This beautiful, 868-page leather-bound volume contains a delightful collection of stories from one of history's most beloved children's authors. Lewis Carroll's stories are still as fresh and appealing as when they were first published more than a century ago. John Tenniel's original illustrations accompany the Alice stories and bring to life the wildly popular characters so well known to us all: the Mad Hatter, the White Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, and a passel of others.
Carroll, one of 11 children, knows his audience well. His stories--clever, provocative, and bizarre--capture the imaginations of children worldwide. Though a prolific storyteller from childhood, he went on to become a mathematician, a fact evidenced by the Tangled Tales serial, which contains a mathematical equation in each installment.
Other stories included in this collection are "The Hunting of the Snark," which was composed backward, in a sense, when inspiration for the tale came by way of the last line; "Rhyme? And Reason?"; the Sylvie and Bruno books; and the original Alice story, "Alice's Adventures Underground," penned and illustrated in Carroll's own hand. Two never-before-printed poems, originally inscribed in two storybooks and presented as mementos to a little girl and boy, conclude this enchanting collection.
INTRODUCTION: THE ILLUSTRATED WORLD OF
LEWIS CARROLL AND HIS ALICES
A NOTE ON THE TEXT
ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND
I. Down the Rabbit-Hole
lI. The Pool of Tears
III. A Caucus-Race and a Long Tale
IV. The Rabbit Sends in a Little Bill
V. Advice from a Caterpillar
VI. Pig and Pepper
VII. A Mad Tea-Party
VIII. The Queen's Croquet Ground
IX. The Mock Turtle's Story
X. The Lobster-Quadrille
XI. Who Stole the Tarts?
XII. Alice's Evidence
THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS AND WHAT
ALICE FOUND THERE
I. Looking-Glass House
II. The Garden of Live Flowers
III. Looking-Glass Insects
IV. Tweedledum and Tweedledee
V. Wool and Water
VI. Humpty Dumpty
VII. The Lion and the Unicorn
VIII. "It's My Own Invention"
IX. Queen Alice
X. Shaking
XI. Waking
XII. Which Dreamed It?
THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK: AN AGONY
IN EIGHT FITS
I. The Landing
Ⅱ. The Bellman's Speech
III. The Baker's Tale
IV. The Hunting
V. The Beaver's Lesson
VI. The Barrister's Dream
VII. The Banker's Fate
VIII. The Vanishing
RHYME? AND REASON?
PHANTASMAGORIA, in Seven Cantos:
I. The Trystyng
II. Hys Fyve Rules
III. Scarmoges
IV. Hys Nouryture
V. Byckerment
VI. Dyscomfyture
VII. Sad Souvenance
Echoes
A Sea Dirge
Ye Carpette Knyghte
Hiawatha's Photographing
M elancholetta
A Valentine
The Three Voices:
The First Voice
The Second Voice
The Third Voice
Tema con Variazi6ni
A Game of Fives
Poeta Fit, non nascitur
Size and Tears
Atalanta in Camden-Town
The Lang Coortin'
Four Riddles
Fame' s Penny-Trumpet
Note: The Hunting of the Snark appears separately in its entirety,
so it has not been repeated in this section.
A TANGLED TALE
I. Excelsior
II. Eligible Apartments
Ⅲ. Mad Mathesis
IV. The Dead Reckoning
V. Oughts and Crosses
VI. Her Radiancy
VII. Petty Cash
VIII. De Omnibus Rebus
IX. A Serpent with Comers
X. Chelsea Buns
Answers to Knots
ALICE'S ADVENTURES UNDER GROUND
I. Down the Rabbit-Hole. The Pool of Tears
II. A Long Tale. The Rabbit Sends in a Little Bill
Ⅲ. Advice from a Caterpillar
IV. The Queen's Croquet-Ground. The Mock Turtle's Story
The Lobster Quadrille. Who Stole the Tarts?
SYLVIE AND BRUNO
I. Less Bread! More Taxes!
II. L'Amie Inconnue
III. Birthday-Presents
IV. A Cunning Conspiracy
V. A Beggar's Palace
VI. The Magic Locket
VII. The Baron's Embassy
VIII. A Ride on a Lion
IX. A Jester and a Bear
X. The Other Professor
XI. Peter and Paul
XII. A Musical Gardener
XIII. A Visit to Dogland
XIV. Fairy-Sylvie
XV. Bruno's Revenge
XVI. A Changed Crocodile
XVII. The Three Badgers
XVIII. Queer Street, Number Forty
XIX. How to Make a Phlizz
XX. Light Come, Light Go
XXI. Through the Ivory Door
XXII. Crossing the Line
XXIII. An Outlandish Watch
XXIV. The Frogs' Birthday-Treat
XXV. Looking Eastward
SYLVIE AND BRUNO CONCLUDED
I. Bruno's Lessons
II. Love's Curfew
Ill. Streaks of Dawn
IV. The Dog-King
V. Matilda Jane
VI. Willie's Wife
VII. Mein Herr
VIII. In a Shady Place
IX. The Farewell-Party
X. Jabbering and Jam
XI. The Man in the Moon
XII. Fairy-Music
XIII. What Tottles Meant
XIV. Bruno's Picnic
XV. The Little Foxes
XVI. Beyond These Voices
XVII. To the Rescue!
XVIII. A Newspaper-Cutting
XIX. A Fairy-Duet
XX. Gammon and Spinach
XXI. The Professor's Lecture
XXII. The Banquet
XXIII. The Pig-Tale
XXIV. The Beggar's Return
XXV. Life Out of Death
THREE SUNSETS AND OTHER POEMS
Three Sunsets
The Path of Roses
The Valley of the Shadow of Death
Solitude
Beatrice
Stolen Waters
The Willow-Tree
Only a Woman's Hair
The Sailor's Wife
After Three Days
Faces in the Fire
A Lesson in Latin
Puck Lost and Found
Note: Two Sylvie and Bruno poems, "Far Away" and "A Song
of Love," have not been repeated in this section.
LEWIS CARROLL: A BIOGRAPHICAL CHRONOLOGY
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF BOOKS