قراءة كتاب Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home: The Story of His Life

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Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home: The Story of His Life

Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home: The Story of His Life

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LEWIS CARROLL
IN WONDERLAND AND AT HOME

 

 

LEWIS CARROLL.

 

 

LEWIS CARROLL
IN WONDERLAND AND AT HOME

 

THE STORY OF HIS LIFE

 

 

BY
BELLE MOSES
AUTHOR OF
“LOUISA MAY ALCOTT”

 

 

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
NEW YORK AND LONDON
1910

 

 

Copyright, 1910, by
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY

Published October, 1910

Printed in the United States of America

 

 

TO
E. M. M. and M. J. M.

 

 


INTRODUCTION.

Lewis Carroll discovered a new country, simply by rowing up and down the river, and telling a story to the accompaniment of dipping oars and rippling waters, as the boat glided through. It is not everyone who can discover a country, people it with marvelous, fanciful shapes, and give it a place in our mental geography. But Lewis Carroll was not “everyone”—in fact he was like no one else to the many who called him friend. He had the magic power of creating something out of nothing, and gave to the eager children who had tired of “Aunt Louisa’s Picture Books,” and “Garlands of Poetry,” something to think about, to guess about, and to talk about.

If he had written nothing else but “Alice in Wonderland,” that one book would have been quite enough to make him famous, but his pen was never idle, and the world of children has much for which to thank him. How much, and for what, the following pages will strive to tell, and if they succeed in conveying to their readers half the charm that lay in the life of this man, who did so much for others, they will not have been written in vain.

In telling the story of his life I am indebted to many, for courtesy and assistance. I wish specially to thank my brother, Montrose J. Moses. Columbia Library, Astor Library, St. Agnes Branch of the Public Library, and Miss Brown, of the Traveling Library, have all been exceedingly kind and helpful. To Messrs. E. P. Dutton and Company I extend my thanks for permission to quote from Miss Isa Bowman’s interesting reminiscences, and to the American and English editors of The Strand I am also indebted for a similar courtesy.

Belle Moses.

New York, October, 1910.

 

 


CONTENTS

CHAPTER   PAGE
I. There Was Once a Little Boy 1
II. School Days at Richmond and Rugby 15
III. Home Life During the Holidays 30
IV. Oxford Scholarship and Honors 42
V. A Many-Sided Genius 60
VI. Up and Down the River with the Real Alice 80
VII. Alice in Wonderland and What She Did There 98
VIII. Lewis Carroll at Home and Abroad 125
IX. More of “Alice Through the Looking-Glass” 146
X. “Hunting of the Snark” and Other Poems 176
XI. Games, Riddles and Puzzles public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@35418@[email protected]#Page_202" class="pginternal"

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