" Alice thought to herself, as she noticed
several of the chessmen down in the hearth among the cinders: but in another
moment, with a little "Oh!" of surprise, she was down on her hands
and knees watching them. The chessmen were walking about, two and two!"
"Here are the Red
King and the Red Queen," Alice said (in a whisper, for fear of frightening
them), "and there are the White King and the White" Queen sitting on
the edge of the shovel -- and here are two Castles walking arm in arm -- I don’t
think they can hear me," she went on, as she put her head closer down,
"and I’m nearly sure they can’t see me. I feel as if I were invisible --
-"
Here something began
squeaking on the table, and made Alice turn her head just in time to see one of
the White Pawns roll over and begin kicking: she watched it with great
curiosity to see what would happen next.
"It is the voice
of my child!" the White Queen cried out, as she rushed past the King, so
violently that she knocked him over among the cinders "My precious Lily!
My imperial kitten!" and she began scrambling wildly up the side of the
fender -- Imperial fiddlestick!" said the King, rubbing his nose, which
had been hurt by the fall. He had a right to be a little annoyed for he was
covered with ashes from head to foot.
Alice was very anxious
to be of use, and, as the poor little Lily was nearly screaming herself into a
fit, she hastily picked up the Queen and set her upon the table by the side of
her noisy little daughter.
The Queen gasped, and
sat down: the rapid journey through the air had quite taken away her breath,
and for a minute or two she could do nobut hug the little Lily in silence. As
soon as she had recovered her breath a little, she called out to the White King,
who was sitting sulkily among the ashes, "Mind the volcano!"
"What
volcano?" said the King, looking up anxiously into the fire, as if he
thought that was the most likely place to find one.
"Blew -- me --
up," panted the Queen, who was still a little out of breath. "Mind
you come up -- the regular way-don’t get blown up!"
Alice watched the White
King as he slowly struggled up from bar to bar, till at last she said,
"Why, you’ll be hours and hours getting to the table,,at that rate. I’d
far better help you, hadn’t I?" But the King took no notice of the
question: it was quite clear that he could neither hear her nor see her.
So Alice picked him up
very gently, and lifted him across more slowly than she had lifted the Queen,
that she mightn’t take his breath away: but, before she put him on the table,
she thought she might as well dust him a little, he was so covered with ashes.
She said afterwards
that she had never seen in all her life such a face as the King made, when he
found himself held in the air by an invisible hand, and being dusted: he was
far too much astonished to cry out, but his eyes and his mouth went on getting
larger and larger, and rounder and rounder, till her hand shook so with
laughing that she nearly let him drop upon the floor.
"Oh! please don’t
make such faces, my dear!" she cried out, quite forgetting that the King
couldn’t hear her. "You make me laugh so that I can hardly hold you! And
don’t keep your mouth so wide open! All the ashes will get into it -- there,
now I think you’re tidy enough!" she added, as she smoothed his hair, and
set him down very carefully upon the table near the Queen.
The King immediately
fell flat on his back, and lay perfectly still and Alice was a little alarmed
at what she had done, and went round the room to see if she could find any
water to throw over him. However, she could find nothing but a bottle of ink,
and when she got back with it she found he had recovered, and he and the Queen
were talking together in a frightened whisper -- so low, that Alice could
hardly hear what they said.
The King was saying,
"I assure you, my dear, I turned cold to the very ends of my
whiskers!" To which the Queen replied, "You haven’t got any
whiskers."
"The horror of
that moment," the King went on, "I shall never, never forget!"
"You will,
though," the Queen said, "if you don’t make a memorandum of it."
Alice looked on,with
great interest as the King took an enormous memorandum-book out of his pocket,
and began writing. A sudden thought struck her, and she took hold of the end of
the pencil, which came some way over his shoulder, and began writing for him.
The poor King looked
puzzled and unhappy, and struggled with the pencil for some time without saying
anything; but Alice was too strong for him, and at last he panted out, "My
dear! I really must get a thinner pencil. I can’t manage this one a bit;
"it writes all manner of things that I don’t intend -- -"
"What manner of
things?" said the Queen, looking over the book (in which Alice had put
"The White Knight is sliding down the poker. he balances very
badly"). "That’s not a memorandum of your feelings!"
There was a book lying
near Alice on the table, and while she sat watching the White King (for she was
still a little anxious about him, and had the ink all ready to throw over :him,
in case he fainted again), she turned over the leaves, to find some part that
she could read," -- for it’s all in some language I don’t know," she
said to herself. It was like this.
’Twas brillig, and the
slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in
the wabe;
All mimsy were the
borogoves,
And the mome raths
outgrabe
She puzzled over this
for some time, but at last a bright thought struck her. "Why, it’s a
Looking-glass book of course! And if I hold it up to a glass, the words will
all go the right way again." This was the poem that Alice read.
’Twas brillig, and the
slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in
the wabe;
All mimsy were the
borogoves,
And the mome raths
outgrabe.
"Beware the
jabberwock, my son.
The jaws that bite, the
claws that catch!
Beware the jubjub bird,
and shun
The frumious
Bandersnatch!"
He took his vorpal
sword in hand:
Long time the manxome
foe he sought --
So rested he by the
Tumtum tree,
And stood awhile in
thought.
And as in uffish
thought he stood,
The jabberwock, with
eyes of flame,
Came whiffling through
the tulgey wood,
And burbled as it came!
One, two! One, two! And
through and through
The vorpal blade went
snicker-snack!
He left it dead, and
with its head
He went galumphing
back.
"And has thou
slain the jabberwock?
Come to my arms, my
beamish boy!
O frabjous day!
Callooh! Callay!"
He chortled in his joy.
’Twas brillig, and the
slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in
the wabe;
All mimsy were the
borogoves,
And the mome raths
outgrabe.
"It seems very
pretty," she said when she had finished it, "but it’s rather hard to
understand!" (You see she didn’t like to confess even to herself, that she
couldn’t make it out at all.) "Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas
-- only I don’t exactly know what they are! However, somebody killed something:
that’s clear, at any rate -- -"
"But oh!"
thought Alice, suddenly jumping up, "if I don’t make haste I shall have to
go back through the Looking-glass, before I’ve seen what the rest of the house
is like! Let’s have a look at the garden first!" She was out of the room
in a moment, and ran downstairs -- or, at least, it wasn’t exactly running, but
a new invention for getting downstairs quickly and easily, as Alice said to
herself. She just kept the tips of her fingers on the hand-rail, and floated
gently down without even touching the stairs with her feet; then she floated on
through the hall, and would have gone straight out at the door in the same way,
if she hadn’t caught hold of the door-post. She was getting a little giddy with
so much floating in the air, and was rather glad to find herself walking again
in the natural way.
I SHOULD see the garden
far better," said Alice to herself, "if I could get to the top of
that hill: and here’s a path that leads straight to it -- at least, no, it
doesn’t do that -- -" (after going a few yards along the path, and turinng
several sharp corners), "but I suppose it will at last. But how curiously
it twists! It’s more like a corkscrew than a path! Well, this turn goes to the
hill, I suppose -- no, it doesn’t! This goes straight back to the house! Well
then, I’ll try it the other way."
And so she did:
wandering up and down, and "trying turn after turn, but always coming back
to the house, do what she would. Indeed, once, when she turned a corner rather
more quickly than usual, she ran against it before she couId stop herself.
"It’s no use
talking about it," Alice said, looking up at the house and pretending it
was arguing with her. "I’m not going in again yet. I know I should have to
get through the Looking-glass again -- back into the old room -- and there’d be
an end of all my adventures!"
So, resolutely turning
her back upon the house she set out once more down the path, determined to keep
straight on till she got to the hill. For a few minutes all went on well, and
she was just saying, "I really shall do it this time -- -" when the
path gave a sudden twist and shook itself (as she described it afterwards), and
the next moment she found herself actually walking in at the door.
"Oh, it’s too
bad!" she cried. "I never saw such a house for getting in the way!
Never!"
However, there was the
hill full in sight, so there was nothing to be done but start again. This time
she came upon a large flower-bed, with a border of daisies, and a willow-tree
growing in the middle.
"O
Tiger-lily," said Alice, addressing herself to one that was waving
gracefully about in the wind, "I wish you could talk!"
"We can
talk," said the Tiger-lily: "when there’s anybody worth talking
to."
Alice was so astonished
that she couldn’t speak for a minute: it quite seemed to take her breath away.
At length, as the Tiger-lily only went on waving about, she spoke again, in a
timid voice -- almost in a whisper. "And can all the flowers talk?"
"As well as you
can," said the Tiger-lily. "And a great deal louder."
"It isn’t manners
for us to begin, you know," said the Rose, "and I really was
wondering when you’d speak! Said I to myself. "Her face has got some sense
in it, though it’s not a clever one!’ Still you’re the right colour, and that
goes a long way."
"I don’t care
about the colour," the Tiger-lily remarked. "If only her petals
curled up a little more, she’d be all right."
Alice didn’t like being
criticised, so she began asking questions: "Aren’t you sometimes
frightened at being planted out here, with nobody to take care of you?"
"There’s the tree
in the middle," said the Rose.
"What else is it
good for?"
"But what could it
do, if any danger came?" Alice asked.
"It could
bark," said the Rose.
"It says
"Bough-wough," cried a Daisy: "that’s why its branches are
called boughs!"
"Didn’t you know
that?" cried another Daisy, and here they all began shouting together,
till the air seemed quite full of little shrill voices. "Silence, every
one of you!" cried the Tiger-lily, waving itself passionately from side to
side, and trembling with excitement. "They know I can’t get at them!"
panted, bending its quivering head towards Alice, "or they wouldn"t
dare do it!"
"Never mind!"
Alice said in a soothing tone, and stooping down to the daisies, who were just
be ginning again, she whispered, "If you don’t hold your tongues, I’ll
pick you!"
There was silence in a
moment, and several of the pink daisies turned white.
"That’s
right!" said the Tiger-lily. "The daisies are worst of all. When one
speaks, they all begin together, and it’s enough to make one wither to hear the
way they go on!"
"How is it you can
all talk so nicely?" Alice said, hoping to get it into a better temper by
a compliment. "I’ve been in many gardens before, but none of the flowers
could talk."
"Put your hand
down, and feel the ground," said the Tiger-lily. "Then you’ll know
why."
Alice did so. "It’s
very hard," she said, "but I don’t see what that has to do with
it."
"In most
gardens," the Tiger-lily said, "they make the beds too soft -- so
that the flowers are always asleep."
This sounded a very
good reason, and Alice was quite pleased to know it. "I never thought of
that before!" she said.
"It’s my opinion
you never think at all," the Rose said in a rather severe tone.
"I never saw
anybody that looked stupider," a Violet said, so suddenly, that Alice
quite jumped; for it hadn’t spoken before.
"Hold your
tongue!" cried the Tiger-lily. "As if you ever saw anybody! You keep
your head under the leaves, and snore away there till you know no more what’s
going on in the world, than if you were a bud!"
"Are there any
more people in the garden besides me?" Alice said, not choosing to notice
the Rose’s last remark.
"There’s one other
flower in the garden that can move about like you," said the Rose. "I
wonder how you do it -- -" ("You’re always wondering," said the
Tiger-lily), "but she’s more bushy than you are."
"Is she like
me?" Alice asked eagerly, for the thought crossed her mind. "There’s
another little girl in the garden somewhere!"
"Well, she has the
same awkward shape as you," the Rose said: "but she’s redder -- and
her petals are shorter, I think."
"Her petals are
done up close, almost like a dahlia," the Tiger-lily interrupted:
"not tumbled about anyhow, like yours."
"But that’s not
your fault," the Rose added kindly: "you’re beginning to fade, you
know -- and then one can’t help one’s petals getting a little untidy."
Alice didn’t like this idea at all: so, to change the subject, she asked,
"Does she ever come out here?"
"I daresay you’ll
see her soon," said the Rose, "She’s one of the thorny kind."
"Where does she
wear the thorns?" Alice asked with some curiosity.
"Why, all round
her head, of course," the Rose replied. "I was wondering you hadn’t
got some too. I thought it was the regular rule."
"She’s
coming!" cried the Larkspur. "I hear her footstep, thump, thump,
along the gravel-walk!" Alice looked round eagerly, and found that it was
the Red Queen. "She’s grown a good deal!" was her first remark. She
had indeed: when Alice first found her in the ashes, she had been only three
inches high -- and here she was, half a head taller than Alice herself!
"It’s the fresh
air that does it," said the Rose: "wonderfully fine air it is, out
here."
"I think I’ll go
and meet her," said Alice, for, though the flowers were very interesting,
she felt that it would be far grander to have a talk with a real Queen.
"You can’t
possibly do that," said the Rose: "I should advise you to walk the
other way." This sounded nonsense to Alice so she said nothing, but set
off at once towards the Red Queen. To her surprise, she lost sight of her in a
moment, and found herself walking in at the front-door again.
A little provoked, she
drew back and, after looking everywhere for the Queen (whom she spied out at
last, a long way off), she thought she would try the plan, this time, of
walking in the opposite direction.
It succeeded
beautifully. She had not been walking a minute before she found herself face to
face with the Red Queen, and full in sight of the hill she had been so long
aiming at.
"Where do you come
from?" said the Red Queen. "And where are you going? Look up, speak
nicely, and don’t twiddle your fingers all the time."
Alice attended to all
these directions, and explained, as well as she could, that she had lost her
way.
"I don’t know what
you mean by your way," said the Queen : "all the ways about here
belong to me -- but why did you come out here at all?" she added in a
kinder tone. "Curtsey while you’re thinking what to say. It saves
time." Alice wondered a little at this, but she was too much in awe of the
Queen to disbelleve it. "I’ll try it when I go home," she thought to
herself, "the next time I’m a little late for dinner."
"It’s time for you
to answer now," the Queen said, looking at her watch: "open your
mouth a little wider when you speak, and aiways say "your Majesty.’"
"I only wanted to
see what the garden was like, your Majesty -- -"
"That’s
right," said the Queen, patting her on the head, which Alice didn’t like
at all: "though, when you say "garden,’ I’ve seen gardens, compared
with which this would be a wilderness."
Alice didn’t dare to
argue the point, but went on: " -- and I thought I’d try and find my way
to the top of that hill -- -"
"When you say
"hill,’ " the Queen interrupted, "I could show you hills, in
comparison with which you’d call that a valley."
"No, I shouldn’t,"
said Alice, surprised into contradicting her at last: "a hill can’t be a
valley, you know, That would be nonsense -- -"
The Red Queen shook her
head. "You may call it ‘nonsense’ if you llke," she said, "but I’ve
heard nonsense, compared with which that would be as sensible as a
dictionary!"
-Alice curtseyed again,
as she was afraid from the Queen’s tone that she was a little offended: and
they walked on in silence till they got to the top of the little hill.
For some minutes Alice
stood without speaking, looking out in all directions over the country -- and a
most curious country it was. There were a number of little brooks running
across from side to side, and the ground between was divided up into squares by
a number of hedges, that reached from brook to brook.
"I declare it’s
marked out just like a large chessboard!" Alice said at last. "There
ought to be some men moving about somewhere -- and so there are!" she
added in a tone of delight, and her heart began to beat quick with excitement
as she went on. "It’s a great game of chess that’s being played -- all
over the world -- if this is the world at all, you know. Oh,what fun it is! How
I wish I was one of them! don’t mind being a Pawn, if only I might join --
though of course I should like to be a Queen, best.’
She glanced rather
shyly at the real Queen as she said this, but her companion only smiled
pleasantly, and said, "That’s easily managed. You can be the White Queen’s
Pawn, if you like, as Lily’s too young to play; and you’re in the Second Square
to begin with: when you get into the Eighth Square you’ll be a Queen -- -"
Just at this moment, somehow or other, they began to run.
Alice never could quite
make out, in thinking it over afterwards, how it was that they began: all she
remembers is, that they were running hand in hand, and the Queen went so fast
that it was all she could do to keep up with her: and still the Queen kept
crying "Faster!" but Alice felt she could not go faster, though she
had no breath to say so. The most curious part of the thing was, that the trees
and the other things round them never changed their places at all: however fast
they went, they never seemed to pass anything. "I wonder if all the things
move along with us?" thought poor puzzled Alice. And the Queen seemed to
guess her thoughts, for she cried, "Faster! Don’t try to talk!"
Not that Alice had any
idea of doing that. She felt as if she would never be able to talk again, she
was getting so out of breath: and still the Queen cried, "Faster!
Faster!" and dragged her along. "Are we nearly there?" Alice
managed to pant out at last.
"Nearly
there!" the Queen repeated. "Why, we passed it ten minutes ago!
Faster!" And they ran on for a time in silence, with the wind whistling in
Alice’s ears, and almost blowing her hair off her head, she fancied.
"Now! Now!"
cried the Queen. "Faster! Faster!" And they went so fast that at last
they seemed to skim through the air, hardly touching the ground with their
feet, till suddenly, just as Alice was getting quite exhausted, they stopped,
and she found herself sitting on the ground, breathless and giddy. The Queen
propped her against a tree, and said kindly, "You may rest a little
now."
Alice looked round her
in great surprise. "Why, I do believe we’ve been under this tree all the
time! Everything’s just as it was!"
"Of course it
is," said the Queen: "what would you have it?"
"Well, in our
country," said Alice, still panting a little, "you’d generally get to
somewhere else -- if you ran very fast for a long time, as we’ve been
doing."
"A slow sort of
country!" said the Queen. "Now, here, you see, it takes all the
running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere
else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!"
"I’d rather not
try, please!" said Alice. "I’m quite content to stay here -- only I
am so hot and thirsty! "
"I know what you’d
like!" the Queen said good-naturedly, taking a little box out of her
pocket, "Have a biscuit?"
Alice thought it would
not be civil to say "No," though it wasn’t at all what she wanted. So
she took it, and ate it as well as she could: and it was very dry; and she
thought she had never been so nearly choked in all her life.
"While you’re
refreshing yourself," said the Queen, "I’ll just take the measurements."
And she took a ribbon out of her pocket, marked in inches, and began measuring
out the ground, and sticking little pegs in here and there.
"At the end of two
yards," she said, putting in a peg to mark the distance, "I shall
give you your directions -- have another biscuit?"
"No, thank
you," said Alice: "one’s quite enough!"
"Thirst quenched,
I hope?" said the Queen.
Alice did not know what
to say to this, but luckily the Queen did not wait for an answer, but went on.
"At the end of three yards I shall repeat them -- for fear of your
forgetting them. At the end of four, I shall say good-bye. And at the end of
five, I shall go!"
She had got all the
pegs put in by this time, and Alice looked on with great interest as she
returned to the tree, and then began slowly walking down the row.
At the two-yard peg she
faced round, and said, "A pawn goes two squares in its first move So you’ll
go very quickly through the Third Square -- by railway, I should think -- and
you’ll find yourself in the Fourth Square in no time. Well, that square belongs
to Tweedledum and Tweedledee -- the Fifth is mostly water -- the Sixth belongs
to Humpty Dumpty -- but you make no remark?" "I -- I didn’t know I
had to make one -- just then " Alice faltered out.
"You should have
said," the Queen went on in a tone of grave reproof, " "It’s
extremely kind of you to tell me all this’ -- however, we’ll suppose it said --
the Seventh Square is all forest -- however, one of the Knights will show you
the way -- and in the Eighth Square we shall be Queens together, and it’s all
feasting and fun!" Alice got up and curtseyed, and sat down again.
At the next peg the
Queen turned again, and said, "Speak in French when you can’t think of the
English for a thing -- turn out your toes as you walk -- and remember who you
are!" She did not wait for Alice to curtsey this time, but walked on
quickly to the next peg, where she turned to say "good-bye," and then
hurried on to the last.
How it happened, Allce
never knew, but exactly as she came to the last peg, she was gone. Whether she
vainshed into the air, or ran quickly into the wood ("and she can run very
fast!" thought Alice), there was no way of guessing, but she was gone, and
Alice began to remember that she was a Pawn, and that it would soon be time to
move.
OF course the first
thing to do was make a grand survey of the country she was going to travel
through. "It’s something very like learning geography," thought
Alice, as she stood on tiptoe in hopes of being able to see a little further.
"Principal rivers -- there are none. Principal mountains -- I’m on the
only one, but I don’t think it’s got any name. Principal towns -- why, what are
those creatures, making honey down there? They can’t be bees -- nobody ever saw
bees a mile off you know -- -" and for some minutes she stood silent,
watching one of them that was bustling about among the flowers, poking its
proboscis into them, "just as if it was a regular bee," thought
Alice.
However, this was
anything but a regular bee: in fact, it was an elephant -- as Alice soon found
out, though the idea quite took her breath away at first. "And what
enomous flowers they must be!" was her next idea. "Something like
cottages with the roofs taken off, and stalks put to them -- and what
quantities of honey they must make! I think I’ll go down and -- no, I won’t go
just yet," she went on, checking herself just as she was beginning to run
down the hill, and trying to find some excuse for turning shy so suddenly.
"It’ll never do to go down among them without a good long branch to brush
them away -- and what fun it’ll be when they ask me how I liked my walk. I
shall say -- "Oh, I liked it well enough -- -’ (here came the favourite
little toss of the head), "only it was so dusty and hot, and the elephants
did tease so!’ "
"I think I’ll go
down the other way," she said after a pause: "and perhaps I may visit
the elephants later on. Besides, I do so want to get into the Third
Square!"
So with this excuse she
ran down the hill and jumped over the first six little brooks.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * *
"Tickets,
please!" said the Guard, putting his head in at the window. In a moment
everybody was holding out a ticket : they were about the same size as the
people, and quite seemed to fill the carriage.
"Now then! Show
your ticket, child!" the Guard went on, looking angrily at Alice. And a
great many voices all said together ("like the chorus of a song,"
thought Alice), "Don’t keep him waiting, child! Why, his time is worth a
thousand pounds a minute!"
"I’m afraid I
haven’t got one," Alice said in a frightened tone : "there wasn’t a
ticket-office where I came from." And again the chorus of voices went on.
"There wasn’t room for one where she came from. The land there is worth a
thousand pounds an inch!"
"Don’t make
excuses," said the Guard: "you should have bought one from the
engine-driver." And once more the chorus of voices went on with "The
man that drives the engine. Why, the smoke alone is worth a thousand pounds a
puff!" Alice thought to herself, "Then there’s no use in
speaking." The voices didn’t join in this time, as she hadn’t spoken, but,
to her great surprise, they all thought in chorus (I hope you understand what
thinking in chorus means -- for I must confess that I don’t), "Better say
nothing at all. Language is worth a thousand pounds a word!"
"I shall dream
about a thousand pounds tonight, I know I shall!" thought Alice.
All this time the Guard
was looking at her, first through a telescope, then through a microscope, and
then through an opera-glass. At last he said, "You’re travelling the wrong
way," and shut up the window and went away.
"So young a
child," said the gentleman sitting opposite to her (he was dressed in
white paper), "ought to know which way she’s going, even if she doesn’t
know her own name!"
A Goat, that was
sitting next to the gentleman in white, shut his eyes and said in a loud voice,
"She ought to know her way to the ticket-office even if she doesn’t know
her alphabet!"
There was a Beetle
sitting next the Goat (it was a very queer set of passengers altogether), and,
as the rule seemed to be that they should all speak in turn, he went on with
"She’ll have to go back from here as luggage!"
Alice couldn’t see who
was sitting beyond the Beetle, but a hoarse voice spoke next. ’"Change
engines -- -" it said, and there it choked and was obliged to leave off.
"It sounds like a
horse," Alice thought to herself. And an extremely small voice, close to
her ear, said, You might make a joke on that -- something about ’horse and
hoarse’, you know"
Then a very gentle
voice in the distance said, "She must be labelled "Lass, with care,’
you know -- -- "
An after that other
voices went on ("What a number of people there are in the carriage!"
thought Alice), saying, "She must go by post, as she’s got a head on her
-- -" "She must be sent as a message by the telegraph -- -"
"She must draw the train herself the rest of the way -- -" and so on.
But the gentleman
dressed in white paper leaned forwards and whispered in her ear, "Never
mind what they all say, my dear, but take a return-ticket every time the train
stops."
"indeed I shan’t!"
Alice said rather impatiently. "I don’t belong to this railway journey at
all -- I was in a wood just now -- and I wish I could get back there!"
"You might make a
joke on that," said the little voice close to her ea : "something
about ’you would, if you could’, you know."
"Don’t tease
so," said Alice, looking about in vain to see where the voice came from ;
"if you’re so anxious to have a joke made, why don’t you make one
yourself?"
The little voice sighed
deeply: it was very unhappy, evidently, and Alice would have said something
pitying to comfort it, "if it would only sigh like other people!" she
thought. But this was such a wonderfully small sigh, that she wouldn’t have
heard it at all, if it hadn’t come quite close to her ear. The consequence of
this was that it tickled her ear very much, and quite took off her thoughts
from the unhappiness of the poor little creature.
"I know you are a
friend," the little voice went on; "a dear friend and an old friend,
And you won’t hurt me, though I am an insect."
"What kind of
insect?" Alice inquired a little anxiously. What she really wanted to know
was, whether it could sting or not, but she thought this wouldn’t be quite a
civil question to ask.
"What then you don’t
-- " the little voice began, when it was drowned by a shrill scream from
the engine, and everybody jumped up in alarm, Alice among the rest.
The Horse, who had put
his head out of the window, quietly drew it in and said, "It’s only a
brook we have to jump over." Everybody seemed satisfied with this, though
Alice felt a little nervous at the idea of trains jumping at all.
"However, it’ll take us into the Fourth Square, that’s some comfort!"
she said to herself. In another moment she felt the carriage rise straight up
into the air, and in her fright, she caught at the thing nearest to her hand,
which happened to be the Goat’s beard. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * But
the beard seemed to melt away as she touched it, and she found herself sitting
quietly under a tree -- while the Gnat (for that was the insect she had been
talking to) was balancing itself on a twig just over her head, and fanning her
with its wings.
It certainly was a very
large Gnat: "about the size of a chicken," Alice thought. Still, she
couldn’t feel nervous with it, after they had been talking together so long.
" -- then you don’t
like all insects?" the Gnat went on, as quietly as if nothing had
happened.
"I like them when
they can talk," Alice said.
"None of them ever
talk, where I come from."
"What sort of
insects do you rejoice in, where you come from?" the Gnat inquired.
"I don’t rejoice
in insects at all," Alice explained, "because I’m rather afraid of
them -- at least the , large kinds. But I can tell you the names of some of
them."
"Of course they
answer to their names?" the Gnat remarked carelessly.
"I never knew them
to do it."
"What’s the use of
their having names," the Gnat said, "if they won’t answer to
them?"
"No use to
them," said Alice; "but it’s useful to the people that name them, I
suppose. If not, why do things have names at all?"
"I can’t’
say," said the Gnat. "In the wood down there, they’ve got no names --
however, go on with your list of insects."
"Well, there’s the
Horse-fly," Alice began, counting off the names on her fingers.
"All right,"
said the Gnat: "half-way up that bush, you’ll see a Rocking-horse-fly, if
you look. It’s made entirely of wood, and gets about by swinging itself from
branch to branch."
"What does it live
on?" Alice asked, with great curiosity.
"Sap and
sawdust," said the Gnat. "Go on with the list."
Alice looked at the
Rocking-horse-fly with great interest, and made up her mind that it must have
been just repainted, it looked so bright and sticky ; and then she went on.
"And there’s the
Dragon-fly."
"Look on the
branch above your head," said the Gnat, "and there you’ll find a
Snap-dragon-fly. Its body is made of plum-pudding, its wings of holly-leaves,
and its head is a raisin burning in brandy."
"And what does it
live on?" Allce asked, as before.
"Frumenty and
mince-pie," the Gnat replied; "and it makes its nest in a
Christmas-box."
"And then there’s
the Butterfly," Alice went on, after she had taken a good look at the
insect with its head on fire, and had thought to herself, "I wonder if
that’s the reason insects are so fond of flying into candles -- because they
want to turn into Snap-dragon-flies!"
"Crawling at your
feet," said the Gnat (Alice drew her feet back in some alarm), "you
may observe a Bread-and-butter-fly. Its wings are thin slices of
bread-and-butter, its body is a crust, and its head is a lump of sugar."
"And what does it
live on?"
"weak tea with
cream in it."
A new difficulty came
into Alice’s head. "Supposing it couldn’t find any?" she suggested.
"Then it would
die, of course."
"But that must
happen very often," Alice remarked thoughtfully. "It always
happens," said the Gnat.
After this, Alice was
silent for a minute or two, pondering. The Gnat amused itself meanwhile by
humming round and round her head: at last it settled again and remarked,
"I suppose you don’t want to lose your name?"
"No, indeed,"
Alice said, a little anxious.
"And yet I don’t
know," the Gnat went on in a careless tone: "only think how
convenient it would be if you could manage to go home without it. For instance,
if the governess wanted to call you to your lesson, she would call out , ’Come
here -- ,’ and there she would have to leave off, because there wouldn’t be any
name for her to call and of course you wouldn’t have to go, you know."
"That would never
do, I’m sure," said Alice: "the governess would never think of
excusing me lessons for that. If she couldn’t. remember my name, she’d call me ’Miss!’
as the servants do."
"Well, if she said
"Miss,’ and didn’t say anything more," the Gnat remarked, "of
course you’d miss your lessons. That’s a joke. I wish you had made it."
Why do you wish I had
made it?" Alice asked.
"It’s a very bad
one."
But the Gnat only
sighed deeply, while two large tears came rolling down its cheeks.
"You shouldn’t
make jokes," Alice said, "if it makes you so unhappy."
Then came another of
those melancholy little sighs, and this time the poor Gnat really seemed to
have sighed itself away, for, when Alice looked up, there was nothing whatever
to be seen on the twig, and, as she was getting quite chilly with sitting still
so long, she got up and walked on.
She very soon came to
an open field with a wood on the other side of it: it looked much darker than
the last wood, and Alice felt a little timid about going into it. However, on
second thoughts, she made up her mind to go on: "for I certainly won’t go
back," she thought to herself, and this was the only way to the Eighth
Square.
"This must be the
wood," she said thoughtfully to herself, "where things have no names,
I wonder what’ll become of my name when I go in? I shouldn’t like to lose it at
all -- because they’d have to give me another, and it would be almost certain
to be an ugly one. But then the fun would be, trying to find the creature that
had got my old name!
That’s just like the
advertisements, you know, when people lose dogs -- "answers to the name of
"Dash": had on a brass collar’ -- just fancy calling everything you
met "Alice,’ till one of them answered! Only they wouldn’t answer at all,
if they were wise." She was rambling on in this way when she reached the
wood: it looked very cool and shady.
"Well, at any rate
it’s a great comfort," she said as she stepped under the trees,
"after being so hot, to get into the -- into the -- into what?" she
went on, rather surprised at not being able to think of the word. "I mean
to get under the -- under the -- under this, you know!" putting her hand
on the trunk of the tree. "What does it call itself? I do believe it’s got
no name -- why, to be sure it hasn’t!"
She stood silent for a
minute, thinking: then she suddenly began again. "Then it really has
happened, after all! And now, who am I? I will remember, if I can! I’m
determined to do it!" But being detemined didn’t help her much, and all
she could say, after a great deal of puzzling, was, "L, I know it begins
with L!"
Just then a Fawn came
wandering by: it looked at Alice with its large eyes, but didn’t seem at all
frightened. "Here then! Here then!" Alice said, as she held out her
hand and tried to stroke it: but it only started back a little, and then stood
looking at her again.
"What do you call
yourself?" the Fawn said at last. Such a soft sweet voice it had!
"I wish I
knew!" thought poor Alice. She answered, rather sadly; Nothing, just
now."
Alice thought, but
nothing came of it. "Please, would you tell me what you call
yourself?" she said timidly. "I think that might help a little."
"I’ll tell you, if
you’ll come a little further on," the Fawn said "I can’t remember
here."
Alice with her arms
clasped lovingly round the soft neck of the Fawn, till they came out into
another open field, and here the Fawn gave a sudden bound into the air, and
shook itself free from Alice’s arms. "And, dear me, you’re a human
child!" A sudden look of alarm came into its beautiful brown eyes and in
another moment it had darted away at full speed.
Alice stood looking
after it, almost ready to cry with vexation at having lost her dear little
fellow-traveller so suddenly- "However, I know my name now," she
said: "that’s some comfort. Alice--Alice-- I won’t forget it again. And
now, which of these finger-posts ought I to follow, I wonder?"
It was not a difficult
question to answer, as there was only one road, and the finger-posts both
pointed along it. "I’ll settle it," Alice said to herself, "when
the road divides and they point different ways.
But this did not seem
likely to happen. She went on and on, a long way, but wherever the road divided
there were sure to be two finger-posts pointing the same way, one marked
"TO TWEEDLEDUM’S HOUSE,’ and the other "TO THE HOUSE OF TWEEDLEDEE.’
"I do
believe," said Alice at last, "that they live in the same house! I
wonder I never thought of that before -- but I can’t stay there long. I’ll just
call and say "How d’ye do?’ and ask them the way out of the wood. If I
could only get to the Eighth square before it gets dark!" So she wandered
on, talking to herself as she went, till, on turning a sharp corner, she came
upon two fat little men, so suddenly that she could not help starting back, but
in another moment she recovered herself, feeling sure that they must be.
THEY were standing
under a tree each with an arm round the other’s neck, and Alice knew which was
which in a moment, because one of them had "DUM’ embroidered on his
collar, and the other DEE.’ "I suppose they’ve each got "TWEEDLE’
round at the back of the collar," she said to herself.
They stood so still
that she quite forgot they were alive, and she was just looking round to see if
the word "TWEEDLE’ was written at the back of each collar, when she was
startled by a voice coming from the one marked "DUM.’
"If you think we’re
wax-works," he said, "you ought to pay, you know. Wax-works weren’t
made to be looked at for nothing. Nohow!"
"Contrariwise"
added the one marked ’DEE’, "if you think we’re alive, you ought to
speak."
"I’m sure I’m very
sorry," was all Alice could say; for the words of the old song kept
ringing through her head like the ticking of a clock, and she could hardly help
saying them out loud: --
"Tweedledum and
Tweedledee
Agreed to have a
battle;
For Tweedledum said
Tweedledee
Had spoiled his nice
new rattle.
Just then flew down a
monstrous crow,
As black as a
tar-barrel;
Which frightened both
the heroes so,
They quite forgot their
quarrel."
"I know what you’re
thinking about," said Tweedledum : "but it isn’t so, nohow."
"Contrariwise,"
continued Tweedledee, "if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it
would be: but as it isn’t, it ain’t. ’That’s logic."
"I was
thinking," Alice said very politely, "which is the best way out of
this wood : it’s getting so dark. Would you tell me, please ?"
But the fat little men
only looked at each other and grinned.
They looked so exactly
like a couple of great schoolboys, that Alice couldn’t help pointing her finger
at Tweedledum, and saying, "First Boy!"
"Nohow!"
Tweedledum cried out briskly, and instantly shut his mouth up again with a
snap.
"Next Boy!"
said Alice, passing on to Tweedledee, though she felt quite certain he would
only shout out "Contrariwise!" and so he did.
"You’ve begun
wrong!" cried Tweedledum.
"The first thing
in a visit is to say, "How d’ye do?’ and shake hands!" And here the
two brothers gave each other a hug, and then they held out the two hands that
were free, to shake hands with her.
Alice did not like
shaking hands with either of them first, for fear of hurting the other one’s
feelings; so, as the best way out of the difficulty, she took hold of both
hands at once: the next moment they were dancing round in a ring. This seemed
quite natural (she remembered afterwards), and she was not even surprised to
hear music playing: it seemed to come from the tree under which they were
dancing, and it was done (as well as she could make it out) by the branches
rubbing one across the other, like fiddles and fiddlesticks.
"But it certainly
was funny" (Alice said afterwards, when she was telling her sister the
history of all this) "to find myself singing "Here we go round the
mulberry bush.’ I don’t know when I began it, but somehow I felt as if I’d been
singing it a long, long time!"
The other two dancers
were fat, and very soon out of breath. "Four times round is enough for one
dance," Tweedledum panted out, and they left off dancing as suddenly as
they had begun: the music stopped at the same moment.
They then let go of
Alice’s hands, and stood looking at her for a minute: there was a rather
awkward pause, as Alice didn’t know how to begin a conversation with people she
had just been dancing with. "It would never do to say "How d’ye do?’
now," she said to herself: "we seem to have got beyond that,
somehow!"
"I hope you’re not
much tired?" she said at last.
"Nohow. And thank
you very much for asking," said Tweedledum.
"So much
obliged!" added Tweedledee. "You like poetry?"
"Ye-es, pretty
well -- some poetry," Alice said doubtfully. "Would you tell me which
road leads out of the wood?"
"What shall I
repeat to her?" said Tweedledee looking round at Tweedledum with great
solemn eyes, and not noticing Alice’s question.
"’The Walrus and
the Carpenter’ is the longest," Tweedledum replied, giving his brother an
affectionate hug. Tweedledee began instantly:
"The sun was
shining- -- "
Here Alice ventured to
interrupt. "If it’s very long," she said, as politely as she could,
"would you tell me first which road -- -"
Tweedledee smiled
gently, and began again:
"The sun was shining
on the sea,
Shining with all his
might:
He did his very best to
make
The billows smooth and
bright --
And this was odd,
because it was
The middle of the
night.
The moon was shining
sulkily,
Because she thought the
sun
Had got no business to
be there
After the day was done
--
’It’s very rude of him,’
she said,
"To come and spoil
the fun!’
The sea was wet as wet
could be,
The sands were dry as
dry.
You could not see a
cloud, because
No cloud was in the
sky:
No birds were flying
overhead --
There were no birds to
fly.
The Walrus and the
Carpenter
Were walking close at
hand;
They wept like anything
to see
Such quantities of
sand:
’If this were only
cleared away,’
They said, ’it would be
grand!’
’If seven maids with
seven mops
Swept it for half a
year.
Do you suppose,’ the
Walrus said,
’That they could get it
clear?’
’I doubt it,’ said the
Carpenter,
And shed a bitter tear.
’O Oysters, come and
walk with us.!’
The Walrus did beseech.
’A pleasant walk, a
pleasant talk,
Along the briny beach:
We cannot do with more
than four,
To give a hand to each.’
The eldest Oyster
looked at him,
But never a word he
said:
The eldest Oyster
winked his, eye,
And shook his heavy
head --
Meaning to say he did
not choose
To leave the
oyster-bed.
But four young Oysters
hurried up,
All eager for the
treat:
Their coats were
brushed, their faces washed,
Their shoes were clean
and neat --
And this was odd,
because, you know,
They hadn’t any feet.
Four other Oysters
followed them,
And yet another four;
And thick and fast they
came at last,
And more, and more, and
more --
All hopping through the
frothy waves,
And scrambling to the
shore.
The Walrus and the
Carpenter
Walked on a mile or so,
And then they rested on
a rock
And all the little
Oysters stood
And waited in a row.
"The time has
come,’ the Walrus said,
"To talk of many
things:
Of shoes -- and ships
-- and sealing-wax --
Of cabbages -- and
kings --
And why the sea is
boiling hot --
And whether pigs have
wings.’
’But wait a bit,’ the
Oysters cried,
’Before we have our
chat;
For some of us are out
of breath,
And all of us are fat!’
"No hurry!’ said
the Carpenter.
They thanked him much
for that.
’A loaf of bread,’ the
Walrus said,
’Is what we chiefly
need:
Pepper and vinegar
besides
Are very good indeed --
Now if you’re ready,
Oysters dear,
We can begin to feed.’
’But not on us.!’ the
Oysters cried,
Turning a little blue.
’After such kindness,
that would be
A dismal thing to do.!’
’The night is fine,’
the Walrus said.
’Do you admire the
view?
’It was so kind of you
to come.!
And you are very nice.!’
The Carpenter said
nothing but
’Cut us another slice:
I wish you were not
quite so deaf --
I’ve had to ask you
twice.!’
’It seems a shame,’ the
Walrus said,
’To play them such a
trick,
After we’ve brought
them out so far,
And made them trot so
quick!’
The Carpenter said
nothing but
’The butter’s spread
too thick!’
’I weep for you,’ the
Walrus said:
’I deeply sympathize.’
With sobs and tears he
sorted out
Those of the largest
size,
Holding his
pocket-handkerchief
Before his streaming
eyes.
’O Oysters,’ said the
Carpenter,
’You’ve had a pleasant
run.!
Shall we be trotting
home again?’
But answer came there
none --
And this was scarcely
odd, because
They’d eaten every
one."
"I like the Walrus
best," said Alice: "because you see he was a little story for the
poor oysters." "He ate more than the Carpenter, though" said
Tweedledee. "You see he held his handkerchief in front, so that the
Carpenter couldn’t count how many he took: contrariwise."
"That was
mean!" Alice said indignantly. "Then I like the Carpenter best -- if
he didn’t eat so many as the Walrus."
"But he ate as
many as he could get," said Tweedledum.
This was a puzzler.
After a pause, Alice began, "Well! They were both very unpleasant
characters -- -" Here she checked herself in some alarm, at hearing
something that sounded to her like the puffng of a large steam-engine in the
wood near them, though she feared it was more likely to be a wild beast.
"Are there any
lions or tigers about here?" she asked timidly.
"lt’s only the Red
King snoring," said Tweedledee.
"Come and look at
him!" the brothers cried, and they each took one of Alice’s hands, and led
her up to where the King was sleeping.
"Isn’t he a lovely
sight?" said Tweedledum. Alice couldn’t say honestly that he was. He had a
tall red night-cap on, with a tassel, and he was lying crumpled up into a sort
of untidy heap, and snoring loud -- "fit to snore his head off!" as
Tweedledum remarked.
"I’m afraid he’ll
catch cold with lying on the damp grass," said Alice, who was a very
thoughtful little girl.
"He’s dreaming
now," said Tweedledee: "and what do you think he’s dreaming
about?"
Alice said,
"Nobody can guess that."
"Why, about
you!" Tweedledee exclaimed, clapping his hands triumphantly. "And if
he left off dreaming about you, where do you suppose you’d be?"
"Where I am now,
of course," said Alice.
"Not you!"
Tweedledee retorted contemptuously. "You’d be nowhere. Why, you’re only a
sort of thing in his dream!"
"If that there
King was to wake," added Tweedledum, "you’d go out -- bang! -- just
llke a candle!"
"I shouldn’t!"
Alice exclaimed indignantly. "Besides, if I’m only a sort of thing in his
dream, what are you, I should like to know?"
"Ditto," said
Tweedledum.
"Ditto,
ditto!" cried Tweedledee.
He shouted this so loud
that Alice couldn’t help saying, "Hush! You’ll be waking him, I’m afraid,
if you make so much noise."
"Well, it’s no use
your talking about waking him," said Tweedledum, "when you’re only
one of the things in his dream. You know very well you’re not real."
"I am real!"
said Alice, and began to cry. "You won’t make yourself a bit realer by
crying," Tweedledee remarked: "there’s nothing to cry about."
"If I wasn’t
real," Alice said -- half-laughing through her tears, it all seemed so
ridiculous -- "I shouldn’t be able to cry."
"I hope you don’t
suppose those are real tears?" Tweedledum interrupted in a tone of great
contempt.
"I know they’re
talking nonsense," Alice thought to herself: "and it’s foolish to cry
about it." So she brushed away her tears, and went on as cheerfully as she
could, "At any rate I’d better be getting out of the wood, for really it’s
coming on very dark.
Do you think it’s going
to rain?"
Tweedledum spread a large
umbrella over himself and his brother, and looked up into it. "No, I don’t
think it is," he said: "at least -- not under here. Nohow."
"But it may rain
outside?"
"It may -- if it
chooses," said Tweedledee: "we’ve no objection. Contrariwise."
"Selfish
things!" thought Alice, and she was just going to say
"Good-night" and leave them, when Tweedledum sprang out from under
the umbrella, and seized her by the wrist.
"Do you see
that?" he said in a voice choking with passion, and his eyes grew large and
yellow all in a moment, as he pointed with a trembling finger at a small white
thing lying under the tree.
"It’s only a
rattle," Alice said, after a careful examination of the little white
thing. "Not a rattle-snake, you know," she added hastily, thinking
that he was frightened: "only an old rattle -- quite old and broken."
"I knew it
was!" cried Tweedledum, beginning to stamp about wildly and tear his hair.
"It’s spoilt, of course!" Here he looked at Tweedledee, who
immediately sat down on the ground, and tried to hide himself under the
umbrella.
Alice laid her hand
upon his arm, and said in a soothing tone, "You needn’t be so angry about
an old rattle."
"But it isn’t
old!" Tweedledum cried, in a greater fury than ever. "It’s new, I
tell you -- I bought it yesterday -- my nice NEW RATTLE!" and his voice
rose to a perfect scream.
All this time
Tweedledee was trying his best to fold up the umbrella, with himself in it:
which was such an extraordinary thing to do, that it quite took off Alice’s
attention from the angry brother. But he couldn’t quite succeed, and it ended
in his rolling over, bundled up in the umbrella, with only his head out: and
there he lay, opening and shutting his mouth and his large eyes --
"looking more like a fish than anything else," Alice thought.
"Of course you
agree to have a battle?" Tweedledum said in a calmer tone.
"I suppose
so," the other sulkily replied, as he crawled out of the umbrella:
"only she must help us to dress up, you know."
So the two brothers
went off hand-in-hand into the wood, and returned in a minute with their arms
full of things -- such as bolsters, blankets, hearthrugs, table-cloths,
dish-covers, and coal-scuttles,
"I hope you’re a
good hand at pinning and tying strings?" Tweedledum remarked. "Every
one of these things has got to go on, somehow or other."
Alice said afterwards
she had never seen such a fuss made about anything in all her life -- the way
those two bustled about -- and the quantity of things they put on -- and the
trouble they gave her in tying strings and fastening buttons -- "Really
they’ll be more like bundles of old clothes than anything else, by the time
they’re ready!" she said to herself, as she arranged a bolster round the
neck of Tweedledee, "to keep his head from being cut off," as he
said.
"You know,"
he added very gravely, "it’s one of the most serious things that can
possibly happen to one in a battle -- to get one’s head cut off."
Alice laughed loud, but
managed to turn it into a cough, for fear of hurting his feelings.
"Do I look very
pale?" said Tweedledum, coming up to have his helmet tied on. (He called
it a helmet, though it certainly looked much more like a saucepan.)
"Well -- yes -- a
little," Alice replied gently.
"I’m very brave
generally," he went on in a low voice: "only to-day I happen to have
a headache."
"And I’ve got a
toothache!" said Tweedledee, who had overheard the remark. "I’m far
worse than you!"
"Then you’d better
not fight to-day," said Alice, thinking it a good opportunity to make
peace.
"We must have a
bit of a fight, but I don’t care about going on long," said Tweedledum.
"What’s the time now?"
Tweedledee looked at
his watch, and said, "Half-past four."
"Let’s fight till
six, and then have dinner," said Tweedledum.
"Very well,"
the other said, rather sadly: "and she can watch us -- only you’d better
not come very close," he added: "I generally hit everything I can see
-- when I get really excited."
"And I hit
everything within reach," cried Tweedledum, "whether I can see it or
not!"
Alice laughed.
"You must hit the trees pretty often, I should think," she said.
Tweedledum looked round
him with a satisfied smile. "I don’t suppose," he said, "there’ll
be a tree left standing, for ever so far round, by the time we’ve
finished!"
"And all about a
rattle!" said Alice, still hoping to make them a little ashamed of
fighting for such a trifle.
"I shouldn’t have
minded it so much," said Tweedledum, "if it hadn’t been a new
one."
"I wish the
monstrous crow would come!" thought Alice.
"There’s only one
sword, you know," Tweedledum said to his brother: "but you can have
the umbrella -- it’s quite as sharp. Only we must begin quick. It’s getting as
dark as it can."
"And darker,"
said Tweedledee.
It was getting dark so
suddenly that Alice thought there must be a thunderstorm coming on. "What
a thick black cloud that is!" she said. "And how fast it comes! Why,
I do believe it’s got wings!"
"It’s the
crow!" Tweedledum cried out in a shrill voice of alarm: and the two
brothers took to their heels and were out of sight in a moment.
Alice ran a little way
into the wood, and stopped under a large tree. "It can never get at me
here," she thought: "it’s far too large to squeeze itself in among
the trees. But I wish it wouldn’t flap its wings so -- it makes quite a
hurricane in the wood -- here’s somebody’s shawl being blown away!"
SHE caught the shawl as
she spoke, and looked about for the owner: in another moment the White Queen
came running wildly through the wood, with both arms stretched out wide, as if
she were flying, and Alice very civilly went to meet her with the shawl.
"I’m very glad I
happened to be in the way," Alice said, as she helped her to put on her
shawl again.
The White Queen only
looked at her in a helpless frightened sort of way, and kept repeating
something in a whisper to herself that sounded like "Bread-and-butter,
bread-and-butter," and Alice felt that if there was to be any conversation
at all, she must manage it herself. So she began rather timidly: "Am I
addressing the White Queen?"
"Well, yes, if you
call that addressing," the Queen said. "It isn’t my notion of the
thing, at all. Alice thought it would never do to have an argument at the very
beginning of their conversation, so she smiled and said, "If your Majesty
will only tell me the right way to begin, I’ll do it as well as I can."
"But I don’t want
it done at all!" groaned the poor Queen. "I’ve been a-dressing myself
for the last two hours."
It would have been all
the better, as it seemed to Alice, if only she had got some one else to dress
her, she was so dreadfully untidy. "Every single thing’s crooked,"
Alice thought to herself, "and she’s all over pins! -- May I put your
shawl a little more straight for you?" she added aloud.
"I don’t know what’s
the matter with it!" the Queen said, in a melancholy voice. "It’s out
of temper, I think, I’ve pinned it here, and I’ve pinned it there, but there’s
no pleasing it!"
"It can’t go
straight, you know, if you pin it all on one side," Alice said, as she
gently put it right for her; "and, dear me, what a state your hair is
in!" "The brush has got entangled in it!" the Queen said with a
deep sigh. "And I lost the comb yesterday."
Alice carefully
released the brush, and did her best to get the hair into order. "Come,
you look rather better now!" she said, after altering most of the pins.
"But really you should have a lady’s maid!"
"I’m sure I’ll take
you with pleasure!" the Queen said. "Twopence a week, and jam every
other day."
Alice couldn’t help
laughing, as she said, "I don’t want you to hire me -- and I don’t care
for jam."
"It’s very good
jam," said the Queen.
"Well, I don’t
want any to-day, at any rate."
"You couldn’t have
it if you did want it," the Queen said. "The rule is, jam to-morrow
and jam yesterday -- but never jam to-day."
"It must come
sometimes to ’jam to-day,’ " Alice objected.
"No, it can’t,"
said the Queen. "It’s jam every other day: to-day isn’t any other day, you
know."
"I don’t
understand you," said Alice, "It’s dreadfully confusing!"
"The effect of
living backwards," the Queen said kindly: "it always makes one a
little giddy at first -- -"
"Living backwards!"
Alice repeated in great astonishment. "I never heard of such a
thing!"
" -- but there’s
one great advantage in it, that one’s memory works both ways."
"I’m sure mine
only works one way" Alice remarked. "I can’t remember things before
they happen."
"It’s a poor sort
of memory that only works backwards," the Queen remarked.
"What sort of
things do you remember best?" Alice ventured to ask.
"Oh, things that
happened the week after next." the Queen replied in a careless tone.
"For instance, now," she went on, sticking a large piece of plaster
on her finger as she spoke, "there’s the King’s Messenger. He’s in prison
now, being punished: and the trial doesn’t even begin till next Wednesday: and
of course the crime comes last of all."
"Suppose he never
commits the crime?" said Alice.
"That would be all
the better, wouldn’t it?" the Queen said, as she bound the plaster round
her finger with a bit of ribbon.
Alice felt there was no
denying that. "Of course it would be all the better," she said: "but
it wouldn’t be all the better his being punished."
"You’re wrong
there, at any rate," said the Queen: "were you ever punished?"
"Only for
faults," said Alice.
"And you were all
the better for it, I know!" the Queen said triumphantly.
"Yes, but then I
had done the things I was punished for," said Alice: "that makes all
the difference."
"But if you hadn’t
done them," the Queen said, "that wouId have been better still;
better, and better, and better!" Her voice went higher with each
"better," till it got quite to a squeak at last.
Alice was just
beginning to say, "There’s a mistake somewhere -- -" when the Queen
began screaming, so loud that she had to leave the sentence unfinished.
"Oh, oh, oh!" shouted the Queen, shaking her hand about as if she
wanted to shake it off. "My finger’s bleeding! Oh, oh, oh, oh!"
Her screams were so
exactly like the whistle of a steam-engine, that Alice had to hold both her
hands over her ears.
"What is the
matter?" she said, as soon as there was a chance of making herself heard.
"Have you pricked your finger?"
"I haven’t pricked
it yet" the Queen said, "but I soon shall -- -oh, oh, oh!"
"When do you
expect to do it?" Alice asked, feeling very much inclined to laugh.
"When I fasten my
shawl again," the poor Queen groaned out: "the brooch will come
undone directly. Oh, oh!" As she said the words the brooch flew open, and
the Queen clutched wildly at it, and tried to clasp it again.
"Take care!"
cried Alice. "You’re holding it all crooked!" And she caught at the
brooch; but it was too late: the pin had slipped, and the Queen had pricked her
finger.
"That accounts for
the bleeding, you see," she said to Alice with a smile. "Now you
understand the way things happen here."
"But why don’t you
scream now?" Alice asked, holding her hands ready to put over her ears
again. "Why, I’ve done all the screaming already," said the Queen.
"What would be the good of having it all over again?"
By this time it was
getting light. "The crow must have flown away, I think," said Alice:
"I’m so glad it’s gone. I thought it was the night coming on."
"I wish I could
manage to be glad!" the Queen said. "Only I never can remember the
rule. You must be very happy, living in this wood, and being glad whenever you
like!"
"Only it is so
very lonely here!" Alice said in a melancholy voice; and at the thought of
her loneliness two large tears came rolling down her cheeks.
"Oh, don’t go on
like that!" cried the poor Queen, wringing her hands in despair.
"Consider what a great girl you are. Consider what a long way you’ve come
to-day. Consider what o’clock it is. Consider anything, only don’t cry!"
Alice could not help
laughing at this, even in the midst of her tears. "Can you keep from
crying by considering things?" she asked.
"That’s the way it’s
done," the Queen said with great decision: "nobody can do two things
at once, you know. Let’s consider your age to begin with -- how old are
you?"
"I’m seven and a
half exactly." "You needn’t say ’exactly,’" the Queen remarked:
"I can believe it without that. Now I’ll give you something to believe. I’m
just one hundred and one, five months and a day."
"I can’t believe
that!" said Alice.
"Can’t you?"
the Queen said in a pitying tone. "Try again: draw a long breath, and shut
your eyes."
Alice laughed.
"There’s no use trying," she said: "one can’t believe impossible
things."
"I daresay you
haven’t had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I
always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as
six impossible things before breakfast. There goes the shawl again!"
The brooch had come
undone as she spoke, and a sudden gust of wind blew her shawl across a little
brook. The Queen spread out her arms again, and went flying after it, and this
time succeeded in catching it for herself. "I’ve got it!" she cried
in a triumphant tone. "Now you shall see me pin it on again, all by
myself!"
"Then I hope your
finger is better now?" Alice said very politely, as she crossed the little
brook after the Queen.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * *
"Oh, much
better!" cried the Queen, her voice rising into a squeak as she went on.
"Much beetter! Be-etter! Be-e-e-etter! B-e-ehh!" The last word ended
in a long bleat, so like a sheep that Alice quite started.
She looked at the
Queen, who seemed to have suddenly wrapped herself up in wool. Alice rubbed her
eyes, and looked again. She couldn’t make out what had happened at all. Was she
in a shop? And was that really -- was it really a sheep that was sitting on the
other side of the counter? Rub as she would, she could make nothing more of it:
she was in a little dark shop, leaning with her elbows on the counter, and
opposite to her was an old Sheep, sitting in an arm-chair knitting, and every
now and then leaving off to look at her through a great pair of spectacles.
"What is it you
want to buy?" the Sheep said at last, looking up for a moment from her
knitting.
"I don’t quite
know yet," Alice said very gently. "I should like to look all round
me first, if I might."
"You may look in
front of you, and on both sides, if you like," said the Sheep; "but
you can’t look all round you -- unless you’ve got eyes at the back of your
head."
But these, as it
happened, Alice had not got; so she contented herself with turning round,
looking at the shelves as she came to them.
The shop seemed to be
full of all manner of curious things -- but the oddest part of it all was, that
whenever she looked hard at any shelf, to make out exactly what it had on it,
that particular shelf was always quite empty: though the others round it were
crowded as full as they could hold.
"Things flow about
so here!" she said at last in a plaintive tone, after she had spent a
minute or so in vainly pursuing a large bright thing, that looked sometimes
like a doll and sometimes like a work-box, and was always in the shelf next
above the one she was looking at. "And this one is the most provoking of
all -- but I’ll tell you what -- " she added, as a sudden thought struck
her, "I’ll follow it up to the very top shelf of all. It’ll puzzle it to
go through the ceiling, I expect!"
But even this plan
failed: the "thing" went through the ceiling as quietly as possible,
as if it were quite used to it.
"Are you a child
or a teetotum?" the Sheep said as she took up another pair of needles.
"You’ll make me giddy soon, if you go on turning round like that."
She was now working with fourteen pairs at once, and Alice couldn’t help
looking at her in great astonishment.
"How can she knit
with so many?" the puzzled child thought to herself. "She gets more
and more like a porcupine every minute!"
"Can you
row?" the Sheep asked, handing her a pair of knitting-needles as she
spoke.
"Yes, a little --
but not on land -- and not with needles -- -" Alice was beginning to say
when suddenly the needles turned into oars in her hands, and she found they
were in a little boat, gliding along between banks: so there was nothing for it
but to do her best.
"Feather!"
cried the Sheep, as she took up another pair of needles.
This didn’t sound like
a remark that needed any answer, so Alice said nothing, but pulled away. There
was something very queer about the water, she thought, as every now and then
the oars got fast in it, and would hardly come out again.
"Feather!
Feather!" the Sheep cried again, taking more needles. "You’ll be
catching a crab directly."
"A dear little
crab!" thought Alice. "I should like that."
"Didn’t you hear
me say ’Feather’?" the Sheep cried angrily, taking up quite a bunch of
needles.
"Indeed I
did," said Alice: "you’ve said it very often -- and very loud.
Please, where are the crabs?"
"In the water, of
course!" said the Sheep, sticking some of the needles into her hair, as
her hands were full. "Feather, I say!
"Why do you say ’Feather’
so often?" Alice asked at last, rather vexed. "I’m not a bird!"
"You are,"
said the Sheep: "you’re a little goose."
This offended Alice a
little, so there was no more conversation for a minute or two, while the boat
glided gently on, sometimes among beds of weeds (which made the oars stick fast
in the water, worse than ever), and sometimes under trees, but always with the
same tall river banks frowning over their heads.
"Oh, please! There
are some scented rushes!" Alice cried in a sudden transport of delight.
"There really are -- and such beauties!"
"You needn’t say ’please’
to me about ’em," the Sheep said, without looking up from her knitting:
"I didn’t put ’em there, and I’m not going to take ’em away."
"No, but I meant
-- please, may we wait and pick some?" Alice pleaded. "If you don’t
mind stopping the boat for a minute."
"How am I to stop
it?" said the Sheep. "If you leave off rowing, it’ll stop of
itself."
So the boat was left to
drift down the stream as it would, till it glided gently in among the waving
rushes. And then the little sleeves were carefully rolled up, and the little
arms were plunged in elbow-deep, to get hold of the rushes a good long way down
before breaking them off -- and for a while Alice forgot all about the Sheep
and the knitting, as she bent over the side of the boat, with just the ends of
her tangled hair dipping into the water -- while with bright eager eyes she
caught at one bunch after another of the darling scented rushes.
"I only hope the
boat won’t tipple over!" she said to herself. "Oh, what a lovely one!
Only I couldn’t quite reach it." And it certainly did seem a little
provoking ("almost as if it happened on purpose," she thought) that,
though she managed to pick plenty of beautiful rushes as the boat glided by,
there was always a more lovely one that she couldn’t reach.
"The prettiest are
always further!" she said at last, with a sigh at the obstinacy of the
rushes in growing so far off, as, with flushed cheeks and dripping hair and
hands, she scrambled back into her place, and began to arrange her new-found treasures.
What mattered it to her
just then that the rushes had begun to fade, and to lose all their scent and
beauty from the very moment that she picked them? Even real scented rushes, you
know, last only a very little while -- and these, being dreamrushes, melted
away almost like snow, as they lay in heaps at her feet -- but Alice hardly
noticed this, there were so many other curious things to think about.
They hadn’t gone much
farther before the blade of one of the oars got fast in the water and wouldn’t
come out again (so Alice explained it afterwards), and the consequence was that
the handle of it caught her under the chin, and, in spite of a series of little
shrieks of "Oh, oh, oh!" from poor Alice, it swept her straight off
the seat, and down among the heap of rushes.
However, she wasn’t a
bit hurt, and was soon up again: the Sheep went on with her knitting all the
while, just as if nothing had happened. "That was a nice crab you
caught!" she remarked, as Alice got back into her place, very much relieved
to find herself still in the boat.
"Was it? I didn’t
see it," said Alice, peeping cautiously over the side of the boat into the
dark water. "I wish it hadn’t let go -- I should so like a little crab to
take home with me!" But the Sheep only laughed scornfully, and went on
with her knitting.
"Are there many
crabs here?" said Alice.
"Crabs, and all
sorts of things," said the Sheep: "plenty of choice, only make up
your mind. Now, what do you want to buy?"
"To buy!"
Alice echoed in a tone that was half astonished and half frightened -- for the
oars, and the boat, and the river, had vanished all in a moment, and she was
back again in the little dark shop.
"I should like to
buy an egg, please," she said timidly. "How do you sell them?
"Fivepence
farthing for one -- twopence for two." the Sheep replied.
"Then two are
cheaper than one?" Alice said in a surprised tone, taking out her purse.
"Only you must eat
them both, if you buy two," said the Sheep.
"Then I’ll have
one, please," said Alice, as she put the money down on the counter. For
she thought to herself, "They mightn’t be at all nice, you know."
The Sheep took the
money, and put it away in a box: then she said, "I never put things into
people’s hands -- that would never do -- you must get it for yourself."
And so saying, she went off to the other end of the shop, and set the egg
upright on a shelf. "I wonder why it wouldn’t do?" thought Alice, as
she groped her way among the tables and chairs, for the shop was very dark
towards the end. "The egg seems to get farther away the more I walk
towards it. Let me see, is this a chair? Why, it’s got branches, I declare! How
very odd to find trees growing here! And actually here’s a little brook! Well,
this is the very queerest shop I ever saw!"
* * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * *
So she went on,
wondering more and more at every step as everything turned into a tree the
moment she came up to it, and she quite expected the egg to do the same.
HOWEVER, the egg only
got larger and larger, and more and more human: when she had come within a few
yards of it, she saw that it had eyes and a nose and mouth; and when she had
come close to it, she saw clearly that it was HUMPTY DUMPTY himself. "It
can’t be anybody else! she said to herself. "I’m as certain of it, as if
his name was written all over his face!"
lt might have been
written a hundred times, easily, on that enormous face. Humpty Dumpty was
sitting with his legs crossed, like a Turk, on the top of a high wall -- such a
narrow one that Alice quite wondered how he could keep his balance -- and, as
his eyes were steadily fixed in the opposite direction, and he didn’t take the
least notice of her, she thought he must be a stuffed figure.
"And how exactly
like an egg he is!" she said aloud, standing with her hands ready to catch
him, for she was every moment expecting him to fall.
"It’s very
provoking," Humpty Dumpty said after a long silence, looking away from
Alice as he spoke, "to be called an egg -- very!"l
"I said you looked
like an egg, Sir," Alice gently explained. "And some eggs are very
pretty, you know," she added, hoping to turn her remark into a sort of
compliment.
"Some
people," said Humpty Dumpty, looking away from her as usual, "have no
more sense than a baby!"
Alice didn’t know what
to say to this: it wasn’t at all like conversation, she thought, as he never
said anything to her; in fact, his last remark was evidently addressed to a
tree -- so she stood and softly repeated to herself: --
Humpty Dumpty sat on a
wall:
Humpty Dumpty had a
great fall.
All the king’s horses
and all the king’s men
Couldn’t put Humpty
Dumpty in his place again."
"That last line is
much too long for the poetry," she added, almost out loud, forgetting that
Humpty Dumpty would hear her.
"Don’t stand
chattering to yourself like that," Humpty Dumpty said, looking at her for
the first time, "but tell me your name and your business."
"My name is Alice,
but -- -"
"It’s a stupid
name enough!" Humpty Dumpty interrupted impatiently. "What does it
mean?"
"Must a name mean
something?" Alice asked doubtfully.
"Of course it
must," Humpty Dumpty said with a short laugh: my name means the shape I am
-- and a good handsome shape it is, too. With a name like yours, you might be
any shape, almost."
"Why do you sit
out here all alone?" said"Alice, not wishing to begin an argument.
"Why, because
there’s nobody with me!" cried Humpty Dumpty. "Did you think I didn’t
know the answer to that? Ask another."
"Don’t you think
you’d be safer down on the ground?" Alice went on, not with any idea of
making another riddle, but simply in her good-natured anxiety for the queer
creature. "That wall is so very narrow!"
"What tremendously
easy riddles you ask!" Humpty Dumpty growled out. "Of course I don’t
think so! Why, if ever I did fall off -- which there’s no chance of -- but if
did -- -" Here he pursed up his lips, and looked so solemn and grand that
Alice could hardly help laughing. "If I did fall," he went on, the
King has promised me -- ah, you may turn pale, if you like! You didn’t think I
was going to say that, did you? The king has promised me -- with his own mouth
-- to -- to -- -- "
"To send all his
horses and all his men," Alice interrupted, rather unwisely.
"Now I declare
that’s too bad!" Humpty Dumpty cried, breaking into a sudden passion.
"You’ve been listening at doors -- and behind trees
"I haven’t,
indeed!" Alice said very gently. "It’s in a book."
"Ah well! They may
write such things in a book," Humpty Dumpty said in a calmer tone.
"That’s what you call a History of England, that is Now, take a good look
at me! I’m one that has spoken to a King, I am: mayhap you’ll never see such
another: and to show you I’m not proud, you may shake hands with me!" And
he grinned almost from ear to ear, as he leant forwards (and as nearly as
possible fell off the wall in doing so) and offered Alice his hand. She watched
him a little anxiously as she took it. "If he smiled much more, the ends
of his mouth might meet behind," she thought: "and then I don’t know
what would happen to his head! I’m afraid it would come off!"
"Yes, all his
horses and all his men," Humpty Dumpty went on. "They’d pick me up
again in a minute, they would! However, this conversation is going on a little
too fast: let’s go back to the last remark but one."
"I’m afraid I can’t
quite remember it," Alice said very politely.
"In that case we
may start afresh," said Humpty Dumpty, "and it’s my turn to choose a
subject -- -" ("He talks about it just as if it was a game!"
thought Alice.) "So here’s a question for you. How old did you say you
were?
Alice made a short
calculation, and said, "Seven years and six months.’
"Wrong!"
Humpty Dumpty exclaimed triumphantly. "You never said a word like
it."
"I thought you
meant "How old are you?’" Alice explained.
"If I’d meant
that, I’d have said it," said Humpty Dumpty.
Alice didn’t want to
begin another argument, so she said nothing.
"Seven years and
six months!" Humpty Dumpty repeated thoughtfully. "An uncomfortable
sort of age. Now if you’d asked my advice, I’d have said, "Leave off at
seven’ -- but it’s too late now."
"I never ask
advice about growing," Alice said indignantly.
"Too proud?"
the other enquired.
Alice felt even more
indignant at this suggestion.
"I mean," she
said, "that one can’t help growing older."
"One can’t,
perhaps," said Humpty Dumpty, "but two can. With proper assistance,
you might have left off at seven."
"What a beautiful
belt you’ve got on!" Alice suddenly remarked. (They had had quite enough
of the subject of age, she thought: and if they were really to take turns in
choosing subjects, it was her turn now). "At least," she corrected
herself on second thoughts, "a beautiful cravat, I should have said -- no,
a belt, I mean -- oh, I beg your pardon!" she added in dismay, for Humpty
Dumpty looked thoroughly offended, and she began to wish she hadn’t chosen that
subject. "If only I knew," she thought to herself, "which was
neck and which was waist!"
Evidently Humpty Dumpty
was very angry, though he said nothing for a minute or two. When he did speak
again, it was in a deep growl.
"It is a -- most
-- provoking -- thing," he said at last, "when a person doesn’t know
a cravat from a belt!"
"I know it’s very
ignorant of me," Alice replied in so humble a tone that Humpty Dumpty
relented.
"It’s a cravat,
child, and a beautiful one, as you say. It’s a present from the White King and
Queen. There now!"
"Is it
really?" said Alice, quite pleased to find she had chosen a good subject,
after all.
"They gave it
me," Humpty Dumpty continued thoughtfully, as he crossed one knee over the
other and clasped his hands round it, " -- for an un-birthday
present."
"I beg your
pardon?" Alice said with a puzzled air.
"I’m not
offended," said Humpty Dumpty.
"I mean, what is
an un-birthday present?"
"A present given
when it isn’t your birthday, of course.
Alice considered a
little. "I like birthday presents best," she said at last.
"You don’t know
what you’re talking about!" cried Humpty Dumpty. "How many days are
there in a year?"
"Three hundred and
sixty-five," said Alice.
"And how many
birthdays have you?"
"One."
"And if you take
one from three hundred and sixty-five, what remains?"
"Three hundred and
sixty-four, of course."
Humpty Dumpty looked
doubtfuly. "I’d rather see that done on paper," he said.
Alice couldn’t help
smiling as she took out her memorandum-book, and worked the sum for him: 365 1
-- 364 -- Humpty Dumpty took the book, and looked at it very carefully.
"That seems to be done right -- -" he began.
"You’re holding it
upside down!" Alice interrupted.
"To be sure I
was!" Humpty Dumpty said gaily, as she turned it round for him. "I
thought it looked a little queer. As I was saying, that seems to be done right
-- though I haven’t time to look it over thoroughly just now -- and that shows
that there are three hundred and sixty-four days when you get un-birthday
presents -- -"
"Certainly,"
said Alice.
"And only one for
birthday presents, you know, There’s glory for you!"
"I don’t know what
you mean by ’glory,’ "Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled
contemptuously. "Of course you don’t -- till I tell you. I meant
"there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!’"
"But ‘glory’ doesn’t
mean ‘a nice knock-down argument,’" Alice objected.
"When I use a
word," Humpty Dumpty said in a rather a scornful tone, "it means just
what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less.
"The question is,"
said Alice, "whether you can make words mean different things."
"The question
is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master -- that’s all."
Alice was too much
puzzled to say anything, so after a minute Humpty Dumpty began again.
"They’ve a temper,
some of them -- particularly verbs, they’re the proudest -- adjectives you can
do anything with, but not verbs -- however, I can manage the whole lot!
Impenetrability! That’s what I say!"
"Would you tell
me, please," said Alice, "what that means?"
"Now you talk like
a reasonable child," said Humpty Dumpty, looking very much pleased.
"I meant by "impenetrability’ that we’ve had enough of that subject,
and it would be just as well if you’d mention what you meant to do next, as I
suppose you don’t intend to stop here all the rest of your life."
"That’s a great
deal to make one word mean," Alice said in a thoughtful tone.
"When I make a
word do a lot of work like that," said Humpty Dumpty, "I always pay
it extra."
"Oh!" said
Alice. She was too much puzzled to make any other remark.
Saturday night,"
Humpty Dumpty went on, wagging his head gravely from side to side: "for to
get their wages, you know." (Alice didn’t venture to ask what he paid them
with; and so you see I can’t tell you.)
"You seem very
clever at explaining words, Sir," said Alice. "Would you kindly tell
me the meaning of the poem called ‘Jabberwocky’ ?"
"Let’s hear
it," said Humpty Dumpty. "I can explain all the poems that ever were
invented -- and a good many that haven’t been invented just yet.’
This sounded very
hopeful, so Alice repeated the first verse:
"’Twas brillig,
and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in
the wabe;
All mimsy were the
borogoves,
And the mome raths
outgrabe."
"That’s enough to
begin with," Humpty Dumpty interrupted: "there are plenty of hard
words there, ‘Brillig’ means four o’clock in the afternoon -- the time when you
begin broiling things for dinner."
"That’ll do very
well," said Alice: "and "slithy’?’
"Well, ’slithy’
means ‘lithe and slimy.’ ‘Lithe’ is the same as ‘active.’ You see it’s like a
portmanteau -- there are two meanings packed up into one word."
"I see it
now," Alice remarked thoughtfully: "and what are toves ?
"well, ‘toves’ are
something like badgers -- they’re something like lizards -- and they’re
something like corkscrews."
"They must be very
curious creatures."
"They are
that," said Humpty Dumpty: "also they make their nests under
sun-dials -- also they live on cheese."
"And what’s to
"gyre’ and to "gymble’?"
"To "gyre’ is
to go round and round like a gyroscope. To "gimble’ is to make holes like
a gimlet."
"And "the
wabe’ is the grass plot round a sundial, I suppose?" said Alice, surprised
at her own ingenuity.
"Of course it is.
It’s called "wabe,’ you know because it goes a long way before it, and a
long way behind it -- -"
"And a long way
beyond it on each side," Alice added.
"Exactly so. Well,
the "mimsy’ is "flimsy and miserable’ (there’s another portmanteau
for you). And a "borogove’ is a thin shabby-looking bird with its feathers
sticking out all round -- something like a live mop."
"And then
"mome raths’ ?" said Alice. "If I’m not giving you too much
trouble."
"Well, a
"rath’ is a sort of green pig: but "mome’ I’m not certain about. I
think it’s short for "from home’ -- meaning that they’d lost their way,
you "And what does ’outgrabe’ mean?"
"Well, ’outgribing’
is something between bellowing and whistling, with a kind of sneeze in the
middle: however, you’ll hear it done, maybe -- down in the wood yonder -- and
when you’ve once heard it you’ll be quite content. Who’s been repeating all
that hard stuff to you?"
"I read it in a
book," said Alice. "But I had some poetry repeated to me, much easier
than that, by -- Tweedledee, I think."
"As to poetry, you
know," said Humpty Dumpty, stretching out one of his great hands, "I
can repeat poetry as well as other folk if it comes to that -- -"
"Oh, it needn’t
come to that!" Alice hastily said, hoping to keep him from beginning.
"The piece I’m
going to repeat," he went on without noticing her remark, "was
written entirely for your amusement."
Alice felt that in that
case she really ought to listen to it, so she sat down, and said "Thank
you" rather sadly.
"In winter when
the fields are white,
I sing this song for
your delight -- -
only I don’t sing
it," he explained.
"I see you don’t,"
said Alice.
"If you can see
whether I’m singing or not, you’ve sharper eyes than most," Humpty Dumpty
remarked severely. Alice was silent.
"In spring, when
woods are getting green,
I’ll try and tell you
what I’mean."
"Thank you very
much," said Alice.
"In summer, when
the days are long,
Perhaps you’ll
understand the song:
In autumn, when the
leaves are brown
Take pen and ink and
write it down,"
"I will, if I can
remember it so long," said Alice.
"You needn’t go on
making remarks like that," Humpty Dumpty said: "they’re not sensible,
and they put me out."
"I sent a message
to the fish:
I told them ’This is
what I wish.’
The little fishes of
the sea,
They sent an answer
back to me.
The little fishes’
answer was
’We cannot do it, Sir,
because -- -’"
"I’m afraid I don’t
quite understand," said Alice. "It gets easier further on,"
Humpty Dumpty replied.
"I sent to them
again to say
’It will be better to
obey.’
The fishes answered
with a grin,
’Why, what a temper you
are in!’
I told them once, I
told them twice:
They would not listen
to advice.
I took a kettle large
and new,
Fit for the deed I had
to do.
My heart went hop, my
heart went thump;
I filled the kettle at
the pump.
Then some one came to
me and said,
’The little fishes are
in bed.’
I said to him, I said
it plain,
"Then you must
wake them up again.’
I said it very loud and
clear;
I went and shouted in
his ear."
Humpty Dumpty raised
his voice almost to a scream as he repeated this verse, and Alice thought with
a shudder, "I wouldn’t have been the messenger for anything!"
"But he was very
stiff and proud;
He said "You needn’t
shout so loud!’
And he was very proud
and stiff;
He said, ’I’D go and
wake them, if -- -’
I took a corkscrew from
the shelf.
I went to wake them up
myself.
And when I found the
door was locked
I pulled and pushed and
kicked and knocked.
And when I found the
door was shut,
I tried to turn the
handle, but -- -"
There was a long pause.
"Is that
all?" Alice timidly asked.
"That’s all,"
said Humpty Dumpty. "Goodbye."
This was rather sudden,
Alice thought: but, after such a very strong hint that she ought to be going,
she felt that it would hardly be civil to stay. So she held out her hand.
"Good-bye, till we meet again!" she said as cheerfully as she could.
"I shouldn’t know
you again if we did meet," Humpty Dumpty replied in a discontented tone,
giving her one of his fingers to shake; "you’re so exactly like other
people.
"The face is what
one goes by, generally," Alice remarked in a thoughtful tone.
"That’s just what
I complain of," said Humpty Dumpty. "Your face is the same as
everybody has -- the two eyes, so -- -" (marking their places in the air
with his thumb) "nose in the middle, mouth under. It’s always the same.
Now if you had the two eyes on the same side of the nose, for instance -- or
the mouth at the top -- -that would be some help."
"It wouldn’t look
nice," Alice objected. But Humpty Dumpty only shut his eyes and said,
"Wait till you’ve
tried."
Alice waited a minute
to see if he would speak again, but as he never opened his eyes or took any
further notice of her, she said, "Good-bye!" once more, and, on
getting no answer to this, she quietly walked away: but she couldn’t help
saying to herself as she went, "Of all the unsatisfactory -- -" (she
repeated this aloud, as it was a great comfort to have such a long word to say)
"of all the unsatisfactory people I ever met -- -" She never finished
the sentence, for at this moment a heavy crash shook the forest from end to
end.
THE next moment
soldiers came running through the wood, at first in twos and threes, then ten
or twenty together, and at last in such crowds that they seemed to fill the
whole forest. Alice got behind a tree, for fear of being run over, and watched
them go by.
She thought that in all
her life she had never seen soldiers so uncertain on their feet: they were
always tripping over something or other, and whenever one went down, several
more always fell over him, so that the ground was soon covered with little
heaps of men.
Then came the horses.
Having four feet, these managed rather better than the foot-soldiers: but even
they stumbled now and then; and it seemed to be a regular rule that, whenever a
horse stumbled, the rider fell off instantly. The confusion got worse every
moment, and Alice was very glad to get into an open place, where she found the
White King seated on the ground, busily writing in his memorandum-book.
"I’ve sent them
all!" the King cried in a tone of delight, on seeing Alice. "Did you
happen to meet any soldiers, my dear, as you came through the wood?"
"Yes, I did,"
said Alice: "several thousand, I should think."
"Four thousand two
hundred and seven, that’s the exact number," the King said, referring to
his book. "I couldn’t send all the horses, you know, because two of them
are wanted in the game. And I haven’t sent the two Messengers, either. They’ve
both gone to the town. Just look along the road, and tell me if you can see
either of them."
"I see nobody on
the road," said Alice.
"I only wish I had
such eyes," the King remarked in a fretful tone. "To be able to see
Nobody! And at that distance too! Why, it’s as much as I can do to see real
people, by this light!"
All this was lost on
Alice, who was still looking intently along the road, shading her eyes with one
hand. "I see somebody now!" she exclaimed at last. "But he’s
coming very slowly -- and what curious attitudes he goes into!" (For the
Messenger kept skipping up and down, and wriggling like an eel, as he came along,
with his great hands spread out like fans on each side.)
"Not at all,"
said the King. "He’s an Anglo-Saxon Messenger -- and those are Anglo-Saxon
attitudes. He only does them when he’s happy. His name is Haigha." (He
pronounced it so as to rhyme with "mayor.")
"I love my love
wih an H," Alice couldn’t help beginning, "because he is Happy. I
hate him with an H, because he is Hideous. I fed him with -- with -- with
Ham-sandwiches and Hay. His name is Haigha, and he lives -- -"
"He lives on the
Hill," the King remarked simply, without the least idea that he was
joining in the game, while Alice was still hesitating for the name of a town
beginning with H. "The other Messenger’s called Hatta. I must have two,
you know -- to come and go. One to come, and one to go."
"I beg your
pardon?" said Alice.
"It isn’t
respectable to beg," said the King.
"I only meant that
I didn’t understand," said Alice. "Why one to come and one to
go?"
"Don’t I tell
you?" the King repeated impatiently. "I must have two -- to fetch and
carry. One to fetch, and one to carry."
At this moment the
Messenger arrived: he was far too much out of breath to say a word, and could
only wave his hands about, and make the most fearful faces at the poor King.
"This young lady
loves you with an H," the King said, introducing Alice in the hope of
turning off the Messenger’s attention from himself -- but It was no use -- the
Anglo-Saxon attitudes only got more extraordinary every moment, while the great
eyes rolled wildly from side to side.
"You alarm
me!" said the King. "I feel faint -- give me a ham sandwich!"
On which the Messenger,
to Alice’s great amusement, opened a bag that hung round his neck, and handed a
sandwich to the King, who devoured it greedily.
"Another
sandwich!" said the King.
"There’s nothing
but hay left now," the Messenger said, peeping into the bag.
"Hay, then,"
the King faintly murmured.
Alice was glad to see
that it revived him a good deal. "There’s nothing like eating hay when you’re
faint," he remarked to her, as he munched away.
"I should think
throwing cold water over you would be better," Alice suggested : " --
-or some sal-volatile."
"I didn’t say
there was nothing better," the King replied. "I said there was
nothing like it." Which Alice did not venture to deny.
"Who did you pass
on the road?" the King went on, holding out his hand to the Messenger for
some more hay.
"Nobody,"
said the Messenger.
"Quite
right," said the King: "this young lady saw him too. So of course
Nobody walks slower than you.
"I do my
best," the Messenger said in a sullen tone. "I’m sure nobody walks
much faster than I do!"
"He can’t do
that," said the King, "or else he’d have been here first. However,
now you’ve got your breath, you may tell us what’s happened in the town."
"I’ll whisper
it," said the Messenger, putting his hands to his mouth in the shape of a
trumpet and stooping so as to get close to the King’s ear. Alice was sorry for
this, as she wanted to hear the news too. However, instead of whispering, he
simply shouted at the top of his voice. "They’re at it again!"
"Do you call that
a whisper!" cried the poor King, jumping up and shaking himself. "If
you do such a thing again I’ll have you buttered! It went through and through my
head like an earthquake!"
"It would have to
be a very tiny earthquake!" thought Alice. "Who are at it
again?" she ventured to ask.
"Why the Lion and
the Unicorn of course,"
"Fighting for the
crown?
"Yes, to be
sure," said the King; "and the best of the joke is, that it’s my
crown all the while! Let’s run and see them." And they trotted off, Alice
repeating to herself, as she ran, the words of the old song: --
"The Lion and the
Unicorn were fighting for the crown.’
The Lion beat the
Unicorn all round the town.
Some gave them white
bread and some gave them brown;
Some gave them
plum-cake and drummed them out of town."
"Does -- the one
-- that wins -- get the crown?" she asked, as well as she could, for the
long run was putting her quite out of breath.
"Dear me,
no!" said the King. "What an idea!"
"Would you -- be
good enough -- -" Alice panted out, after running a little further,
"to stop a minute -- just to get -- one’s breath again?"
"I’m good
enough," the King said, "only I’m not strong enough. You see, a
minute goes by so fearfully quick. You might as well try to stop a
Bandersnatch!"
Alice had no more
breath for talking, so they trotted on in silence, till they came in sight of a
great crowd, in the middle of which the Lion and Unicorn were fighting. They
were in such a cloud of dust, that at first Alice could not make out which was
which: but she soon managed to distinguish the Unicorn by his horn.
They placed themselves
close to where Hatta, the other Messenger, was standing watching the fight,
with a cup of tea in one hand and a piece of bread and butter in the other.
"He’s only just
out of prison, and he hadn’t finished his tea when he was sent in," Haigha
whispered to Alice: "and they only give them oyster-shells in there -- so
you see he’s very hungry and thirsty. How are you, dear child?" he went
on, putting his arm affectionately round Hatta’s neck.
Hatta looked round and
nodded, and went on with his bread-and-butter.
"Were you happy in
prison, dear child?" said Haigha.
Hatta looked round once
more, and this time a tear or two trickled down his cheek: but not a word would
he say.
"Speak, can’t
You!" Haigha cried impatiently. But Hatta only munched away, and drank
some more tea.
"Speak, won’t
you!" cried the King. "How are they getting on with the fight?"
Hatta made a desperate
effort, and swallowed a large piece of bread-and-butter. "They’re getting
on very well," he said in a choking voice: "each of them has been
down about eighty-seven times."
"Then I suppose
they’ll soon bring the white bread and the brown?" Alice ventured to
remark.
"It’s waiting for ’em
now," said Hatta: "this is a bit of it as I’m eating."
There was a pause in
the fight just then, and the Lion and the Unicorn sat down, panting, while the
King called out "Ten minutes allowed for refreshments!" Haigha and
Hatta set to work at once, carrying round trays of white and brown bread. Alice
took a piece to taste, but it was very dry.
"I don’t think
they’ll fight any more to-day," the King said to Hatta: "go and order
the drums to begin." And Hatta went bounding away like a
"grasshopper.
For a minute or two
Alice stood silently watching him. suddenly she brightened up look, look!"
she cried, pointing eagerly. "There’s the White Queen running across the
country! She came flying out of the wood over yonder -- how fast those Queens
can run!"
"There’s some
enemy after her, no doubt," the King said, without even looking round.
"That wood’s full of them."
"But aren’t you
going to run and help her?" Alice asked, very much surprised at his taking
it so quietly.
"No use, no
use!" said the King. "She runs so fearfully quick. You might as well
try to catch a Bandersnatch! But I’ll make a memorandum about her, if you like
-- she’s a dear good creature," he repeated softly to himself, as he
opened his memorandum-book. "Do you spell "creature’ with a double ’e’?"
At this moment the
Unicorn sauntered by them, with his hands in his pockets. "I had the best
of it this time!" he said to the King, just glancing at him as he passed.
"A little -- a
little," the King replied, rather nervously. "You shouldn’t have run
him through with your horn, you know."
"It didn’t hurt
him" the Unicorn said carelessly, and he was going on, when his eye
happened to fall upon Alice : he turned round instantly, and stood for some
time looking at her with an air of the deepest disgust.
"What -- is --
this?" he said at last.
"This is a child!"
Haigha replied eagerly, coming in front of Alice to introduce her, and
spreading out both his hands towards her in an Anglo-Saxon attitude. "We
only found it to-day. It’s as large as life, and twice as natural!"
"I always thought
they were fabulous monsters!" said the Unicorn. "Is it alive?"
"It can
talk," said Haigha, solemnly.
The unicorn looked
dreamily at Alice, and said, child."
Alice could not help
her lips curling up into a smile as she began: "Do you know, I always
thought Unicorns were fabulous monsters, too! I never saw one alive
before!"
"Well, now that we
have seen each other: said The Unicorn,"if you’ll believe in me, I’ll
believe in you. Is that a bargain?
"Yes, if you
like," said Alice.
"Come, fetch out
the plum-cake, old man!" the Unicorn went on, turning from her to the
King.
"None of your
brown bread for me!"
"Certainly
Certainly!" the king muttered, and beckoned to Haigha. "Open the
bag!" he whispered. "Quick! Not that one -- that’s full of hay!"
Haigha took a large
cake out of the bag, and gave it to Alice to hold, while he got out a dish and
carving-knife. How they all came out of it Alice couldn’t guess. It was just
like a conjuring trick, she thought.
The Lion had joined them
while this was going on: he looked very tired and sleepy, and his eyes were
half shut. "What’s this?" he said, blinking lazily at Alice, and
speaking in a deep hollow tone that sounded like the tolling of a great bell.
"Ah, what is it,
now ?" the Unicorn cried eagerly, "You’ll never guess! I couldn’t."
The Lion looked at
Alice wearily. "Are you animal -- -or vegetable -- or mineral?" he
said, yawning at every other word.
"It’s a fabulous
monster!" the Unicorn cried out, before Alice could reply.
"Then hand round
the plum-cake, Monster," the Lion said, lying down and putting his chin on
his paws. "And sit down, both of you" (to the King and the Unicorn) :
"fair play with the cake, you know!"
The king was evidently
very uncomfortable at having to sit down between the two great creatures ; but
there was no other place for him.
"What a fight we
might have for the crown, now!" the Unicorn said, looking slyly up at the
crown, which the poor King was nearly shakin off his head, he trembled so much.
"I should win
easy," said the Lion.
"I’m not so sure
of that," said the Unicorn.
"Why, I beat you
all round the town, you chicken!" the Lion replied angrily, half getting
up as he spoke.
Here the king
interupted, to prevent the quarrel going on: he was very nervous, and his voice
quite quivered. "Ali round the town?" he said. "That’s a good
long way. Did you go by the old bridge, or the market-place? You get the best
view by the old bridge as he lay down again. "There was too much dust to
see anything. What a time the Monster is, cutting up that cake!"
Alice had seated
herself on the bank of a little brook, with the great dish on her knees’,and ’wer"as
provoking!" she said, in reply to the Lion (she was getting quite used to
being called "the Monster)". "I’ve cut off several slices
already, but they always join on again!"
"You don’t know
how to manage Looking-glass cakes," the Unicorn remarked. "Hand it
round first, and cut it afterwards."
This sounded nonsense,
but Alice very obediently got up, and carried the dish round, and the cake
divided itself into three pieces as she did so. "Now cut it up," said
the Lion, as she returned to her place with the empty dish.
"I say, this isn’t
fair!" cried the Uincorn, as Alice sat with the knife in her hand, very
much puzzled how to begin. "The Monster has given the Lion twice as much
as me!"
"She’s kept none
for herself, anyhow," said the Lion. "Do you like plum-cake,
Monster?"
But before Alice could
answer him the drums began.
Where the noise came from
she couldn’t make out: the air seemed full of it, and it rang through She
started to her feet, and sprang across the little brook in her terror, and had
just time to see the Lion and the Unicorn rise to their feet, with angry looks
at being interrupted in their feast, before she dropped to her knees and put
her hands over her ears, vainly trying to shut out the dreadful uproar.
"If that doesn’t
"drum them out of town,’ " she thought to herself, "nothing ever
will!"
AFTER a while the noise
seemed gradually to die away, till all was dead silence, and Alice lifted up
her head in some alarm. There was no one to be seen, and her first thought was
that she must have been dreaming about the Lion and the Unicorn and those queer
Anglo-Saxon Messengers, however, there was the great dish still lying at her
feet, on which she had tried to cut the plum-cake’ "So I wasn’t dreaming,
after all." she said to herself, "unless -- unless we’re all part of
the same dream. Only I do hope it’s my dream and not the Red King’s! I don’t
like belonging to another person’s dream," she went on in a rather
complaining tone: "I’ve a great mind to go and wake him, and see what
happens!"
At this moment her
thoughts were interrupted by a loud shouting of "Ahoy! Ahoy! Check!"
and a Knight, dressed in crimson armour, came galloping down upon her,
brandishing a great club. just as he reached her, the horse stopped suddenly:
"You’re my prisoner!" the Knight cried, as he tumbled off his horse.
Startled as she was,
Alice was more frightened for him than for herself at the moment, and watched
him with some anxiety as he mounted again. As soon as he was comfortably in the
saddle, he began once more, "You’re my -- -" but here another voice
broke in, "Ahoy! Ahoy! Check!" and Alice looked round in some
surprise for the new enemy.
This time it was a
White Knight. He drew up at Alice’s side, and tumbled off his horse just as the
Red Knight had done: then he got on again, and the two Knights sat and looked
at each other without speaking. Alice looked from one to the other in some
bewilderment.
"She’s my
prisoner, you know!" the Red-Knight said at last.
"Yes, but then I
came and rescued her!" the White Knight replied.
"Well, we must
fight for her, then," said the Red Knight, as he took up his helmet (which
hung from the saddle, and was something the shape of a horse’s head), and put
it on.
"You will observe
the Rules of Battle, of course?" the White Knight remarked, putting on his
helmet too.
"I always
do," said the Red Knight, and they began banging away at each other with
such fury that Alice got behind a tree to be out of the way of the blows.
"I wonder, now,
what the Rules of Battle are," she said to herself, as she watched the
fight, timidly peeping out from her hiding-place: "one Rule seems to be
that, if one Knight hits the other, he knocks him off his horse, and if he
misses, he tumbles off-himself -- and another Rule seems to be that they hold
their clubs in their arms, as if they were Punch and Judy. What a noise they
make when they tumble! Just like fire-irons falling into the fender! And how
quiet the horses are! They let them get on and off them just as if they were
tables!"
Another Rule of Battle,
that Alice had not noticed, seemed to be that they always fell on their heads,
and the battle ended with their both falling off in this way, side by side :
when they got up again, they shook hands, and then the Red Knight mounted and
galloped off.
"It was a glorious
victory, wasn’t it?" said the White Knight, as he came up panting.
"I don’t
know," Alice said doubtfully. "I don’t want to be anybody’s prisoner.
I want to be Queen."
"So you will, when
you’ve crossed the next brook," said the White Knight. "I’ll see you
safe to the end of the wood -- and then I must go back, you know. That’s the
end of my move."
"Thank you very
much," said Alice. "May I help you off with your helmet?" It was
evidently more than he could manage by himself; however she managed to shake
him out of it at last.
"Now one can
breathe more easily," said the Knight, putting back his shaggy hair with
both hands, and turning nis gentle face and large mild eyes to Alice. She
thought she had never seen such a strange-looking soldier in all her life. He
was dressed in tin armour, which seemed to fit him very badly, and he had a
queer little deal box fastened across his shoulders upside-down, and with the
lid hanging open. Alice looked at it with great curiosity.
"I see you’re
admiring my little box," the Knight said in a friendly tone. "It’s my
own invention -- to keep clothes and sandwiches in. You see I carry it
upside-down, so that the rain can’t get in."
"But the things
can get out," Alice gently remarked. "Do you know the lid’s
open?"
"I didn’t know
it," the Knight said, a shade of vexation passing over his face.
"Then all the things must have fallen out! And the box is no use without
them." He unfastened it as he spoke, and was just going to throw it into
the bushes, when a sudden thought seemed to strike , and he hung it carefully
on a tree. "Can you guess why I did that!" he said to Alice.
Alice shook her head.
"In hopes some bees may make a nest in it -- then I should get the
honey."
"But you’ve got a
bee-hive -- or something like one -- fastened to the saddle," said Alice.
"Yes, it’s a very
good bee-hive," the Knight said in a discontented tone, "one of the
best kind. But not a single bee has come near it yet. And the other thing is a
mouse-trap. I suppose the mice keep the bees out -- or the bees keep the mice
out, I don’t know which."
"I was wondering
what the mouse-trap was for," said Alice. "It isn’t very likely there
would be any mice on the horse’s back."
"Not very likely,
perhaps," said the Knight; "but if they do come, I don’t choose to have
them running all about."
"You see," he
went on after a pause, "it’s as well to be provided for everything. That’s
the reason the horse has anklets round his feet."
"But what are they
for?" Alice asked in a tone of great curiosity.
"To guard against
the bites of sharks," the Knight replied. "It’s an invention of my
own. And now help me on. I’ll go with you to the end of the wood -- what’s that
dish for?"
"It’s meant for
plum-cake," said Alice.
"We’d better take
it with us," the Knight said.
"It’ll come in
handy if we find any plum-cake. Help me to get it into this bag."
This took a long time
to manage, though Alice held the bag open very carefully, because the Knight
was so very awkward in putting in the dish: the first two or three times that
he tried he fell in himself instead. "It’s rather a tight fit, you
see," he said, as they got it in at last; "there are so many
candlesticks in the bag." And he hung it to the saddle, which was already
loaded with bunches of carrots, and fire-irons, and many other things.
"I hope you’ve got
you hair well fastened on?" he continued, as they set off.
"Only in the usual
way," Alice said, smiling.
"That’s hardly
enough," he said, anxiously. "You see the wind is so very strong
here. It’s as strong as soup."
"Have you invented
a plan for keeping one’s hair from being blown off?" Alice enquired.
"Not yet,"
said the Knight. "But I’ve got a plan for keeping it from falling
off."
"I should like to
hear it very much."
"First you take an
upright stick," said the Knight. "Then you make your hair creep up
it, Like a fruit-tree. Now the reason hair falls off is because it hangs down
-- things never fall upwards, you know. It’s my own invention. You may try it
if you like."
It didn’t sound a
comfortable plan, Alice thought, and for a few minutes she walked on in
silence, puzzling over the idea, and every now and then stopping to help the
poor Knight, who certainly was not a good rider.
Whenever the horse
stopped (which it did very often), he fell off in front; and whenever it went
on again (which it generally did rather suddenly), he fell off behind.
Otherwise he kept on pretty well, except that he had a habit of now and then
falling off sideways; and as he generally did this on the side on which Alice
was walking, she soon found that it was the best plan not to walk quite close
to the horse.
"I’m afraid you’ve
not had much practice in riding," she ventured to say, as she was helping
him up from his fifth tumble.
The Knight looked very
much surprised, and a little offended at the remark. "What makes you say
that?" he asked, as he scrambled back into the saddle, keeping hold of
Alice’s hair with one hand, to save himself from falling over on the other side
"Because people don’t fall off quite so often, when they’ve had much
practice."
"I’ve had plenty
of practice," the Knight said very gravely: "plenty of
practice!"
Alice could think of
nothing better to say than "Indeed?" but she said it as heartily as
she could. They went on a little way in silence after this, the Knight with his
eyes shut, muttering to himself, and Alice watching anxiously for the next
tumble.
"The great art of
riding," the Knight suddenly began in a loud voice, waving his right arm
as he spoke "is to keep -- " Here the sentence ended as suddenly as
it had begun, as the Knight fell heavily on the top of his head exactly in the
path where Alice was walking. She was quite frightened this time, and said in
an anxious tone, as she picked him up, "I hope no bones are broken?"
"None to speak
of," the Knight said, as if he didn’t mind breaking two or three of them. "The
great art of riding as I was sayin is -- to keep your balance. Like this, you
know -- -"
He let go the bridle,
and stretched out both his arms to show Alice what he meant, and this time he
fell flat on his back, right under the horse’s feet.
"Plenty of
practice!" he went on repeating, all the time that Alice was getting him
on his feet again. "Plenty of practice!"
"It’s too
ridiculous!" cried Alice, getting quite out of patience. "You ought
to have a wooden horse on wheels, that you ought!"
"Does that kind go
smoothly?" the Knight asked in a tone of great interest, clasping his arms
round the horses’ neck as he spoke, just in time to save himself from tumbling
off again.
"Much more
smoothly than a live horse," Alice said, with a little scream of laughter,
in spite of all she could do to prevent it.
"I’ll get
one," the Knight said thoughtfully to himself. "One or two --
several."
There was a short
silence after this; then the night went on again. "I’m a great hand at
inventing things. Now, I daresay you noticed, the last time you picked me up,
that I was looking thoughtful?"
"You were a little
grave," said Alice.
"Well, just then I
was inventing a new way of getting over a gate -- would you like to hear
it?"
"Very much
indeed," Alice said politely.
"I’ll tell you how
I came to think of it," said the Knight. "You see, I said to myself,
"The only diffculty is with the feet: the head is high enough already.’
Now, first I put my head on the top of the gate -- then the head’s high enough
-- then I stand on my head -- then the feet are high enough, you see -- then I’m
over you see."
"Yes, I suppose
you’d be over when that was done," Alice said thoughtfully: "but don’t
you think it would be rather hard?"
"I haven’t tried
it yet," the Knight said, gravely, "so I can’t tell for certain --
but I’m afraid it would be a little hard."
He looked so vexed at
the idea, that Alice changed the subject hastily. "What a curious helmet
you’ve got!" she said cheerfully. "Is that your invention too?"
The Knight looked down
proudly at his helmet which hung from the saddle. "Yes," he said,
"but I’ve invented a better one than that -- like a sugar loaf. When I
used to wear it, if I fell off the horse, it always touched the ground directly.
So I had very little way to fall, you see -- but there was the danger of
falling into it, to be sure. That happened to me once -- and the worst of it
was, before I could get out again, the other White Knight came and put it on.
He thought it was his own helmet."
The Knight looked so
solemn about it that Alice did not dare to laugh. "I’m afraid you must
have hurt him," she said in a trembling voice, "being on the top of
his head."
"I had to kick
him, of course," the Knight said very seriously. "And then he took
the helmet off again -- but it took hours and hours to get me out. I was as
fast as -- as lightning, you know." "But that’s a different kind of
fastness," Alice objected.
The Knight shook his
head. "It was all kinds of fastness with me, I can assure you!" he
said. He raised his hands in some excitement as he said this, and instantly
rolled out of the saddle, and fell headlong into a deep ditch.
Alice ran to the side
of the ditch to look for him. She was rather startled by the fall, as for some
time he had kept on very well, and she was afraid that he really was hurt this
time. However, though she could see nothing but the soles of his feet, she was
he was talking on in his usual tone. "All kinds of fastness," he
repeated: "but it was careless of him to put another man’s helmet on --
with the man in it, too."
"How can you go on
talking so quietly, head downwards?" Alice asked, as she dragged him out
by the feet, and laid him in a heap on the bank.
The Knight looked
surprised at the question. "What does it matter where my body happens to
be?" he said. "My mind goes on working all the same. In fact, the
more head-downwards I am, the more I keep inventing new things."
"Now the cleverest
thing that I ever did," he went on after a pause, "was inventing a
new pudding during the meat-course."
"In time to have
it cooked for the next course?" said Alice. "Well, that was quick
work, certainly." "Well, not the next course," the Knight said
in a slow thoughtful tone: "no, certainly not the next course."
"Then it would
have, to be the next day. I suppose you wouldn’t have two pudding-courses in
one dinner?"
"Well, not the
next day," the Knight repeated as before: "not the next day. In
fact," he went on, holding his head down, and his voice getting lower and
lower, "I don’t believe that pudding ever was cooked! In fact, I don’t
believe that pudding ever will be cooked! And yet it was a very clever pudding
to invent."
"What did you mean
it to be made of?" Alice asked, hoping to cheer him up, for he seemed
quite low-spirited about it.
"It began with
blotting-paper," the Knight answered with a groan.
"That wouldn’t be
very nice, I’m afraid -- -"
"Not very nice
alone," he interrupted, quite eagerly: "but you’ve no idea what a
difference it makes, mixing it with other things -- such as gunpowder and
sealing-wax. And here I must leave you." Alice could only look puzzled:
she was thinking of the pudding.
"You are
sad," the Knight said in an anxious tone: "let me sing you a song to
comfort you."
"Is it very
long?" Alice asked, for she had heard a good deal of poetry that day.
"It’s long,"
said the Knight, "but it’s very, very beautiful. Everybody that hears me
sing it -- either it brings the tears into their eyes, or else -- -"
"Or else what?"
said Alice, for the Knight had made a sudden pause.
"Or else it doesn’t,
you know. The name of the song is called ’Haddocks’ Eyes.’ "
"Oh, that’s the
name of the song, is it?" Alice said, trying to feel interested.
"No, you don’t
understand," the Kinght said, looking a little vexed. "That’s what
the name is called. The name really is ’The Aged Aged Man.’"
"Then I ought to
have said, ’That’s what the song is called’?" Alice corrected herself.
"No, you oughtn’t:
that’s another thing. The song is called ’Ways and Means’: but that’s only what
it’s called, you know!"
"Well, what is the
song, then?" said Alice, who was by this time completely bewildered.
"I was coming to
that," the Knight said. "The song really is ’A sitting on a Gate’:
and the tune’s my own invention."
So saying, he stopped
his horse and let the reins fall on its neck: then, slowly beating time with
one hand, and with a faint smile lighting up his gentle, foolish face, he
began.
Of all the strange
things that Alice saw in her journey Through the Looking-glass, this was the
one that she always remembered most clearly. Years afterwards she could bring
the whole scene back again, as if it had been only yesterday -- the mild blue
eyes and kindly smile of the Knight -- the setting sun gleaming through his
hair, and shining on his armour in a blaze of light that quite dazzled her --
the horse quietly moving about, with the reins hanging loose on his neck,
cropping the grass at her feet -- and the black shadows of the forest behind --
all this she took in like a picture, as, with one hand shading her eyes, she
leant against a tree, watching the strange pair, and listening, in a
half-dream, to the melancholy music of the song.
"But the tune isn’t
his own invention," she said to herself: "it’s "I give thee all,
I can no more.’" She stood and listened very attentively, but no tears
came into her eyes.
"I’ll tell thee
everything I can;
There’s little to
relate.
I saw ’n aged aged man,
A-sitting on a gate.
’Who are you, aged man?’
I said.
’And how is it you
live?’
And his answer trickled
through my head
Like water through a
sieve.
He said ’I look for
butterflies
That sleep among the
wheat:
I make them into mutton
pies,
And sell them in the
street.
I sell them unto men,’
he said,
’Who sail on stormy
seas;
And that’s the way I
get my bread --
A trifle, if you
please.’
But I was thinking of a
plan
To dye one’s whiskers
green,
And always use so large
a fan
That they could not be
seen.
So, having no reply to
give
To what the old man
said,
I cried ’Come, tell me
how you live!’
And thumped him on the
head.
His accents mild took
up the tale:
He said, ’I go my ways,
And when I find a
mountain-rill,
I set it in a blaze;
And thence they make a
stuff they call
Rowland’s Macassar Oil
--
Yet twopence-halfpenny
is all,
They give me for my
toil.’
But I was thinking of a
way
To feed oneself on
batter,
And so go on from day
to day
Getting a little
fatter.
I shook him well from
side to side,
Until his face was
blue:
’Come, tell me how you
live,’ I cried,
’And what it is you
do.!’
He said ’I hunt for
haddock eyes
Among the heather
bright,
And work them into
waistcoat-buttons
In the silent night.
And these I do not sell
for gold
or coin of silvery
shine,
but for a copper
halfpenny,
And that will purchase
nine.
’I sometimes dig for
buttered rolls,
Or set limed twigs for
crabs;
I sometimes search the
grassy knolls
For wheels of
hansom-cabs.
And that’s the way’ (he
gave a wink)
By which I get my
wealth --
And very gladly will I
drink
Your Honour’s noble
health.’
I heard him then, for I
had just
Completed my design
To keep the Menai
bridge from rust
By boiling it in wine.
I thanked him much for
telling me
The way he got his
wealth,
But chiefly for his
wish that he
Might drink my noble
health.
And now, if e’er by
chance I put
My fingers into glue,
Or madly squeeze a
right-hand foot
Into a left-hand shoe,
Or if I drop upon my
toe
A very heavy weight,
I weep,for it reminds
me so
Of that old man I used
to know --
Whose look was mild,
whose speech was slow,
Whose hair was whiter
than the snow,
Whose face was very
like a crow,
With eyes, like
cinders, all aglow,
Who seemed distracted
with his woe,
Who rocked his body to
and fro,
And muttered mumblingly
and low,
As if his mouth were
full of dough,
That summer evening
long ago
A sitting on a
gate"
As the Knight sang the
last words of the ballad he gathered up the reins, and turned his horse’s head
along the road by which they had come. "You’ve only a few yards to
go," he said, "down the hill and over that little brook and then you’ll
be a Queen -- but you’ll stay and see me off first?" he added as Alice
turned away with an eager look. "I shan’t be long. You’ll wait and wave
your handkerchief when I get to that turn in the road? I think it’ll encourage
me, you see."
"Of course I’ll
wait," said Alice: "and thank you very much for coming so far -- and
for the song -- I liked it very much."
"I hope so,"
the Knight said doubtfully: "but you didn’t cry so much as I
expected."
So they shook hands,
and then the Knight rode slowly away into the forest. "It won"t take
long to see him off, I expect," Alice said to herself, as she stood
watching him. "There he goes! Right on his head as usual! However, he gets
on again pretty easily -- that comes of having so many things hung round the horse
-- -" So she went on talking to herself, as she watched the horse walking
leisurely along the road, and the Knight tumbling off, first on one side and
then on the other. After the fourth or fifth tumble he reached the turn, and
then she waved her handkerchief to him, and waited till he was out of sight.
"I hope it
encouraged him," she said, as she turned to run down the hill: "and
now for the last brook, and to be a Queen! How grand it sounds!" A very
few steps brought her to the edge of the brook. "The Eighth Square at
last!" she cried as she bounded across and threw herself down to rest on a
lawn as soft as moss, with little flower-beds dotted all about it here and
there. "Oh, how glad I am to get here! And what is this on my head?" she
exclaimed in a tone of dismay, as she put her hands up to something very heavy,
that fitted tight round her head.
"But how can it
have got there without my knowing it?" she said to herself, as she lifted
it off, and set it on her lap to make out what it could possibly be. It was a
golden crown.
"WELL, this is
grand!" said Alice. "I never expected I should be a Queen so soon --
and I’ll tell you what it is, your Majesty," she went on in a severe tone
(she was always rather fond of scolding hersef), "it’ll never do to loll
about on the grass like that! Queens have to be dignified, you know"
So she got up and
walked about -- rather stiffly just at first, as she was afraid that the crown
might come off: but she comforted herself with the thought that there was
nobody to see her, "and if I really am a Queen," she said as she sat
down again, "I shall be able to manage it quite well in time."
Everything was
happening so oddly that she didn’t feel a bit surprised at finding the Red
Queen and the White Queen sitting close to her, one on each side: she would
have liked very much to ask them how they came there, but she feared it would
not be quite civil. However, there would be no harm, she thought, in asking if
the game was over. "Please, would you tell me -- -" she began,
looking timidly at the Red Queen.
"Speak when you’re
spoken to!" the Red Queen sharply interrupted her.
"But if everybody
obeyed that rule," said Alice, who was always ready for a little argument,
"and if you only spoke when you were spoken to, and the other person
always waited for you to begin, you see nobody would ever say anything, so that
-- -"
"Ridiculous!"
cried the Queen. "Why, don’t you see, child -- -" here she broke off
with a frown, and after thinking for a minute, suddenly changed the subject of
the conversation. "What do you mean by ’If you really are a Queen’? What
right have you to call yourself so? You can’t be a Queen, you know, till you’ve
passed the proper examination. And the sooner we begin it, the better."
"I only said ’if’!"
poor Alice pleaded in a piteous tone.
The two Queens looked
at each other, and the Red Queen remarked, with a little shudder, "She
says she only said ’if’ -- -"
"But she said a
great deal more than that!" the White Queen moaned, wringing her hands.
"Oh, ever so much more than that!"
"So you did, you
know," the Red Queen said to Alice. "Always speak the truth -- think
before you speak -- and write it down afterwards."
"I’m sure I didn’t
mean -- -" Alice was beginning, but the Red Queen interrupted.
"That’s just what
I complain of! You should have meant! What do you suppose is the use of a child
without any meaning? Even a joke should have some meaning -- and a chiId’s more
important than a joke, I hope. You couldn’t deny that, even if you tried with
both hands."
"I don’t deny
things with my hands," Alice objected.
"Nobody said you
did," said the Red Queen, "I said you couldn’t if you tried."
"She’s in that
state of mind," said the White Queen, "that she wants to deny
something -- only she doesn’t know what to deny!"
"A nasty, vicious
temper," the Red Queen remarked; and then there was an uncomfortable
silence for a minute or two.
The Red Queen broke the
silence by saying to the White Queen, "I invite you to Alice’s dinner-party
this afternoon."
The White Queen smiled
feebly, and said, "And I invite you."
"I didn’t know I
was to have a party at all," said Alice; "but if there is to be one,
I think I ought to invite the guests."
"We gave you the
opportunity of doing it," the Red Queen remarked: "but I daresay you’ve
not had many lessons in manners yet?"
"Manners are not
taught in lessons," said Alice.
"Lessons teach you
to do sums, and things of that sort."
"Can you do Addition?"
the White Queen asked.
"What’s one and
one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one?"
"I don’t
know," said Alice. "I lost count."
"She can’t do
Addition," the Red Queen interrupted. "Can you do Subtraction? Take
nine from eight."
"Nine from eight I
can’t, you know," Alice replied very readily: "but -- -"
"She can’t do
Subtraction," said the White Queen. "Can you do Division? Divide a
loaf by a knife -- what’s the answer to that?"
"I suppose --
-" Alice was beginning, but the Red Queen answered for her.
"Bread-and-butter, of course. Try another Subtraction sum. Take a bone
from a dog. What remains?"
Alice considered.
"The bone wouldn’t remain, of course, if I took it -- and the dog wouldn’t
remain; it would come to bite me -- and I’m sure I shouldn’t remain!"
"Then you think
nothing would remain?" said the Red Queen.
"I think that’s
the answer."
"Wrong, as
usual," said the Red Queen; "the dog’s temper would remain."
"But I don’t see
how -- -"
"Why, look here!"
the Red Queen cried. "The dog would lose its temper, wouldn’t it?"
"Perhaps it
would," Alice replied cautiously.
"Then if the dog
went away, its temper would remain!" the Queen exclaimed.
Alice said, as gravely
as she could, "They might go different ways." But she couldn’t help
thinking to herself, "What dreadful nonsense we are talking!"
"She can’t do sums
a bit!" the Queens said together, with great emphasis.
"Can you do
sums?" Alice said, turning suddenly on the White Queen, for she didn’t like
being found fault with so much.
The Queen gasped and
shut her eyes. "I can do Addition," she said, "if you give me
time -- but I can’t do Subtraction under any circumstances! "
"Of course you
know your A B C?" said the Red Queen.
"To be sure I do,"
said Alice.
"So do I,"
the White Queen whispered. "We’ll often say it over together, dear. And I’ll
tell you a secret -- I can read words of one letter! Isn’t that grand? However,
don’t be discouraged. You’ll come to it in time."
Here the Red Queen began
again. "Can you answer useful questions?" she said. "How is
bread made?"
"I know
that!" Alice cried eagerly. "You take some flour -- -"
"Where do you pick
the flower?" the White Queen asked. "In a garden, or in the
hedges?"
"Well, it isn’t
picked at all," Alice explained: "it’s ground- -- "
"How many acres of
ground?" said the White Queen. "You mustn’t leave out so many
things."
"Fan her
head!" the Red Queen anxiously interupted. "She’ll be feverish after
so much thinking."
So they set to work and
fanned her with bunches of leaves, till she had to beg them to leave off, it
blew her hair about so.
"She’s all right
again now," said the Red Queen. "Do you know Languages? What’s the
French for fiddle-de-dee ?"
"Fiddle-de-dee’s
not English," Alice replied gravely.
"Who said it
was?" said the Red Queen.
Alice thought she saw a
way out of the difficulty this time. "If you’ll tell me what language
"fiddle-de-dee’ is, I’ll tell you the French for it!" she exclaimed
triumphantly.
But the Red Queen drew
herself up rather stiffly, and said, "Queens never make bargains."
"I wish Queens
never asked questions," Alice thought to herself.
"Don’t let us
quarrel," the White Queen said in an anxious tone. "What is the cause
of lightning ?"
"The cause of
lightning," Alice said very decidedly, for she felt quite sure about this,
"is the thunder -- no, no!" she hastily corrected herself.
"I meant the other
way."
"It’s too late to
correct it," said the Red Queen: "when you’ve once said a thing, that
fixes it, and you must take the consequences."
"Which reminds me
-- " the White Queen said, looking down and nervously clasping and
unclasping’her hands, "we had such a thunderstorm last Tuesday -- I mean
one of the last set of Tuesdays, you know."
"In our
country," Alice remarked, "there’s only " one day at a
time."
The Red Queen said.
"That’s a poor thin way of doing things. Now here, we mostly have days and
nights two or three at a time, and sometimes in the winter we take as many as
five’nights together -- for warmth, you know."
"Are five nights
warmer than one night, then?" Alice ventured to ask.
"Five times as
warm, of course."
"But they should
be five times as cold, by the same rule -- -"
"just so!"
cried the Red Queen. "Five times as warm, and five times as cold -- just
as I’m five times as rich as you are, and five times as clever!"
Alice sighed and gave
it up. "It’s exactly like a riddle with no answer!" she thought.
"Humpty Dumpty saw
it too," the White Queen went on in a low voice, more as if she were
talking to herself. "He came to the door with a corkscrew in his hand --
-"
"What for?"
said the Red Queen.
"He said he would
come in," the White Queen went on, "because he was looking for a
hippopotamus. Now, as it happened, there wasn’t such a thing in the house, that
morning."
"Is there
generally ?" Alice asked in an astonished tone.
"Well, only on
Thursdays," said the Queen.
"I know what he
came for," said Alice: "he wanted to punish the fish, because --
-"
Here the White Queen
began again. "It was such a thunderstorm, you can’t think!"
("She never could, you know," said the Red Queen.) "And part of
the roof came off, and ever so much thunder got in -- and it went rolling round
the room in great lumps -- and knocking over the tables and things -- till I
was so frightened, I couldn’t remember my own name!"
Alice thought to
herself, "I never should try to remember my name in the middle of an
accident! Where would be the use of it?" But she did not say this aloud,
for fear of hurting the poor Queen’s feelings.
"Your Majesty must
excuse her," the Red Queen said to Alice, taking one of the White Queen’s
hands in her own, and gently stroking it: "she means well, but she can’t
help saying foolish things, as a general rule."
The White Queen looked
timidly at Alice, who felt she ought to say something kind, but really couldn’t
think of anything.
"She never was
really well brought up," the Red Queen went on: "but it’s amazing how
good-tempered she is! Pat her on the head, and see how pleased she’ll be!"
But this was more than Alice had courage to do.
"A little kindness
-- and putting her hair in papers -- would do wonders with her -- -"
The White Queen gave a
deep sigh, and laid her head on Alice’s shoulder. "I am so sleepy!"
she moaned.
"She"s tired,
poor thing!" said the Red Queen, "Smooth her hair -- lend her your
nightcap -- and sing her a soothing lullaby."
"I haven’t got a
nightcap with me," said Alice, as she tried to obey the first direction:
"and I don’t know any soothing lullabies."
"I must do it
myself, then," said the Red Queen, and she began:
"Hush-a-by lady,
in Alice’s lap!
Till the feast’s ready,
we’ve time for a nap:
Till the feast’s over,
we’ll go to the ball --
Red Queen, and White
Queen, and Alice, and all!.
"And now you know
the words," she added, as she put her head down on Alice’s other shoulder,
"just sing it through to me. I’m getting sleepy too." In another
moment both Queens were fast asleep, and snoring loud.
"What am I to
do?" exclaimed Alice, looking about in great perplexity, as first one
round head, and then the other, rolled down from her shoulder, and lay like a
heavy lump in her lap. "I don’t think it ever happened before, that anyone
had to take "care of two Queens asleep at once! No, not in all the History
of England -- it couldn’t, you know, because there never was more than one
Queen at a time. Do wake up, you heavy things!" she went on in an
impatient tone; but there was no answer but a gentle snoring.
The snoring got more
distinct every minute, and sounded more like a tune: at last she could even
make out words, and she listened so eagerly that when the two great heads
suddenly vanished from her lap, she hardly missed them.
She was standing before
an arched doorway, over which were the words QUEEN ALICE in large letters, and
on each side of it there was a bell-handle ; one marked "Visitors’
Bell," and the other "Servants’ Bell."
"I’ll wait till
the song’s over," thought Alice, "and then I’ll ring the -- the --
which bell must ring?" she went on, very much puzzled by the names.
"I’m not a visitor, and I’m not a servant. There ought to be one marked
"Queen,’ you know -- -"
Just then the door
opened a little way, and a creature with a long beak put its head out for a
moment and said, "No admittance till the week after next!" and shut
the door again with a bang.
Alice knocked and rang
in vain for a long time, but at last a very old Frog, who was sitting under a
tree, got up, and hobbled slowly towards her : he was dressed in bright yellow,
and had enormous boots on.
"What is it
now?" the Frog said in a deep hoarse whisper.
Alice turned round,
ready to find fault with anybody. "Where’s the servant whose business it
is to answer the door?" she began angrily.
"Which door?"
said the Frog.
Alice almost stamped
with irritation at the slow drawl in which he spoke. "This door, of
course!
The Frog looked at the
door with his large dull eyes for a minute : then he went nearer and rubbed it
with his thumb, as if he were trying whether the paint would come off; then he
looked at Alice. "To answer the door?" he said. "What’s it been
asking of?" He was so hoarse that Alice could scarcely hear him.
"I don’t know what
you mean," she said.
"I speaks English,
doesn’t I?" the Frog went on. "Or are you deaf? What did it ask
you?"
"Nothing!"
Alice said impatiently. "I’ve been knocking at it!"
"Shouldn’t do that
-- shouldn’t do that -- " the Frog muttered. "Wexes it, you
know." Then he went up and gave the door a kick with one off his great
feet. "You let it alone," he panted out, as he hobbled back to his
tree, "and it’ll let you alone, you know."
At this moment the door
was flung open, and a shrill voice was heard singing:
To the Looking-glass
world it was Alice that said,
"I’ve a sceptre in
hand, I’ve a crown on my head;
Let the Looking-glass
creatures, whatever they be,
Come and dine with the
Red Queen, the White
Queen, and me.
And hundreds of voices
joined in the chorus:
"Then fill up the
glasses as quick as you can,
And sprinkle the table
with buttons and bran:
Put cats in the coffee,
and mice in the tea --
And welcome Queen Alice
with thirty-times-three!
Then followed a
confused noise of cheering, and Alice thought to herself, "Thirty times
three makes ninety. I wonder if anyone’s counting?" In a minute there was
silence again, and the same shrill voice, sang another verse:
"‘O Looking-glass
creatures,’ quoth Alice, ‘draw near!
’Tis an honour to see
me, a favour to hear:
’Tis a privilege high
to have dinner and tea
Along with the Red
Queen, the White Queen, and me!’"
Then came the chorus
again:
"Then fill up the
glasses with treacle and ink,
Or anything else that
is pleasant to drink;
Mix sand with the
cider, and wool with the wine --
And welcome Queen Alice
with ninety-times-nine"
"Ninety-times-nine!"
Alice repeated in despair. "Oh, that’ll never be done! I’d better go in at
once -- " and in she went, and there was a dead silence the moment she
appeared.
Alice glanced nervously
along the table, as she walked up the large hall, and noticed that there were
about fifty guests, of all kinds: some were animals, some birds, and there were
even a few flowers among them. "I’m glad they’ve come without waiting to
be asked," she thought: "I should never have known who were the right
people to invite!"
There were three chairs
at the head of the table; the Red and White Queens had taken two of them, but
the middle one was empty. Alice sat down, rather uncomfortable at the silence,
and longing for someone to speak.
At last the Red Queen
began. "You’ve missed the soup and fish," she said. "Put on the
joint!" And the waiters set a leg of mutton before Alice, who looked at it
rather anxiously, as she had never had to carve one before.
"You look a little
shy; let me introduce you to that leg of mutton," said the Red Queen.
"Alice -- Mutton; Mutton -- Alice." The leg of mutton got up in the
dish and made a little bow to Alice; and she returned the bow, not knowing
whether to be frightened or amused.
"May I give you a
slice?" she said, taking up the knife and fork, and looking from one Queen
to the other.
"Certainly
not," the Red Queen said, very decidedly; "it isn’t etiquette to cut
anyone you’ve been introduced to. Remove the joint!" And the waiters
carried it off, and brought a large plum-pudding in its place.
"I won’t be
introduced to the pudding, please," Alice said rather hastily, "or we
shall get no dinner at all. May I give you some?"
But the Red Queen
looked sulky, and growled, "Pudding -- Alice; Alice -- Pudding. Remove the
pudding!" and the waiters took it away before Alice could return its bow.
However, she didn’t see
why the Red Queen should be the only one to give orders, so, as an experiment,
she called out, "Waiter! Bring back the pudding!" and there it was
again in a moment, like a conjuring trick. It was so large that she couldn’t
help feeling a little shy with it, as she had been with the mutton; however,
she conquered her shyness by a great effort, and handed a slice to the Red
Queen.
"What
impertinence!" said the Pudding. " I wonder how you’d like it, if I
were to cut a slice out of you, you creature!"
Alice could only look
at it and gasp.
"Make a
remark," said the Red Queen: "it’s ridiculous to leave all the
conversation to the pudding!"
"Do you know, I’ve
had such a quantity of poetry repeated to me to-day," Alice began, a
little frightened at finding that, the moment she opened her lips, there was
dead silence, and all eyes were fixed upon her; "and it’s a very curious
thing, I think -- every poem was about fishes in some way. Do you know why they’re
so fond of fishes, all about here?"
She spoke to the Red
Queen, whose answer was a little wide of the mark. "As to fishes,"
she said, very slowly and solemnly, putting her mouth close to Alice’s ear,
"her White Majesty knows a lovely riddle -- all in poetry -- all about
fishes. Shall she repeat it?"
"Her Red Majesty’s
very kind to mention it," the White Queen murmured into Alice’s other ear,
in a voice like the cooing of a pigeon. "It would be such a treat! May
I?"
"Please do,"
Alice said very politely. The White Queen laughed with delight, and stroked
Alice’s cheek. Then she began:
"‘First the fish
must be caught.’
That is easy: a baby, I
think, could have caught it.
‘Next, the fsh must be
bought.’
That is easy: a penny,
I think, would have bought it.
‘Now cook me the fish!’
That is easy, and will
not take more than a minute.
‘Let it lie in a dish!’
That is easy, because
it already is in it.
‘Bring it here! Let me
sup!’
It is easy to set such
a dish on the table.
‘Take the dish-cover
up!’
Ah that is so hard that
I fear I’m unable!
For it holds it like
glue --
Holds the lid to the
dish, while it lies in the middle:
Which is easiest to do,
un-dish-cover the fish,
or dish-cover the riddle?"
"Take a minute to
think about it, then and guess," said the Red Queen. "Meanwhile, we’ll
drink your health -- Queen Alice’s health!" she screamed at the top of her
voice, and all the guests began drinking it directly, and very queerly they
managed it: some of them put their glasses upon their heads like extinguishers,
and drank all that trickled down their faces -- others upset the decanters, and
drank the wine as it ran off the edges of the table -- and three of them (who
looked like kangaroos) scrambled into the dish of roast mutton, and began to
lap up the gravy, "just like pigs in a trough!" thought Alice.
"You ought to
return thanks in a neat speech," the Red Queen said, frowning at Alice as
she spoke. "We must support you, you know," the White Queen
whispered, as Alice got up to do it, very obediently, but a little frightened.
"Thank you very
much," she whispered in reply, "but I can do quite well
without."
"That wouldn’t be
at all the thing," the Red Queen said very decidedly: so Alice tried to
submit to it with a good grace.
("And they did
push so!" she said afterwards, when she was telling her sister the history
of the feast. "You would have thought they wanted to squeeze me
flat!")
In fact it was rather
difficult for her to keep in her place while she made her speech: the two
Queens pushed her so, one on each side, that they nearly lifted her up into the
air: "I rise to return thanks -- " Alice began: and she really did
rise as she spoke, several inches; but she got hold of the edge of the table,
and managed to pull herself down again.
"Take care of
yourself!" screamed the White Queen, seizing Alice’s hair with both her
hands. "Something’s going to happen!"
And then (as Alice
afterwards described it) all sorts of things happened in a moment. The candles
grew up to the ceiling, looking something like a bed of bushes with fireworks
at the top. As to the bottles, they each took a pair of plates, which they
hastily fitted on as wings, and so, with forks for legs, went fluttering about:
"and very like birds they look," Alice thought to herself, as well as
she could in the dreadful confusion that was beginning. At this moment she
heard a hoarse laugh at her side, and turned to see what was the matter with
the White Queen; but, instead of the Queen, there was the leg of mutton sitting
in the chair. "Here I am!" cried a voice from the soup-tureen, and
Alice turned again, just in time to see the Queen’s broad good-natured face
grinning at her for a moment over the edge of the tureen, before she
disappeared into the soup.
There was not a moment
to be lost. Already several of the guests were lying down in the dishes, and
the soup-ladle was walking up the table to Alice, and signing to her to get out
of its way.
"I can’t stand
this any longer!" she cried, as she seized the table-cloth with both
hands: one good pull, and plates, dishes, guests, and candles came crashing
down together in a heap on the floor.
"And as for you,"
she went on, turning fiercely upon the Red Queen, whom she considered as the
cause of all the mischief -- but the Queen was no longer at her side -- she had
suddenly dwindled down to the size of a little doll, and was now on the table,
merrily running round and round after her own shawl, which was trailing behind
her.
At any other time,
Alice would have felt surprised at this, but she was far too much excited to be
surprised at anything now. "As for you," she repeated, catching hold
of the little creature in the very act of jumping over a bottle which had just
lighted upon the table, "I’ll shake you into a kitten, that I will!"
She took her off the
table as she spoke, and shook her backwards and forwards with all her might.
The Red Queen made no
resistance whatever; only her face grew very small, and her eyes got large and
green: and still, as Alice went on shaking her, she kept on growing shorter --
and fatter -- and softer -- and rounder -- and -- -
-- and it really was a
kitten, after all.
YOUR Red Majesty
shouldn’t purr so loud," Alice said, rubbing her eyes, and addressing the
kitten respectfully, yet with some severity. "You woke me out of -- oh!
such a nice dream! And you’ve been along with me, Kitty -- all through the
Looking-glass world. Did you know it, dear?"
It is a very
inconvenient habit of kittens (Alice had once made the remark) that, whatever
you say to them, they always purr. "If they would only purr for "yes,’
and mew for "no,’ or any rule of that sort," she had said, "so
that one could keep up a conversation! But how can you talk with a person if
they always say the same thing?"
On this occasion the
kitten only purred: and it was impossible to guess whether it meant "yes’
or ’no.’
So Alice hunted among
the chessmen on the table till she had found the Red Queen: then she went down
on her knees on the hearthrug, and put the Kitten and the Queen to look at each
other. "Now, Kitty!" she cried, clapping her hands triumphantly.
"You’ve got to confess that that was what you turned into!"
("But it wouldn’t
look at it," she said, when she was explaining the thing afterwards to her
sister : "it turned away its head, and pretended not to see it: but it
looked a little ashamed of itself, so I think it must have been the Red
Queen.")
"Sit up a little
more stiffly, dear!" Alice cried with a merry laugh. "And curtsey
while you’re thinking what to -- what to purr. It saves time, remember!"
And she caught it up in her arms, and gave it one little kiss "just in
honour of its having been a Red Queen, you know!"
"Snowdrop, my
pet!" she went on, looking over her shoulder at the White Kitten, which
was still patiently undergoing its toilet, "when will Dinah have finished
with your White Majesty, I wonder? That must be the reason you were so untidy
in my dream. -- Dinah! Do you know that you’re scrubbing a White Queen? Really,
it’s most disrespectful you, and I’m quite surprised at you!"
"And what did
Dinah turn to, I wonder?" she prattled on, as she settled comfortably
down, with one elbow on the rug, and her chin in her hand, to watch the kittens.
"Tell me, Dinah, did you turn to Humpty Dumpty? I think you did --
however, you’d better not mention it to your friends just yet, for I"m not
sure.
"By the way,
Kitty, if only you’d been really with me in my dream, there was one thing you
would have enjoyed -- I had such a quantity of poetry said to me, all about
fishes! To-morrow morning you shall have a real treat. All the time you’re
eating your breakfast, I’ll repeat "The Walrus and the Carpenter" to
you; and then you can make believe it’s oysters, my dear!
"Now, Kitty, let’s
consider who it was that dreamed it all. This is a serious question, my dear,
and you should not go on licking your paw like that -- as if Dinah hadn’t
washed you this morning!
You see, Kitty, it must
have been either me or the Red King. He was part of my dream, of course -- but
then I was part of his dream, too! Was it the Red King, Kitty? You were his
wife, my dear, so you ought to know -- oh, Kitty, do help to settle it! I’m
sure your paw can wait!" But the provoking kitten only began on the other
paw, and pretended it hadn’t heard the question.
Which do you think it
was?
THE END