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  1. Through the Looking-Glass Full Book Summary. Alice sits in her armchair at home, drowsily watching her pet kitten, Kitty, as she unravels a ball of string. She snatches Kitty up and begins telling her about “Looking-Glass House,” an imaginary world on the other side of the mirror where everything is backward.

    • Symbols

      The rushes that Alice pulls from the water in Chapter 5...

    • Motifs

      Inverse Reflections. Many of the basic assumptions that...

  2. Through the Looking-Glass Summary. One cold November day, Alice lounges in the sitting room and plays with her black kitten, Kitty, while the mother cat Dinah cleans the white kitten, Snowdrop. Kitty is mischievous and plays with Alice's ball of yarn, unwinding it, so Alice scolds the kitten for this and for several other crimes.

  3. Nov 25, 2020 · Through the Looking-Glass: plot summary. The novel begins with Alice sitting indoors on a winter afternoon, curled up in an armchair with her kitten for company. As the snow falls outside, Alice asks her kitten to imitate one of the chess pieces in front of them. When the kitten fails to comply, Alice holds it up in the mirror and threatens to ...

  4. Through the Looking Glass (2008) was a chamber opera composed by Alan John to a libretto by Andrew Upton. Alice Through the Looking Glass (2016), directed by James Bobin, is a sequel to the Tim-Burton-directed Disney reboot Alice in Wonderland (2010). It does not follow the plot of the book.

    • Lewis Carroll
    • 1871
    • Looking-Glass House. Alice is at home; talking to herself and to her black kitten named Kitty. On the table is a chess game and she tries to make the kitten sit like the Red Queen, but the kitten doesn’t succeed because it won’t fold its arms properly.
    • The Garden of Live Flowers. Alice tries to reach a hill to see the garden better, but not one path seems to lead to it; she always ends up where she started.
    • Looking-Glass Insects. Alice notices that what she thought were bees are in fact elephants. She runs down the hill and crosses the first brook, which takes her to the next square.
    • Tweedledum and Tweedledee. As they are standing very still, Alice forgets they are alive and they reprimand her for not knowing the right manners for a visit.
  5. Through the Looking-Glass is the sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, a classic novel by Lewis Carroll. Through the Looking-Glass, written six years later, features the same topsy-turvy portal world known as Wonderland; the sequel is often included in a dual compendium with the first book. In this tale, Alice steps through a mirror ...

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