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Alice in Wonderland and Through The Looking Glass Lewis Carroll
Chapter I: Looking-Glass House
Summary
Alice rests at home in an armchair, talking drowsily to
herself as her black kitten, Kitty, plays with a ball of string
at her feet. Alice lovingly scolds the kitten for unraveling the
ball of string that she had been winding up. She goes on to scold
Kitty's mother, Dinah, who is busy bathing the white kitten Snowdrop.
Alice begins an imaginative conversation with Kitty, pretending
that her pet talks back, and asks her to pretend that she is the
Red Queen in a chess game. Alice attempts to arrange Kitty's forelegs
to better resemble the chess piece. When Kitty does not comply,
Alice holds her up to the mirror above the mantle and threatens
to put Kitty into the world on the other side of the mirror, which
she calls Looking-Glass House. Alice thinks about what Looking-Glass
House must be like, wondering aloud to Kitty if there might be a
way to break through to the other side of the mirror. All of a sudden,
Alice finds herself on the mantle, staring into the mirror. She
magically steps through the mirror into Looking-Glass House.
On the other side of the mirror, Alice looks around and
finds that the room she is standing in resembles the mirror image
of the room in her own house. However, several parts of the room
look quite different. The pictures on the wall near the mirror seem
to be alive, and the mantle clock has the face of a grinning little
man.
Alice notices a group of chessmen inside the fireplace
among the cinders, walking in line two-by-two. Alice examines them
closely and determines that she is invisible to them. She hears
a squeak behind her. Alice wheels around to find a White Pawn on
the table. Out of the fireplace charges the White Queen, who knocks
over the White King in her haste, rushing to grab her child. Alice
helpfully lifts the White Queen onto the table, and the White Queen
gasps in surprise as Alice grabs the Queen's child Lily. The White
King follows, but he quickly grows impatient. Alice lifts him up,
dusts him off, and places him down next to the White Queen. The
White King lies on his back, stunned in surprise, which causes Alice
to realize that she is invisible to the chessmen. Once the White
King recovers, he pulls out a pencil and begins jotting his experience
down, but Alice snatches the pencil from him and writes something
down in his book. The White King comments that he must get a new
book, since strange words seem to appear on the pages of his current
one.
Alice picks up one of the books from the table and discovers
that the text is backward. She holds the book up to the mirror to
read it properly and reads the poem on the page. The poem, entitled
Jabberwocky, describes a knight's travels to vanquish a hideous
monster known as the Jabberwock. Perplexed by the poem, Alice sets
the book down and decides to explore the rest of the house. As she leaves
the room and begins heading down the stairs, she finds herself floating
until she finally catches hold of the door-post to the door that
leads outside of Looking-Glass House.
Analysis
In his stories, Carroll blurs the boundaries between being
awake and being asleep so that it becomes difficult to tell where
reality ends and dreaming begins. At the beginning of the chapter,
Alice enjoys a drowsy winter nap near the fire. She leaves her chair
only to snatch up Kitty and place her on her knee. Alice dozes off
in this position, and her step through the mirror happens in her
dream. Since she is only half asleep, Alice's experiences combine
elements from the waking world and her dreams. The dream motif of Through
the Looking-Glass differs from the one found in Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland, for here Alice exercises some
control over what she encounters in her fantasy world. Alice's repeated
pleas to Kitty to play pretend emphasize her desire to exert some
control over her imagination.
Alice discovers that the room on the other side of the
mirror is nearly identical to her old room, showing the motif of
inversion that reappears throughout the text. The alternate dimension
is not just a mirror image, but a comprehensive inversion of reality.
In Looking-Glass House, Alice no longer needs a fire, since the
winter of the real world becomes summer in the imagined world, where
the gardens are in bloom and the trees are filled with leaves. Even
the inanimate objects in Alice's old room, such as the pictures
and the mantle clock, spring to life. Alice appears invisible to
the chess pieces, which is one aspect of the inversion that occurs
in Looking-Glass House. In Alice's world, she is alive while the
chess pieces are inanimate, but Looking-Glass World belongs to the
chess pieces, where they have a working order to their lives. Like
the chessboard, their lives are highly symmetrical and controlled.
Alice's invisibility suggests that she maintains a godlike
power over the chessmen of Looking-Glass World, which stems from
the fact that the whole universe exists as part of her imagination.
Alice picks up the White King as if she were a divine power manipulating the
lives of the chess pieces. This establishes the idea of the chessboard
as a plane of existence upon which individuals are positioned like
chess pieces and moved around according to predetermined rules.
Inside the house, Alice's invisibility allows her to be an unseen hand,
but the image of the chessboard gains its full significance in the
next chapter when she joins the chess game outside. There, Alice becomes
a chess piece herself, manipulated by an unseen hand, presumably
the authorial hand of Carroll. The imposition of this hand starts
to become apparent when Alice loses control over her body and floats
down the stairs, propelled forward toward her destiny by the unseen
hand of the author.
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