Lewis Carroll Essay

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    Lewis Carroll's "The Walrus and the Carpenter" could possibly be just a nonsensical rhyme meant purely for entertainment value. The fact that this is a nonsense poem inside a nonsense story makes it all the more difficult to decipher a deeper meaning. Like the author, who had a darker side to him, so too might his work. Carroll made this statement in a letter to an American friend,I'm very much afraid I didn't mean anything but nonsense. Still, you know, words mean more than we mean to express when

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    The nonsensical poem, “Jabberwocky,” was written by Lewis Carrol in 1871 for Alice’s second adventure: Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There. “Jabberwocky” describes the adventure of a single boy through a land of oddities. In this poem, Carrol creates a whimsical, alternate reality filled with heroes, villains and magical creatures, undergoing a constant battle between good and evil. Carrol uses vivid imagery and neologisms in “Jabberwocky” to exemplify and play with the oddities

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    works like the two William Wordsworth poems I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and The World is Too Much with Us, along with A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns. The Victorian era has its own share of works that reflect the time when it was written, including Lewis Carroll’s The Walrus

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    course you don't!” replied the Hatter, tossing his head contemptuously. ‘I dare say you never even spoke to Time!’ ‘Perhaps not,’ Alice cautiously replied: ‘but I know I have to beat time when I learn music’” (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll,

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    The Setting Of A Story

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    actions reveal who they are. This essay will show how the authors of three fiction, namely “Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland”, “The Birds”, and “The Walking Dead, 1 Days Gone Bye” have used setting to disclose the nature of their characters. Alice in Lewis Carrol’s Adventures in Wonderland is an inquisitve, logical, and forthright young girl. Somehow, these traits help the author inspire his target audience consisting of children of Alice’s age group. Carrol’s devises two types of setting, namely reality

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    who look carefully enough. The same could be said about Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, a tale of a young girl in a nonsensical world. The novel comprises of a whimsical charm and a feeling of absurd madness. Early critics even considered it nonsense, unworthy of serious critiquing. But underlying all the nonsense and illogic, there is more that can be taken from the story, even from a psychoanalytical point of view. Carroll very cleverly uses literary devices, specifically satire

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    The Mad Hatter There are many confusing ways Lewis Carroll uses wordplay, ambiguity, and other quirks of language that creates an illusion of madness and logic in A Mad Tea Party in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. The way the characters are portrayed creates a complicated image of nonsense throughout the story. The obscurity of the character's lead to an unaccepting rationality and creates confusion for the reader. Wordplay, ambiguity and other quirks through the character's are tied together

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    “It’s no use going back to yesterday, because I was a different person then”(Lewis Carroll). Alice in the wonderland is a fantasy world Alice enters after falling in a hole for a long time. In her Illusion world she meets different types of creatures talking, singing and dancing. In her imaginary world, Alice notices potions and edible objects that say “eat me” or “drink me” which specifies a significant theme that interprets the fantasy of Alice, which also connects with the different sized animals

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    Jabberwocky Tone

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    Throughout Lewis Carroll’s “Jabberwocky”, his proficiency in the nonsense genre of poetry is evident. The poem is set in the same fantasy world as Alice in Wonderland. Carroll exhibits the use of childlike diction and uses the perspective of a father escorting his young son. “Jabberwocky” exhibits peculiar, infantile diction. The poem consists of informal diction, characteristic of the fantasy world it takes place in. Carroll uses words that are characteristic of a young child’s vocabulary. He

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    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll, is a classic novel that introduced a new form of imagery in both popular culture and literature. This is a story about a young girl named Alice who falls down a tree hole into a world known as Wonderland. In this world, every animal and plant is personified and is truly what no one would expect. Readers find out however, that Wonderland is just a figment of Alice’s imagination and she is actually dreaming the whole time. In the novel, Alice’s Adventures

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