- THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS - Project Gutenberg
Then they 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
- Poem origins: Through the Looking-Glass - Alice-in-Wonderland. net
Origins of the poems in "Through the Looking-Glass": the well-known and moralizing poems that were parodied for the Alice in Wonderland stories
- Lewis Carroll – Through the Looking-Glass (Chap. 8) | Genius
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 for some time without speaking
- The 20 Best Through the Looking Glass Quotes - Bookroo
“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
- Chapter IX: Queen Alice - Alice-in-Wonderland. net
‘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
- Through The Looking-Glass: And What Alice Found There - Lewis Carroll
"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!"
- Through the Looking Glass, Chapter Three
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
- “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking-Glass, and . . .
In the summer of 1862, at the height of Great Britain’s Victorian era, the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a lecturer in mathematics at Christ Church, Oxford, took the three young daughters of his dean on a rowing excursion, with a stop on shore to have tea
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