ALL
ABOUT ALICE
For Christmas 1864, Charles
Dodgson gave Alice Liddell a handwritten story, with his own drawings, called
'Alice's Adventures Underground'. The version with which most of us are
familiar - 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland', illustrated by Sir John Tenniel
- was published a year later. The Wonderland title was suggested by Dean
Liddell, Alice's father, whom classical scholars will recognise as co-author of
the Greek Lexicon 'Liddell and Scott'.
Dodgson had hoped to use his
own illustrations for the printed version, but Ruskin (who was also Alice's
drawing master) told him that they showed insufficient talent to warrant
spending the time to improve them. Ruskin appears in the book as 'an old conger
eel that used to come once a week' to teach 'drawing, stretching and fainting
in coils.'
It was agreed with Tenniel
that his drawings should not resemble the real Alice, whose hair was short and
dark. Photographs and a portrait by Dodgson show an intelligent, serious little
girl with deep-set eyes and a heart-shaped chin, quite different from the
popular image. Tenniel caricatured himself in the White Knight.
As for the original
manuscript, Alice sold it to raise death duties when she was widowed in 1928.
It went to an American dealer for £15,400. Now, however, it is in the British
Museum, having been presented to us in 1948 by the Americans 'as the slightest
token of recognition for the fact that (you) held off Hitler while we got ready
for the war.' A facsimile edition is now available, published by Michael
Joseph.
There is a story that Queen
Victoria liked 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' so much that she wrote to ask
Dodgson to send her a copy of his next book. Soon afterwards she received a
Treatise on Determinants. Delightful though this story is, Dodgson denied it
hotly, and wrote that it was "utterly false in every particular; nothing
even resembling it has occurred".
It is easy to imagine how much
Alice would have enjoyed Dodgson's bizarre distortions of events and characters
in her own life, and as the daughter of a lexicographer, she must have shared
the author's delight in word play. Much of the background to the book is
explained in 'Alice's Adventures in Oxford' by Mavis Batey (Pitkin Pictorials).
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