This manuscript - one of the British Library's best - loved treasures - is the original version of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll, the pen-name of Charles Dodgson, an Oxford mathematician.
Dodgson was fond of children and became friends with Lorina, Alice and Edith Liddell, the young daughters of the Dean of his college, Christ Church. One summer's day in 1862 he entertained them on a boat trip with a story of Alice's adventures in a magical world entered through a rabbit-hole. The ten-year-old Alice was so entranced that she begged him to write it down for her. It took him some time to write out the tale - in a tiny, neat hand - and complete the 37 illustrations. Alice finally received the 90-page book, dedicated to 'a dear child, in memory of a summer day', in November 1864.
Now you can see, and read, the entire book
here.
Very cool. I have a print edition of that, with print on the left page, and a photo of the page on the right.
And my favorite book is "The Annotated Alice", recently featured in Lost.
wow great site Bruce
I think BD#2 stole my Annotated Alice
Speaking of --
have any of you old farts seen the '70s Alice in Wonderland Musical Porno?
I adored Alice's adventures when i was a kid. I seem to recall Alice Through the Looking Glass being quite a dark book, compared to Wonderland. Loved them both.
There's an absolutely brilliant modern take on Alice by the author Jeff Noon, called The Automated Alice. It's written as the third Alice book. Superb stuff.
I read this many years ago. Alone at night with only the computer on reading this book like some lost treasure. First found then lost again. And after all this time you return this book to me like an old flame reunited.
Thank you for this find.
You're welcome. :D
I had never seen, actually never heard of, this original handmade book. I'd only seen the published version, which was different from the original story he wrote for the girl.
There was an article in New Scientist about what Alice in Wonderland is really about. As mentioned Carroll was mathemetician and at the time a lot of new algebra and concepts were coming forth. Carroll was a bit of a stick in the mud and scenes like Alice eating from one side of the mushroom to get bigger or smaller, but the sides not being defined, or the Mad Hatters Tea Party or the Cheshire Cat's smile are all satires on this ridiculous 'new math'.
The Cheshire cat, and Mad Hatter's tea party, were not in the original story, and the bigger/smaller mushroom was from eating the cap or stem. There are considerable differences from the published version.
The Cheshire cat, and Mad Hatter's tea party, were not in the original story, and the bigger/smaller mushroom was from eating the cap or stem. There are considerable differences from the published version.
Yes, it said he added them later to lampoon the new fangled ideas.
The article is
here, but you can't read the full text unless you're a subscriber.
They talked about the math satire on NPR, I think they still have the article up. I must go dig for it.