The Lobster Quadrille
The Mock Turtle sighed
deeply, and drew the
back of one flapper
across his eyes. He
looked at Alice, and
tried to speak, but for
a minute or two sobs
choked his voice. 'Same
as if he had a bone in
his throat,' said the
Gryphon: and it set to
work shaking him and
punching him in the
back. At last the Mock
Turtle recovered his
voice, and, with tears
running down his cheeks,
he went on again:--
'You may not have lived
much under the sea--'
('I haven't,' said
Alice)-- 'and perhaps
you were never even
introduced to a
lobster--' (Alice began
to say 'I once tasted--'
but checked herself
hastily, and said 'No,
never') '--so you can
have no idea what a
delightful thing a
Lobster Quadrille is!'
'No, indeed,' said
Alice. 'What sort of a
dance is it?'
'Why,' said the Gryphon,
'you first form into a
line along the
sea-shore--'
'Two lines!' cried the
Mock Turtle. 'Seals,
turtles, salmon, and so
on; then, when you've
cleared all the
jelly-fish out of the
way--'
'That generally
takes some time,'
interrupted the Gryphon.
'--you advance twice--'
'Each with a lobster as
a partner!' cried the
Gryphon.
'Of course,' the Mock
Turtle said: 'advance
twice, set to
partners--'
'--change lobsters, and
retire in same order,'
continued the Gryphon.
'Then, you know,' the
Mock Turtle went on,
'you throw the--'
'The lobsters!' shouted
the Gryphon, with a
bound into the air.
'--as far out to sea as
you can--'
'Swim after them!'
screamed the Gryphon.
'Turn a somersault in
the sea!' cried the Mock
Turtle, capering wildly
about.
'Change lobster's
again!' yelled the
Gryphon at the top of
its voice.
'Back to land again, and
that's all the first
figure,' said the Mock
Turtle, suddenly
dropping his voice; and
the two creatures, who
had been jumping about
like mad things all this
time, sat down again
very sadly and quietly,
and looked at Alice.
'It must be a very
pretty dance,' said
Alice timidly.
'Would you like to see a
little of it?' said the
Mock Turtle.
'Very much indeed,' said
Alice.
'Come, let's try the
first figure!' said the
Mock Turtle to the
Gryphon. 'We can do
without lobsters, you
know. Which shall sing?'
'Oh, you sing,'
said the Gryphon. 'I've
forgotten the words.'
So they began solemnly
dancing round and round
Alice, every now and
then treading on her
toes when they passed
too close, and waving
their forepaws to mark
the time, while the Mock
Turtle sang this, very
slowly and sadly:--
'"Will you walk a
little faster?" said a
whiting to a snail.
"There's a porpoise
close behind us, and
he's treading on my
tail. See how eagerly
the lobsters and the
turtles all advance!
They are waiting on the
shingle--will you come
and join the dance?
Will you, won't you,
will you, won't you,
will you join the dance?
Will you, won't you,
will you, won't you,
won't you join the
dance?
"You can really have
no notion how delightful
it will be When they
take us up and throw us,
with the lobsters, out
to sea!" But the snail
replied "Too far, too
far!" and gave a look
askance-- Said he
thanked the whiting
kindly, but he would not
join the dance. Would
not, could not, would
not, could not, would
not join the dance.
Would not, could not,
would not, could not,
could not join the
dance.
'"What matters it how
far we go?" his scaly
friend replied. "There
is another shore, you
know, upon the other
side. The further off
from England the nearer
is to France-- Then turn
not pale, beloved snail,
but come and join the
dance.
Will you, won't you,
will you, won't you,
will you join the dance?
Will you, won't you,
will you, won't you,
won't you join the
dance?"'
'Thank you, it's a very
interesting dance to
watch,' said Alice,
feeling very glad that
it was over at last:
'and I do so like that
curious song about the
whiting!'
'Oh, as to the whiting,'
said the Mock Turtle,
'they--you've seen them,
of course?'
'Yes,' said Alice, 'I've
often seen them at
dinn--' she checked
herself hastily.
'I don't know where Dinn
may be,' said the Mock
Turtle, 'but if you've
seen them so often, of
course you know what
they're like.'
'I believe so,' Alice
replied thoughtfully.
'They have their tails
in their mouths--and
they're all over
crumbs.'
'You're wrong about the
crumbs,' said the Mock
Turtle: 'crumbs would
all wash off in the sea.
But they have
their tails in their
mouths; and the reason
is--' here the Mock
Turtle yawned and shut
his eyes.--'Tell her
about the reason and all
that,' he said to the
Gryphon.
'The reason is,' said
the Gryphon, 'that they
would go with the
lobsters to the dance.
So they got thrown out
to sea. So they had to
fall a long way. So they
got their tails fast in
their mouths. So they
couldn't get them out
again. That's all.'
'Thank you,' said Alice,
'it's very interesting.
I never knew so much
about a whiting before.'
'I can tell you more
than that, if you like,'
said the Gryphon. 'Do
you know why it's called
a whiting?'
'I never thought about
it,' said Alice. 'Why?'
'It does the boots
and shoes.' the
Gryphon replied very
solemnly.
Alice was thoroughly
puzzled. 'Does the boots
and shoes!' she repeated
in a wondering tone.
'Why, what are your
shoes done with?' said
the Gryphon. 'I mean,
what makes them so
shiny?'
Alice looked down at
them, and considered a
little before she gave
her answer. 'They're
done with blacking, I
believe.'
'Boots and shoes under
the sea,' the Gryphon
went on in a deep voice,
'are done with a
whiting. Now you know.'
'And what are they made
of?' Alice asked in a
tone of great curiosity.
'Soles and eels, of
course,' the Gryphon
replied rather
impatiently: 'any shrimp
could have told you
that.'
'If I'd been the
whiting,' said Alice,
whose thoughts were
still running on the
song, 'I'd have said to
the porpoise, "Keep
back, please: we don't
want you with
us!"'
'They were obliged to
have him with them,' the
Mock Turtle said: 'no
wise fish would go
anywhere without a
porpoise.'
'Wouldn't it really?'
said Alice in a tone of
great surprise.
'Of course not,' said
the Mock Turtle: 'why,
if a fish came to me,
and told me he was going
a journey, I should say
"With what porpoise?"'
'Don't you mean
"purpose"?' said Alice.
'I mean what I say,' the
Mock Turtle replied in
an offended tone. And
the Gryphon added 'Come,
let's hear some of
your adventures.'
'I could tell you my
adventures--beginning
from this morning,' said
Alice a little timidly:
'but it's no use going
back to yesterday,
because I was a
different person then.'
'Explain all that,' said
the Mock Turtle.
'No, no! The adventures
first,' said the Gryphon
in an impatient tone:
'explanations take such
a dreadful time.'
So Alice began telling
them her adventures from
the time when she first
saw the White Rabbit.
She was a little nervous
about it just at first,
the two creatures got so
close to her, one on
each side, and opened
their eyes and mouths so
very wide, but
she gained courage as
she went on. Her
listeners were perfectly
quiet till she got to
the part about her
repeating 'You are
old, Father William,'
to the Caterpillar, and
the words all coming
different, and then the
Mock Turtle drew a long
breath, and said 'That's
very curious.'
'It's all about as
curious as it can be,'
said the Gryphon.
'It all came different!'
the Mock Turtle repeated
thoughtfully. 'I should
like to hear her try and
repeat something now.
Tell her to begin.' He
looked at the Gryphon as
if he thought it had
some kind of authority
over Alice.
'Stand up and repeat
"'Tis the voice of the
sluggard,"' said the
Gryphon.
'How the creatures order
one about, and make one
repeat lessons!' thought
Alice; 'I might as well
be at school at once.'
However, she got up, and
began to repeat it, but
her head was so full of
the Lobster Quadrille,
that she hardly knew
what she was saying, and
the words came very
queer indeed:--
''Tis the voice of the
Lobster; I heard him
declare, "You have baked
me too brown, I must
sugar my hair." As a
duck with its eyelids,
so he with his nose
Trims his belt and his
buttons, and turns out
his toes.'
[later editions
continued as follows
When the sands are all
dry, he is gay as a
lark, And will talk in
contemptuous tones of
the Shark, But, when the
tide rises and sharks
are around, His voice
has a timid and
tremulous sound.]
'That's different from
what I used to say when
I was a child,' said the
Gryphon.
'Well, I never heard it
before,' said the Mock
Turtle; 'but it sounds
uncommon nonsense.'
Alice said nothing; she
had sat down with her
face in her hands,
wondering if anything
would ever happen
in a natural way again.
'I should like to have
it explained,' said the
Mock Turtle.
'She can't explain it,'
said the Gryphon
hastily. 'Go on with the
next verse.'
'But about his toes?'
the Mock Turtle
persisted. 'How could
he turn them out with
his nose, you know?'
'It's the first position
in dancing.' Alice said;
but was dreadfully
puzzled by the whole
thing, and longed to
change the subject.
'Go on with the next
verse,' the Gryphon
repeated impatiently:
'it begins "I passed by
his garden."'
Alice did not dare to
disobey, though she felt
sure it would all come
wrong, and she went on
in a trembling voice:--
'I passed by his
garden, and marked, with
one eye, How the Owl and
the Panther were sharing
a pie--'
[later
editions continued as
follows:
The Panther took
pie-crust, and gravy,
and meat, While the Owl
had the dish as its
share of the treat. When
the pie was all
finished, the Owl, as a
boon, Was kindly
permitted to pocket the
spoon: While the Panther
received knife and fork
with a growl, And
concluded the banquet--]
'What is the use
of repeating all that
stuff,' the Mock Turtle
interrupted, 'if you
don't explain it as you
go on? It's by far the
most confusing thing I
ever heard!'
'Yes, I think you'd
better leave off,' said
the Gryphon: and Alice
was only too glad to do
so.
'Shall we try another
figure of the Lobster
Quadrille?' the Gryphon
went on. 'Or would you
like the Mock Turtle to
sing you a song?'
'Oh, a song, please, if
the Mock Turtle would be
so kind,' Alice replied,
so eagerly that the
Gryphon said, in a
rather offended tone,
'Hm! No accounting for
tastes! Sing her "Turtle
Soup," will you, old
fellow?'
The Mock Turtle sighed
deeply, and began, in a
voice sometimes choked
with sobs, to sing
this:--
'Beautiful Soup, so
rich and green, Waiting
in a hot tureen! Who for
such dainties would not
stoop? Soup of the
evening, beautiful Soup!
Soup of the evening,
beautiful Soup!
Beau--ootiful Soo--oop!
Beau--ootiful Soo--oop!
Soo--oop of the
e--e--evening,
Beautiful, beautiful
Soup!
'Beautiful Soup! Who
cares for fish, Game, or
any other dish? Who
would not give all else
for two pennyworth only
of beautiful Soup?
Pennyworth only of
beautiful Soup?
Beau--ootiful Soo--oop!
Beau--ootiful Soo--oop!
Soo--oop of the
e--e--evening,
Beautiful, beauti--FUL
SOUP!'
'Chorus again!' cried
the Gryphon, and the
Mock Turtle had just
begun to repeat it, when
a cry of 'The trial's
beginning!' was heard in
the distance.
'Come on!' cried the
Gryphon, and, taking
Alice by the hand, it
hurried off, without
waiting for the end of
the song.
'What trial is it?'
Alice panted as she ran;
but the Gryphon only
answered 'Come on!' and
ran the faster, while
more and more faintly
came, carried on the
breeze that followed
them, the melancholy
words:--
'Soo--oop of the
e--e--evening,
Beautiful, beautiful
Soup!' |