Lewis Carroll

The Complete Works of Lewis Carroll (Illustrated)


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      Lewis Carroll

      The Complete Works of Lewis Carroll (Illustrated)

      Novels, Stories, Poems & The Life and Letters

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-1889-9

       Novels

       Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

       Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There

       Sylvie and Bruno

       Sylvie and Bruno Concluded

       Stories

       A Tangled Tale

       Bruno’s Revenge and Other Stories

       What the Tortoise Said to Achilles

       Poems

       Early Verse

       Puzzles from Wonderland

       Prologues to Plays

       Rhyme? And Reason?

       College Rhymes and Notes by an Oxford Chiel

       Acrostics, Inscriptions and Other Verses

       Three Sunsets and Other Poems

       The Hunting of the Snark

       The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll

      

       Novels

      Main TOC

      Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

      Main TOC

        Christmas Greetings

        Chapter 1

        Chapter 2

        Chapter 3

        Chapter 4

        Chapter 5

        Chapter 6

        Chapter 7

        Chapter 8

        Chapter 9

        Chapter 10

        Chapter 11

        Chapter 12

      All in the golden afternoon

      Full leisurely we glide;

      For both our oars, with little skill,

      By little arms are plied

      While little hands make vain pretence

      Our wanderings to guide.

      Ah, cruel Three! In such an hour

      Beneath such dreamy weather,

      To beg a tale of breath too weak

      To stir the tiniest feather!

      Yet what can one poor voice avail

      Against three tongues together?

      Imperious Prima flashes forth

      Her edict to ‘begin it’:

      In gentler tone Secunda hopes

      ‘There will be nonsense in it’

      While Tertia interrupts the tale

      Not more than once a minute.

      Anon, to sudden silence won,

      In fancy they pursue

      The dream-child moving through a land

      Of wonders wild and new,

      In friendly chat with bird or beast—

      And half believe it true.

      And ever, as the story drained

      The wells of fancy dry,

      And faintly strove that weary one

      To put the subject by,

      ‘The rest next time’—‘It is next time!’

      The happy voices cry.

      Thus grew the tale of Wonderland:

      Thus slowly, one by one,

      Its quaint events were hammered out—

      And now the tale is done,

      And home we steer,