Who Stole the Tarts?
The King and Queen of
Hearts were seated on
their throne when they
arrived, with a great
crowd assembled about
them--all sorts of
little birds and beasts,
as well as the whole
pack of cards: the Knave
was standing before
them, in chains, with a
soldier on each side to
guard him; and near the
King was the White
Rabbit, with a trumpet
in one hand, and a
scroll of parchment in
the other. In the very
middle of the court was
a table, with a large
dish of tarts upon it:
they looked so good,
that it made Alice quite
hungry to look at
them--'I wish they'd get
the trial done,' she
thought, 'and hand round
the refreshments!' But
there seemed to be no
chance of this, so she
began looking at
everything about her, to
pass away the time.
Alice had never been in
a court of justice
before, but she had read
about them in books, and
she was quite pleased to
find that she knew the
name of nearly
everything there.
'That's the judge,' she
said to herself,
'because of his great
wig.'
The judge, by the way,
was the King; and as he
wore his crown over the
wig, (look at the
frontispiece if you want
to see how he did it,)
he did not look at all
comfortable, and it was
certainly not becoming.
'And that's the
jury-box,' thought
Alice, 'and those twelve
creatures,' (she was
obliged to say
'creatures,' you see,
because some of them
were animals, and some
were birds,) 'I suppose
they are the jurors.'
She said this last word
two or three times over
to herself, being rather
proud of it: for she
thought, and rightly
too, that very few
little girls of her age
knew the meaning of it
at all. However,
'jury-men' would have
done just as well.
The twelve jurors were
all writing very busily
on slates. 'What are
they doing?' Alice
whispered to the
Gryphon. 'They can't
have anything to put
down yet, before the
trial's begun.'
'They're putting down
their names,' the
Gryphon whispered in
reply, 'for fear they
should forget them
before the end of the
trial.'
'Stupid things!' Alice
began in a loud,
indignant voice, but she
stopped hastily, for the
White Rabbit cried out,
'Silence in the court!'
and the King put on his
spectacles and looked
anxiously round, to make
out who was talking.
Alice could see, as well
as if she were looking
over their shoulders,
that all the jurors were
writing down 'stupid
things!' on their
slates, and she could
even make out that one
of them didn't know how
to spell 'stupid,' and
that he had to ask his
neighbour to tell him.
'A nice muddle their
slates'll be in before
the trial's over!'
thought Alice.
One of the jurors had a
pencil that squeaked.
This of course, Alice
could not stand,
and she went round the
court and got behind
him, and very soon found
an opportunity of taking
it away. She did it so
quickly that the poor
little juror (it was
Bill, the Lizard) could
not make out at all what
had become of it; so,
after hunting all about
for it, he was obliged
to write with one finger
for the rest of the day;
and this was of very
little use, as it left
no mark on the slate.
'Herald, read the
accusation!' said the
King.
On this the White Rabbit
blew three blasts on the
trumpet, and then
unrolled the parchment
scroll, and read as
follows:--
'The Queen of Hearts,
she made some tarts, All
on a summer day: The
Knave of Hearts, he
stole those tarts, And
took them quite away!'
'Consider your verdict,'
the King said to the
jury.
'Not yet, not yet!' the
Rabbit hastily
interrupted. 'There's a
great deal to come
before that!'
'Call the first
witness,' said the King;
and the White Rabbit
blew three blasts on the
trumpet, and called out,
'First witness!'
The first witness was
the Hatter. He came in
with a teacup in one
hand and a piece of
bread-and-butter in the
other. 'I beg pardon,
your Majesty,' he began,
'for bringing these in:
but I hadn't quite
finished my tea when I
was sent for.'
'You ought to have
finished,' said the
King. 'When did you
begin?'
The Hatter looked at the
March Hare, who had
followed him into the
court, arm-in-arm with
the Dormouse.
'Fourteenth of March, I
think it was,' he
said.
'Fifteenth,' said the
March Hare.
'Sixteenth,' added the
Dormouse.
'Write that down,' the
King said to the jury,
and the jury eagerly
wrote down all three
dates on their slates,
and then added them up,
and reduced the answer
to shillings and pence.
'Take off your hat,' the
King said to the Hatter.
'It isn't mine,' said
the Hatter.
'Stolen!' the
King exclaimed, turning
to the jury, who
instantly made a
memorandum of the fact.
'I keep them to sell,'
the Hatter added as an
explanation; 'I've none
of my own. I'm a
hatter.'
Here the Queen put on
her spectacles, and
began staring at the
Hatter, who turned pale
and fidgeted.
'Give your evidence,'
said the King; 'and
don't be nervous, or
I'll have you executed
on the spot.'
This did not seem to
encourage the witness at
all: he kept shifting
from one foot to the
other, looking uneasily
at the Queen, and in his
confusion he bit a large
piece out of his teacup
instead of the
bread-and-butter.
Just at this moment
Alice felt a very
curious sensation, which
puzzled her a good deal
until she made out what
it was: she was
beginning to grow larger
again, and she thought
at first she would get
up and leave the court;
but on second thoughts
she decided to remain
where she was as long as
there was room for her.
'I wish you wouldn't
squeeze so.' said the
Dormouse, who was
sitting next to her. 'I
can hardly breathe.'
'I can't help it,' said
Alice very meekly: 'I'm
growing.'
'You've no right to grow
here,' said the
Dormouse.
'Don't talk nonsense,'
said Alice more boldly:
'you know you're growing
too.'
'Yes, but I grow
at a reasonable pace,'
said the Dormouse: 'not
in that ridiculous
fashion.' And he got up
very sulkily and crossed
over to the other side
of the court.
All this time the Queen
had never left off
staring at the Hatter,
and, just as the
Dormouse crossed the
court, she said to one
of the officers of the
court, 'Bring me the
list of the singers in
the last concert!' on
which the wretched
Hatter trembled so, that
he shook both his shoes
off.
'Give your evidence,'
the King repeated
angrily, 'or I'll have
you executed, whether
you're nervous or not.'
'I'm a poor man, your
Majesty,' the Hatter
began, in a trembling
voice, '--and I hadn't
begun my tea--not above
a week or so--and what
with the
bread-and-butter getting
so thin--and the
twinkling of the tea--'
'The twinkling of the
what?' said the
King.
'It began with
the tea,' the Hatter
replied.
'Of course twinkling
begins with a T!'
said the King sharply.
'Do you take me for a
dunce? Go on!'
'I'm a poor man,' the
Hatter went on, 'and
most things twinkled
after that--only the
March Hare said--'
'I didn't!' the March
Hare interrupted in a
great hurry.
'You did!' said the
Hatter.
'I deny it!' said the
March Hare.
'He denies it,' said the
King: 'leave out that
part.'
'Well, at any rate, the
Dormouse said--' the
Hatter went on, looking
anxiously round to see
if he would deny it too:
but the Dormouse denied
nothing, being fast
asleep.
'After that,' continued
the Hatter, 'I cut some
more bread-
and-butter--'
'But what did the
Dormouse say?' one of
the jury asked.
'That I can't remember,'
said the Hatter.
'You must
remember,' remarked the
King, 'or I'll have you
executed.'
The miserable Hatter
dropped his teacup and
bread-and-butter, and
went down on one knee.
'I'm a poor man, your
Majesty,' he began.
'You're a very poor
speaker,' said the
King.
Here one of the
guinea-pigs cheered, and
was immediately
suppressed by the
officers of the court.
(As that is rather a
hard word, I will just
explain to you how it
was done. They had a
large canvas bag, which
tied up at the mouth
with strings: into this
they slipped the
guinea-pig, head first,
and then sat upon it.)
'I'm glad I've seen that
done,' thought Alice.
'I've so often read in
the newspapers, at the
end of trials, "There
was some attempts at
applause, which was
immediately suppressed
by the officers of the
court," and I never
understood what it meant
till now.'
'If that's all you know
about it, you may stand
down,' continued the
King.
'I can't go no lower,'
said the Hatter: 'I'm on
the floor, as it is.'
'Then you may sit
down,' the King replied.
Here the other
guinea-pig cheered, and
was suppressed.
'Come, that finished the
guinea-pigs!' thought
Alice. 'Now we shall get
on better.'
'I'd rather finish my
tea,' said the Hatter,
with an anxious look at
the Queen, who was
reading the list of
singers.
'You may go,' said the
King, and the Hatter
hurriedly left the
court, without even
waiting to put his shoes
on.
'--and just take his
head off outside,' the
Queen added to one of
the officers: but the
Hatter was out of sight
before the officer could
get to the door.
'Call the next witness!'
said the King.
The next witness was the
Duchess's cook. She
carried the pepper-box
in her hand, and Alice
guessed who it was, even
before she got into the
court, by the way the
people near the door
began sneezing all at
once.
'Give your evidence,'
said the King.
'Shan't,' said the cook.
The King looked
anxiously at the White
Rabbit, who said in a
low voice, 'Your Majesty
must cross-examine
this witness.'
'Well, if I must, I
must,' the King said,
with a melancholy air,
and, after folding his
arms and frowning at the
cook till his eyes were
nearly out of sight, he
said in a deep voice,
'What are tarts made
of?'
'Pepper, mostly,' said
the cook.
'Treacle,' said a sleepy
voice behind her.
'Collar that Dormouse,'
the Queen shrieked out.
'Behead that Dormouse!
Turn that Dormouse out
of court! Suppress him!
Pinch him! Off with his
whiskers!'
For some minutes the
whole court was in
confusion, getting the
Dormouse turned out,
and, by the time they
had settled down again,
the cook had
disappeared.
'Never mind!' said the
King, with an air of
great relief. 'Call the
next witness.' And he
added in an undertone to
the Queen, 'Really, my
dear, you must
cross-examine the next
witness. It quite makes
my forehead ache!'
Alice watched the White
Rabbit as he fumbled
over the list, feeling
very curious to see what
the next witness would
be like, '--for they
haven't got much
evidence yet,'
she said to herself.
Imagine her surprise,
when the White Rabbit
read out, at the top of
his shrill little voice,
the name 'Alice!' |