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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. Nov 25, 2020 · Below, we offer a brief plot summary of the novel, followed by some analysis of its meaning – or rather, possible meanings. 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 ...

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  4. This shocks the queen. Alice lifts the White King up too. Alice looks around and flips through a book. She realizes that the text isn't in a foreign language—since this is Looking-glass World, the text is backwards. She holds the book up to a mirror and is able to read a poem titled "Jabberwocky." Alice thinks it sounds pretty, but she can't ...

    • Chapter 1: Looking-Glass House
    • Chapter 2: The Garden of Live Flowers
    • Chapter 3: Looking-Glass Insects
    • Chapter 4: Tweedledum and Tweedledee
    • Chapter 5: Wool and Water
    • Chapter 6: Humpty Dumpty
    • Chapter 7: The Lion and The Unicorn
    • Chapter 8: ‘It’s My Own Invention’
    • Chapter 9: Queen Alice
    • Chapter 12: Which Dreamed It?

    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. She decides it should be punished and holds it up to the looking-glass, threatening to put the kitten into the Looking...

    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. Eventually she comes upon a flower-bed. The flowers can talk and they tell her that there’s someone else in the garden. It appears to be the Red Queen, who is now as large as Alice is. They have a conversation and Alice ...

    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. She suddenly finds herself in a railway carriage with all kinds of creatures and a Guard who asks for the tickets. Alice tries to explain that she hasn’t got a ticket and during the discussion ...

    As they are standing very still, Alice forgets they are alive and they reprimand her for not knowing the right manners for a visit. When they shake hands they all start dancing. Alice wants to know which road she should take to leave the forest, but they repeat ‘The Walrus and the Carpenter’ to her. Then they take her to the sleeping Red King and t...

    Alice catches the shawl and sees the White Queen running through the wood. As she is very untidy, Alice helps her to put on her shawl again and brushes her hair. The Queen wants to hire her as a lady’s maid, but she refuses. The White Queen explains the advantages of living backwards, meaning that you remember things before they actually happen. Sh...

    As Alice approaches, the egg gets larger and more human, and eventually turns into Humpty Dumpty, who is sitting on a very narrow wall. She offends him by calling him an egg and he tells her that her name doesn’t fit her shape. Alice is concerned about him falling from the wall, but Humpty Dumpty explains that the King promised him to send all his ...

    The next moments several thousand soldiers and horses come running out of the wood. They all keep stumbling and tripping over each other. When Alice reaches an open place, she sees the White King with his memorandum book. He tells her that he sent all his men and horses, except for those that are wanted in the game and his two messengers. Haigha, o...

    When the noise has died away a Red Knight arrives on his horse. He shouts “Check!” takes Alice prisoner and tumbles off his horse. Then a White Knight arrives to rescue her and he also falls off his horse. They start a fight during which they constantly keep falling off their horses. The White Knight wins and tells her that he is here to guide her ...

    Alice realises that she now is a queen. The White Queen and Red Queen invite her to her own dinner-party and start examining her with nonsensical questions and giving her lessons in manners. The Queens get tired and fall asleep in Alice’s lap. Suddenly they disappear and Alice is standing in front of a doorway marked ‘Queen Alice’. She asks a Frog ...

    Alice realises that she has dreamt the whole thing and that she is now back in the drawing room, holding her black kitten. She walks to the table, takes the chess-piece of the Red Queen and tries to make the kitten confess that it turned into her. She wonders what it was that Dinah and the white kitten turned into. She asks Kitty who it was that dr...

  5. Though time be fleet, and I and thou Are half a life asunder, Thy loving smile will surely hail The love-gift of a fairy-tale. have not seen thy sunny face, Nor heard thy silver laughter; No thought of me shall find a place In thy young life's hereafter - Enough that now thou wilt not fail To listen to my fairy-tale.

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  6. The creation of the story. W hile writing the ‘Looking-Glass’ story, Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) used a lot of material that he had come up with earlier. In the article ‘ Alice on the Stage ‘ he remarked: “ [Through the] Looking-Glass [was] made up almost wholly of bits and scraps, single ideas that came of themselves.”.

  7. Summary. Alice is sure the whole thing is not the white kitten’s fault. It must surely be the fault of the black kitten. Dinah, the mother cat, who has been washing the white kitten’s face ...

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