Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Alice was written exactly three years after Rivierrend Charles Lutwitz Dodgson and Revive Robinson Duckworth sit in a boat with three young girls in the Thames River in 1865.
Ellis Pleiens Liddell (age 10, born 1852) (Seyconda in the preface link), Edith Marie Liddell (age 8, born 1853) (Tertia in the preface link), Charlotte Liddell, Laurie Charlotte Liddell (age 13, birth 1849) (Priya in the book's preface.
These three girls were daughters of Oxford University vice-chancellor and Dean of Christ Church and Henry George Liddell, headmaster of Westminster School. Most of the book's adventures were inspired and inspired by people, situations and buildings at Oxford and Christ Church, such as the Rabbit Hall, which symbolizes the real staircase in the main hall of Christ Church. It is believed that in the Ripon cathedral where Carroll's father was a canon, a carpenter of Griffon and a rabbit inspired the story.
The tour started at Folly Bridge near Oxford and it was five miles away to Godesto village. During this time Riverierend Dods had told a story to girls, in which accidentally, a boring Alice girl was talking about who came out in search of adventure. The girls liked it and Alice Lidle asked Dodgson to write it for her. After a long delay of more than two years, he did this at the end and on 26 November 1864, Alice handed over the manuscript to Alice's Adventures Under Ground, in which Dodsen painted herself. Some, including Martin Gardner, believed that there was an old version that had destroyed Dodgers and wrote a detailed copy of the hand, but there is no prevalent evidence to prove this.
But before Ellis received his copy, Dodson was preparing it for publication and expanding the effect of 15,500 words to 27,500 words, in which the primary part of the cashier's cat and Mad Tea Party was added. In 1865, Dodgson's story was published by Elise's adventures in Wonderland "Louise Carol", in which John Tenniel painted pictures. Tenniel's first print order of 2000 copies was blocked in the face of the quality of the print. A new version was released in December of the same year, but there was a date of 1866 and it was immediately published. As soon as it was known, the original version was sold to New York's publishing house Appleton with Dodson's approval. The binding of Appleton Ellis was similar to the 1866 Macmillan Alice, only the difference in the name of the publisher. The title page of Appleton Alice was added and the title page of the 1860 Macmillan was removed, on which was the publication of New York's publisher and date of 1866. All the printed copies were sold immediately. In the publishing world, Alice woke up, the children and the older women loved her the same way. Among the first readers to read it, Queen Victoria and Child Oscar Wilde were included. This book has never been out of print. Alice Adventures in Wonderland has been translated into 125 languages. So far, more than one hundred editions of this book have been printed and inspired by the other media, especially in the theater and film countless times.
This book is shortened to Alice in Wonderland titles, and in many years the title has become popular in many presentations by inspiration on stage, film and TV. Some of the prints of this title include Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its follow-up sequel novel Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Find Theirs.
Highlights of the publication 1865 First UK version (Supersed version) 1865 Alice printed in the United States for the first time 1869: Alice Ebenchuer im Wonderland translated by German translator by Antoni Zimmerman. 1869: Avengers de Alice, translated into French-language by Henry Bue, publishes a publish des Mervellius. 1870: Translation of the Swedish language by Emily Nønen Alice Faventier I Segundent was published. 1871: Dodson met another Alice during a stay in London, named Alice Reix, and talked about her reflection in the mirror, which created another book through The Looking Glass and What Alice Found Their, which was even more sales than before. 1886: Carroll introduces a copy of the earlier Alice Adventures Under Ground manuscript. 1890: Carroll publishes a special edition The Nursery Alice for children reading from zero to five years. 1905: Mrs. J. C. Gorham published the Alice Adventures in Wonderland Retold in Words of One Syllable, which was a series of such books published by A L. Bert Company for child readers. 1908: Alice is translated for the first time in Japanese. 1910: La Aventuro D'Alício N Mirando, published in Esperanto by Elphric Lofwyne Kearney, was published. 1916: The first edition of the Windermere series is released in Alice Adventures in Wonderland. It was illustrated by Milo Winter. 1960: American writer Martin Gardner published the special edition The Annotated Alice, which included the text of Alice Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass. These books have a broad definition of printed signatures and include the full-length parody of Victorian poems. In the subsequent edition it was expanded on the basis of definitions. 1961: Publication of Folio Society with 42 Pictures by John Tenniel 1964: Alicia in Terra Mirabili Clive is a Latin translation published by Harcourt Carruthers 1998: Louis Corolla's own copy of Alice, one of the six copies survived in the earlier edition of 1965, sold one anonymous US buyer for $ 1.54 million at auction Come. Making it the most expensive book of children (or 19th Century literature of literature). (This pre-record was subsequently stripped in 2007 when Jill Rowling's limited edition version of Harry Potter was sold for auctioned The Tales of Bidal the Bard for $ 1.95 million ($ 3.9 million). 2003: Everytraí Eilíse i dítír na nIontas Published by Nicholas Williams in Irish translation. 2008: Folio Alice's Adventures Under Ground, Replica Edition (up to 3,700 copy limited, The Original Alice Pus
Chapter 1 - Down the Rabbit Hall: When Alice is tired of sitting with her sister on the bank of the river, she sees a white rabbit clothed in her hand, who has a clock and runs quickly. Alice goes behind him and falls into a rabbit rate where there is a strange hall and there are gates of each shape. It gets a small door that is very small in size. But from it she sees an attractive garden. He then gets a bottle which says "Drink me", drinking bottle fluid shrinks its size and can reach the key. There is a cake found on which "eat me", after eating it increases its size so much that its head is scarred with a roof.
Chapter 2- Tears of Lake: Alice is sad and starts crying and her tears flood the hallway. After being compressed by a fan he caught, Elise swims out of her tears and meets a mouse who is self-floating. Alice tries to talk to her, but she can only talk about her cat who does not like the mouse.
Chapter 3 - Cocktail race and long story: The crowd in the ocean of tears grows and other animals and birds also start to swim in it. Alice and other animals reach the coast as far as possible, and now it is a question of how to get rid of it again. Mice gives them a dry talk about William the Conqueror. Dodo says that he should be conducting a cocus race for drying, in which all will run in one circle and there is no winner. After that, Alice feared all the animals unknowingly by talking about her cat.
Chapter 4 - The Rabbit sends a trickle bill: The white rabbit rises in search of doves and birds. It tells Alice to go home and find these things, but she starts to grow larger in size. The frightened rabbit orders her gardener, Bill the Lizard to climb the ceiling and get into the chimney from there. Alice, standing outside, sounds the sound of other animals who have gathered to see her huge hand. The bunch of animals throws pieces on it, which turn into a small cake, and Alice eats it again and again in its small size.
Chapter 5 - Advice from Caterpillars: Alice reaches a mushroom where a caterpillar is drinking hokka. Caterpillars ask Alice and Elise accepts her identity crisis that has become more complicated by her ability to miss her poetry. Before leaving, the caterpillar tells Alice that the mushroom one
Chapter 6 - Pig and Pepper: A fish-footman is invited to the queen of the house, who gives it to a Frog Footman. Alice looks at this interaction and then enters the house after a surprise conversation with the frog. The queen's cook is throwing utensils and making a soup, which has many black peppers, and due to this Alice, the queen and her baby (but the cook and her laughing cheshire cat) appear to be huge screams. The queen gave her child to Ellis, and the boy turned into a pig. That does not limit Alice's surprise.
Chapter 7- The Mad Tea Party: The Cheshire Cat is published on a tree and directs it to the house of Hare Hare. It disappears, but its laugh stays behind the floating in the air, and Ellis insists to comment that she has often seen a cat without a smile but has never seen a laugh without a cat. Alice is made up of "Mad" Tea Party with Hatter (now commonly known as Mad Hatter), March Hare, and a sleeping dormouse which sleeps in most chapters. Other characters give Alice many puzzles and stories. Mad Hatter states that he is drinking tea all day long. Because time has permanently punished him at 6 o'clock (time of tea) permanently. Alice among the puzzles, being humiliated and exhausted, leaves the party with the claim that this party was the most foolish party ever in her life.
Alice is trying to play Croquet with Flemingo Cheshire Cat
Chapter 8 - Queen's Conquet Ground: Alice leaves her tea party and enters a garden where she visits three live cards with cards, which painted white roses in red because Queen of Hearts hates white color. The cards of the pot, the kings and queens, and besides a white rabbit, Julus enters the garden. When Alice meets the king and the queen The queen, who is difficult to please, presents her own Tasikalakam "Of With His Head". Any person who comes out of his mouth even in the slightest resentment and dissatisfaction with any citizen.
Alice was invited to play a crochet with the queen and her pawn (or some people could say that was ordered), but chaos spread in the game just a few times. Live Flamingos were used as hammers and Hoghog was used as balls, Alice's visit once again came with Cheshire Cat. Only then Queen of Hearts ordered the head of the cat to be cut, but the judge complained that it was not possible to do this because the cat's only head appeared. Due to this queen's queen, Queen was eager to free the Dutch from captivity to resolve the dispute.
Chapter 9-Mock Turtle Stories: On Alice's request, the Dutchman was brought to the Crockett Ground. He tries to get morals in every item on his four sides. The Queen of Hearts threatened him with death and threw away from there and made Alice visit with a gripper which took him to the Mock Turtle. Mock turtle is sad without any troubles. She tries to demonstrate that she was a genuine tortoise at school, but the griffon stops interrupting it so that she can play the game.
Chapter 10 - Lobster Quadrille: A mock turtle and a grimphone descend on Lobster Quadrille, while Alice (by mistake) chants "Tis the Voice of Lobster". Mock turtle sings for it a "beautiful soup", during which the grillopster pulls Alice for an impeachment suit.
Chapter 11 - Who stole Tart? Alice becomes a lawsuit, where the Navy of Hearts is accused of stealing Queen Tartus. The jury includes various animals, including Bill the Lizard and White Rabbit plays trumpet in the court and is the judge of the King of Hearts. During the proceedings, Ellison realized that she was growing very fast. Dormouse blames Alice for speeding up and says she has no right to take all the air up so fast. Almond blames the accused for Dornmouse, and says he is ridiculous because all grow up and he is not in his hands. Meanwhile, the witnesses include the Mad Hatter who gives displeasure and discouragement to the king by giving a bitter reply to the questions asked, besides the Queen's Cook.
Karan 12- Alice's Evidence: When Alice is called as a witness. By mistake, it knocks the jury box filled with beasts and King orders that all beasts should be restored in their place before starting the trial. King and Queen Rule 42 ("More than a mile high should leave the court.") Alice orders to leave from there. But Alice opposes this order and refuses to go away. He argues with the King and Queen of Hearts on this ridiculous action and refuses to control his tongue. The Queen of Hearts uses her tactic "With With Her Head" shouting. But Alice is fearless and calls them all a packet of cards. Alice's sister Ellis leaves some leaves, instead of a card, and awakens it for tea. Alice leaves her sister on the river bank to imagine herself on all the avid events.
Characters
Alice White Rabbit Mice Dodo Lori Eaglet Duck Pet Bill Lizard Caterpillar Frog Footman Fish Futman Duchash Cook Cheshire Cat Hatter March Hare Dormas Queen of Hearts Neighbors of Hearts King of Hearts Griffon Mock Turtle Pig Mislegations about Baby Elis's sister Dina (Ellis cat) characters
Jabberwock is often considered to be the character of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but in reality, it only looks at the link-through-the-looking-glass. However, it has often been included in film versions, which are usually called "Alice in Wonderland" and create illusion. The Queen of Hearts is generally mistaken for the red-queen of The Looking-Glass, by mistake in front of the story, except for a queen, she has no other specialty of Queen. The Queen of Hearts is a part of the concept of decks which are present in the first book, while the red queen represents the red piece of Shantangan, because Shantanj is the subject of the next link. Dissolving characters in many conversions causes illusions.
Character sign
Carroll's story is first seen in any form in the listener Navy member chapter 3 (A Cox-Race and a Long Tale). Apparently Alice Liddell herself was in it while Carroll or Charles Dodgson was also copied as Dodo. Carroll is known as Dodo because he was hesitant when Dodgસન was speaking. In this way he used to speak his last name, he used to do Dr-Do-Dodson. The reference to Duck is the reference to Canon Duckworth, Laurie Atal Laurina Liddell and Eaglet, Edith Liddell (for Alice Liddell's sisters).
Bill the Lizard, may be a play on the name of Benjamin Disraeli. In a picture of Tanel's Through the Looking-Glass, a character is depicted in the form of "Man in White Paper". (Which is found in the form of a tourist in the morning on Alice train), the portrait of Lions and Unicorn as a Disneyrile cartoon wearing a hat of paper also has many similarity with Tennessee's Gladstone and Disraeli Punch picture.
There is a possibility that Haitter is related to Theophilus Carter, a furniture vendor who wants to go to Oxford for his unconventional exploration. Tenniel apparently made the hayeter as carter on Carroll's suggestion. Dormouse tells the story of three sisters, whose name was Elsie, Lacey and Tilly. This was Liddell's sisters. Elsie is ... (Lorraine Charlotte), Tilly Edith (her family nickname Matilda) and Lacey Ellis has an anagram.
Mock turtle talks about a drowning master, "an old kong fisherman" who comes once a week to teach "drilling, stretching and fading in the cuckoo". This art critic John Raskin refers to the Liddell House once a week to teach children painting, sketching and oil painting. (The children actually learned well, Alice Liddell produced some good watercolors.)
Mock turtle also sings "Beautiful Soup". It is a parody of the song "Star of the Evening, Beautiful Star", which is presented in Liddell's house by Lorina, Alice and Edith Liddell for Lewis Carroll in a warm, when he first told the story of Alice's Adventures Under Ground.
Cinematic and television adaptations
The inspiration from this book has been presented many times on film and television. This list contains only direct and complete adaptations from the book. The sequels and works that are inspired, but are not based on these books (such as Tim Burton's 2010 film Alice in Wonderland) are included in the creation of inspiration from Alice in Wonderland.
Alice in Wonderland (1903 film) silent film, director Cecil Happworth and Percy Stole's Adventures in Wonderland (1910 film), silent film, director Edwin Stanton, Porter Alice in Wonderland (1915 film), silent film, director W. W. Young Alice in Wonderland (1931 film), director Bud Pollard Alice in Wonderland (1933 film), Director Norman Z. MacLeod Alice in Wonderland (1949 film), Animation The live-action / stop motion film director Lu Bin Alice in Wonderland (1951 film), Walt Disney Animation Studios' traditional animation film Alice of Wonderland in Paris, 1966 animated film Alice in Wonderland, (or What a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?), 1966 Hanna-Barbara animated television movie Alice in Wonderland (1966 film), BBC Television Movie, Director Jonathan Miller, Alice's Edge Entrepreneurs in Wonderland (1972 film), British musical film Alice in Wonderland (1976 film), Pornographic film Alice (1981 film), Alisa V. Stren Chudes, 1981 Kivonach Film, a traditional / cut-out animation series, directed by Yferm Prussansky. Alice at the Palace, Elizabeth Swados's 1981 production Alice in Concert, filmed Performance Alice in Wonderland (1983 film), Filmed Performance Fuchigo no Kuni no Alice, 1983 Nippon Animation Anime television series Alice in Wonderland (1985 film) based on the Broadway Revival of 1982, , Television movie Alice in Wonderland (1986 TV serial), 4 × 30 minute BBC TV adaptation, writing and directing Barry Lett Alice in Wonderland (1988 film), 51 minute direct-to-video animated film by Burbank Films Australia, Neko Zenly (1988 film), Surrealist live-action / stop motion film, director Jen Swankmezer, Alice by First Run features on DVD in English As released in Adventures in Wonderland (1991-1995 TV series), Disney Channel series where Alice goes from her bedroom mirror to Wandland Alice in Wonderland (1999 film), television movie Abby in Wonderland (2008 film), made as Sesame Street specialty, releases comics released straight to DVD
Many comics adaptations have been taken from this book.
Alice in Wonderland (Antarctic Press, 2006, Four Issues) Wonderland (Slave Labor Graphics) , 2006, six issues) Heart no Kuni no Alice (Manga series, 2008, Hoshimo Sumey) Pandora Hearts (Manga Series, 2009, Joon Muchijuki) Alice in Verse: The Lost Rhymes of Wonderland (Candle's Books, 2010, J.T.Holden) Are you Alice? Gothic manga retelling live show in Alice in Wonderland
After getting the book immediately after its popularity, its live performance began shortly. One of the earliest examples of this is Alice in Wonderland. Seven Clark's musical drama (book) and Walter Slaughter (music), which was presented at London's Prince of Wales Theater in 1886.
The book and its front link are the most widely known works of Carol, so he inspired some live performances, including drama, opera, belle and traditional English idiom. This work involves transformation that is largely loyal to the original book and simultaneously used the story in the form of a support for new functions. A good example is the Eighth Square. The secret of a murder that is set in Wonderland. It is written by Matt Fleming and Ben J. McPherson's song and music The Goth-Tond Rock Music premiered in New Theater Royale in Portsmouth England in 2006. T. a. Fantastica exhibits "Aspects of Alice" written and directed by Patr Krantichavi, a popular black light theater located in Prague. The conversion is not loyal to the book, but Alice introduces her journey into adulthood, while accompanying signals to the Czech Republic history.
Ellis Pleiens Liddell (age 10, born 1852) (Seyconda in the preface link), Edith Marie Liddell (age 8, born 1853) (Tertia in the preface link), Charlotte Liddell, Laurie Charlotte Liddell (age 13, birth 1849) (Priya in the book's preface.
These three girls were daughters of Oxford University vice-chancellor and Dean of Christ Church and Henry George Liddell, headmaster of Westminster School. Most of the book's adventures were inspired and inspired by people, situations and buildings at Oxford and Christ Church, such as the Rabbit Hall, which symbolizes the real staircase in the main hall of Christ Church. It is believed that in the Ripon cathedral where Carroll's father was a canon, a carpenter of Griffon and a rabbit inspired the story.
The tour started at Folly Bridge near Oxford and it was five miles away to Godesto village. During this time Riverierend Dods had told a story to girls, in which accidentally, a boring Alice girl was talking about who came out in search of adventure. The girls liked it and Alice Lidle asked Dodgson to write it for her. After a long delay of more than two years, he did this at the end and on 26 November 1864, Alice handed over the manuscript to Alice's Adventures Under Ground, in which Dodsen painted herself. Some, including Martin Gardner, believed that there was an old version that had destroyed Dodgers and wrote a detailed copy of the hand, but there is no prevalent evidence to prove this.
But before Ellis received his copy, Dodson was preparing it for publication and expanding the effect of 15,500 words to 27,500 words, in which the primary part of the cashier's cat and Mad Tea Party was added. In 1865, Dodgson's story was published by Elise's adventures in Wonderland "Louise Carol", in which John Tenniel painted pictures. Tenniel's first print order of 2000 copies was blocked in the face of the quality of the print. A new version was released in December of the same year, but there was a date of 1866 and it was immediately published. As soon as it was known, the original version was sold to New York's publishing house Appleton with Dodson's approval. The binding of Appleton Ellis was similar to the 1866 Macmillan Alice, only the difference in the name of the publisher. The title page of Appleton Alice was added and the title page of the 1860 Macmillan was removed, on which was the publication of New York's publisher and date of 1866. All the printed copies were sold immediately. In the publishing world, Alice woke up, the children and the older women loved her the same way. Among the first readers to read it, Queen Victoria and Child Oscar Wilde were included. This book has never been out of print. Alice Adventures in Wonderland has been translated into 125 languages. So far, more than one hundred editions of this book have been printed and inspired by the other media, especially in the theater and film countless times.
This book is shortened to Alice in Wonderland titles, and in many years the title has become popular in many presentations by inspiration on stage, film and TV. Some of the prints of this title include Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its follow-up sequel novel Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Find Theirs.
Highlights of the publication 1865 First UK version (Supersed version) 1865 Alice printed in the United States for the first time 1869: Alice Ebenchuer im Wonderland translated by German translator by Antoni Zimmerman. 1869: Avengers de Alice, translated into French-language by Henry Bue, publishes a publish des Mervellius. 1870: Translation of the Swedish language by Emily Nønen Alice Faventier I Segundent was published. 1871: Dodson met another Alice during a stay in London, named Alice Reix, and talked about her reflection in the mirror, which created another book through The Looking Glass and What Alice Found Their, which was even more sales than before. 1886: Carroll introduces a copy of the earlier Alice Adventures Under Ground manuscript. 1890: Carroll publishes a special edition The Nursery Alice for children reading from zero to five years. 1905: Mrs. J. C. Gorham published the Alice Adventures in Wonderland Retold in Words of One Syllable, which was a series of such books published by A L. Bert Company for child readers. 1908: Alice is translated for the first time in Japanese. 1910: La Aventuro D'Alício N Mirando, published in Esperanto by Elphric Lofwyne Kearney, was published. 1916: The first edition of the Windermere series is released in Alice Adventures in Wonderland. It was illustrated by Milo Winter. 1960: American writer Martin Gardner published the special edition The Annotated Alice, which included the text of Alice Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass. These books have a broad definition of printed signatures and include the full-length parody of Victorian poems. In the subsequent edition it was expanded on the basis of definitions. 1961: Publication of Folio Society with 42 Pictures by John Tenniel 1964: Alicia in Terra Mirabili Clive is a Latin translation published by Harcourt Carruthers 1998: Louis Corolla's own copy of Alice, one of the six copies survived in the earlier edition of 1965, sold one anonymous US buyer for $ 1.54 million at auction Come. Making it the most expensive book of children (or 19th Century literature of literature). (This pre-record was subsequently stripped in 2007 when Jill Rowling's limited edition version of Harry Potter was sold for auctioned The Tales of Bidal the Bard for $ 1.95 million ($ 3.9 million). 2003: Everytraí Eilíse i dítír na nIontas Published by Nicholas Williams in Irish translation. 2008: Folio Alice's Adventures Under Ground, Replica Edition (up to 3,700 copy limited, The Original Alice Pus
Chapter 1 - Down the Rabbit Hall: When Alice is tired of sitting with her sister on the bank of the river, she sees a white rabbit clothed in her hand, who has a clock and runs quickly. Alice goes behind him and falls into a rabbit rate where there is a strange hall and there are gates of each shape. It gets a small door that is very small in size. But from it she sees an attractive garden. He then gets a bottle which says "Drink me", drinking bottle fluid shrinks its size and can reach the key. There is a cake found on which "eat me", after eating it increases its size so much that its head is scarred with a roof.
Chapter 2- Tears of Lake: Alice is sad and starts crying and her tears flood the hallway. After being compressed by a fan he caught, Elise swims out of her tears and meets a mouse who is self-floating. Alice tries to talk to her, but she can only talk about her cat who does not like the mouse.
Chapter 3 - Cocktail race and long story: The crowd in the ocean of tears grows and other animals and birds also start to swim in it. Alice and other animals reach the coast as far as possible, and now it is a question of how to get rid of it again. Mice gives them a dry talk about William the Conqueror. Dodo says that he should be conducting a cocus race for drying, in which all will run in one circle and there is no winner. After that, Alice feared all the animals unknowingly by talking about her cat.
Chapter 4 - The Rabbit sends a trickle bill: The white rabbit rises in search of doves and birds. It tells Alice to go home and find these things, but she starts to grow larger in size. The frightened rabbit orders her gardener, Bill the Lizard to climb the ceiling and get into the chimney from there. Alice, standing outside, sounds the sound of other animals who have gathered to see her huge hand. The bunch of animals throws pieces on it, which turn into a small cake, and Alice eats it again and again in its small size.
Chapter 5 - Advice from Caterpillars: Alice reaches a mushroom where a caterpillar is drinking hokka. Caterpillars ask Alice and Elise accepts her identity crisis that has become more complicated by her ability to miss her poetry. Before leaving, the caterpillar tells Alice that the mushroom one
Chapter 6 - Pig and Pepper: A fish-footman is invited to the queen of the house, who gives it to a Frog Footman. Alice looks at this interaction and then enters the house after a surprise conversation with the frog. The queen's cook is throwing utensils and making a soup, which has many black peppers, and due to this Alice, the queen and her baby (but the cook and her laughing cheshire cat) appear to be huge screams. The queen gave her child to Ellis, and the boy turned into a pig. That does not limit Alice's surprise.
Chapter 7- The Mad Tea Party: The Cheshire Cat is published on a tree and directs it to the house of Hare Hare. It disappears, but its laugh stays behind the floating in the air, and Ellis insists to comment that she has often seen a cat without a smile but has never seen a laugh without a cat. Alice is made up of "Mad" Tea Party with Hatter (now commonly known as Mad Hatter), March Hare, and a sleeping dormouse which sleeps in most chapters. Other characters give Alice many puzzles and stories. Mad Hatter states that he is drinking tea all day long. Because time has permanently punished him at 6 o'clock (time of tea) permanently. Alice among the puzzles, being humiliated and exhausted, leaves the party with the claim that this party was the most foolish party ever in her life.
Alice is trying to play Croquet with Flemingo Cheshire Cat
Chapter 8 - Queen's Conquet Ground: Alice leaves her tea party and enters a garden where she visits three live cards with cards, which painted white roses in red because Queen of Hearts hates white color. The cards of the pot, the kings and queens, and besides a white rabbit, Julus enters the garden. When Alice meets the king and the queen The queen, who is difficult to please, presents her own Tasikalakam "Of With His Head". Any person who comes out of his mouth even in the slightest resentment and dissatisfaction with any citizen.
Alice was invited to play a crochet with the queen and her pawn (or some people could say that was ordered), but chaos spread in the game just a few times. Live Flamingos were used as hammers and Hoghog was used as balls, Alice's visit once again came with Cheshire Cat. Only then Queen of Hearts ordered the head of the cat to be cut, but the judge complained that it was not possible to do this because the cat's only head appeared. Due to this queen's queen, Queen was eager to free the Dutch from captivity to resolve the dispute.
Chapter 9-Mock Turtle Stories: On Alice's request, the Dutchman was brought to the Crockett Ground. He tries to get morals in every item on his four sides. The Queen of Hearts threatened him with death and threw away from there and made Alice visit with a gripper which took him to the Mock Turtle. Mock turtle is sad without any troubles. She tries to demonstrate that she was a genuine tortoise at school, but the griffon stops interrupting it so that she can play the game.
Chapter 10 - Lobster Quadrille: A mock turtle and a grimphone descend on Lobster Quadrille, while Alice (by mistake) chants "Tis the Voice of Lobster". Mock turtle sings for it a "beautiful soup", during which the grillopster pulls Alice for an impeachment suit.
Chapter 11 - Who stole Tart? Alice becomes a lawsuit, where the Navy of Hearts is accused of stealing Queen Tartus. The jury includes various animals, including Bill the Lizard and White Rabbit plays trumpet in the court and is the judge of the King of Hearts. During the proceedings, Ellison realized that she was growing very fast. Dormouse blames Alice for speeding up and says she has no right to take all the air up so fast. Almond blames the accused for Dornmouse, and says he is ridiculous because all grow up and he is not in his hands. Meanwhile, the witnesses include the Mad Hatter who gives displeasure and discouragement to the king by giving a bitter reply to the questions asked, besides the Queen's Cook.
Karan 12- Alice's Evidence: When Alice is called as a witness. By mistake, it knocks the jury box filled with beasts and King orders that all beasts should be restored in their place before starting the trial. King and Queen Rule 42 ("More than a mile high should leave the court.") Alice orders to leave from there. But Alice opposes this order and refuses to go away. He argues with the King and Queen of Hearts on this ridiculous action and refuses to control his tongue. The Queen of Hearts uses her tactic "With With Her Head" shouting. But Alice is fearless and calls them all a packet of cards. Alice's sister Ellis leaves some leaves, instead of a card, and awakens it for tea. Alice leaves her sister on the river bank to imagine herself on all the avid events.
Characters
Alice White Rabbit Mice Dodo Lori Eaglet Duck Pet Bill Lizard Caterpillar Frog Footman Fish Futman Duchash Cook Cheshire Cat Hatter March Hare Dormas Queen of Hearts Neighbors of Hearts King of Hearts Griffon Mock Turtle Pig Mislegations about Baby Elis's sister Dina (Ellis cat) characters
Jabberwock is often considered to be the character of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but in reality, it only looks at the link-through-the-looking-glass. However, it has often been included in film versions, which are usually called "Alice in Wonderland" and create illusion. The Queen of Hearts is generally mistaken for the red-queen of The Looking-Glass, by mistake in front of the story, except for a queen, she has no other specialty of Queen. The Queen of Hearts is a part of the concept of decks which are present in the first book, while the red queen represents the red piece of Shantangan, because Shantanj is the subject of the next link. Dissolving characters in many conversions causes illusions.
Character sign
Carroll's story is first seen in any form in the listener Navy member chapter 3 (A Cox-Race and a Long Tale). Apparently Alice Liddell herself was in it while Carroll or Charles Dodgson was also copied as Dodo. Carroll is known as Dodo because he was hesitant when Dodgસન was speaking. In this way he used to speak his last name, he used to do Dr-Do-Dodson. The reference to Duck is the reference to Canon Duckworth, Laurie Atal Laurina Liddell and Eaglet, Edith Liddell (for Alice Liddell's sisters).
Bill the Lizard, may be a play on the name of Benjamin Disraeli. In a picture of Tanel's Through the Looking-Glass, a character is depicted in the form of "Man in White Paper". (Which is found in the form of a tourist in the morning on Alice train), the portrait of Lions and Unicorn as a Disneyrile cartoon wearing a hat of paper also has many similarity with Tennessee's Gladstone and Disraeli Punch picture.
There is a possibility that Haitter is related to Theophilus Carter, a furniture vendor who wants to go to Oxford for his unconventional exploration. Tenniel apparently made the hayeter as carter on Carroll's suggestion. Dormouse tells the story of three sisters, whose name was Elsie, Lacey and Tilly. This was Liddell's sisters. Elsie is ... (Lorraine Charlotte), Tilly Edith (her family nickname Matilda) and Lacey Ellis has an anagram.
Mock turtle talks about a drowning master, "an old kong fisherman" who comes once a week to teach "drilling, stretching and fading in the cuckoo". This art critic John Raskin refers to the Liddell House once a week to teach children painting, sketching and oil painting. (The children actually learned well, Alice Liddell produced some good watercolors.)
Mock turtle also sings "Beautiful Soup". It is a parody of the song "Star of the Evening, Beautiful Star", which is presented in Liddell's house by Lorina, Alice and Edith Liddell for Lewis Carroll in a warm, when he first told the story of Alice's Adventures Under Ground.
Cinematic and television adaptations
The inspiration from this book has been presented many times on film and television. This list contains only direct and complete adaptations from the book. The sequels and works that are inspired, but are not based on these books (such as Tim Burton's 2010 film Alice in Wonderland) are included in the creation of inspiration from Alice in Wonderland.
Alice in Wonderland (1903 film) silent film, director Cecil Happworth and Percy Stole's Adventures in Wonderland (1910 film), silent film, director Edwin Stanton, Porter Alice in Wonderland (1915 film), silent film, director W. W. Young Alice in Wonderland (1931 film), director Bud Pollard Alice in Wonderland (1933 film), Director Norman Z. MacLeod Alice in Wonderland (1949 film), Animation The live-action / stop motion film director Lu Bin Alice in Wonderland (1951 film), Walt Disney Animation Studios' traditional animation film Alice of Wonderland in Paris, 1966 animated film Alice in Wonderland, (or What a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?), 1966 Hanna-Barbara animated television movie Alice in Wonderland (1966 film), BBC Television Movie, Director Jonathan Miller, Alice's Edge Entrepreneurs in Wonderland (1972 film), British musical film Alice in Wonderland (1976 film), Pornographic film Alice (1981 film), Alisa V. Stren Chudes, 1981 Kivonach Film, a traditional / cut-out animation series, directed by Yferm Prussansky. Alice at the Palace, Elizabeth Swados's 1981 production Alice in Concert, filmed Performance Alice in Wonderland (1983 film), Filmed Performance Fuchigo no Kuni no Alice, 1983 Nippon Animation Anime television series Alice in Wonderland (1985 film) based on the Broadway Revival of 1982, , Television movie Alice in Wonderland (1986 TV serial), 4 × 30 minute BBC TV adaptation, writing and directing Barry Lett Alice in Wonderland (1988 film), 51 minute direct-to-video animated film by Burbank Films Australia, Neko Zenly (1988 film), Surrealist live-action / stop motion film, director Jen Swankmezer, Alice by First Run features on DVD in English As released in Adventures in Wonderland (1991-1995 TV series), Disney Channel series where Alice goes from her bedroom mirror to Wandland Alice in Wonderland (1999 film), television movie Abby in Wonderland (2008 film), made as Sesame Street specialty, releases comics released straight to DVD
Many comics adaptations have been taken from this book.
Alice in Wonderland (Antarctic Press, 2006, Four Issues) Wonderland (Slave Labor Graphics) , 2006, six issues) Heart no Kuni no Alice (Manga series, 2008, Hoshimo Sumey) Pandora Hearts (Manga Series, 2009, Joon Muchijuki) Alice in Verse: The Lost Rhymes of Wonderland (Candle's Books, 2010, J.T.Holden) Are you Alice? Gothic manga retelling live show in Alice in Wonderland
After getting the book immediately after its popularity, its live performance began shortly. One of the earliest examples of this is Alice in Wonderland. Seven Clark's musical drama (book) and Walter Slaughter (music), which was presented at London's Prince of Wales Theater in 1886.
The book and its front link are the most widely known works of Carol, so he inspired some live performances, including drama, opera, belle and traditional English idiom. This work involves transformation that is largely loyal to the original book and simultaneously used the story in the form of a support for new functions. A good example is the Eighth Square. The secret of a murder that is set in Wonderland. It is written by Matt Fleming and Ben J. McPherson's song and music The Goth-Tond Rock Music premiered in New Theater Royale in Portsmouth England in 2006. T. a. Fantastica exhibits "Aspects of Alice" written and directed by Patr Krantichavi, a popular black light theater located in Prague. The conversion is not loyal to the book, but Alice introduces her journey into adulthood, while accompanying signals to the Czech Republic history.
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