Pig and Pepper
For a minute or two she
stood looking at the
house, and wondering
what to do next, when
suddenly a footman in
livery came running out
of the wood--(she
considered him to be a
footman because he was
in livery: otherwise,
judging by his face
only, she would have
called him a fish)--and
rapped loudly at the
door with his knuckles.
It was opened by another
footman in livery, with
a round face, and large
eyes like a frog; and
both footmen, Alice
noticed, had powdered
hair that curled all
over their heads. She
felt very curious to
know what it was all
about, and crept a
little way out of the
wood to listen.
The Fish-Footman began
by producing from under
his arm a great letter,
nearly as large as
himself, and this he
handed over to the
other, saying, in a
solemn tone, 'For the
Duchess. An invitation
from the Queen to play
croquet.' The
Frog-Footman repeated,
in the same solemn tone,
only changing the order
of the words a little,
'From the Queen. An
invitation for the
Duchess to play
croquet.'
Then they both bowed
low, and their curls got
entangled together.
Alice laughed so much at
this, that she had to
run back into the wood
for fear of their
hearing her; and when
she next peeped out the
Fish-Footman was gone,
and the other was
sitting on the ground
near the door, staring
stupidly up into the
sky.
Alice went timidly up to
the door, and knocked.
'There's no sort of use
in knocking,' said the
Footman, 'and that for
two reasons. First,
because I'm on the same
side of the door as you
are; secondly, because
they're making such a
noise inside, no one
could possibly hear
you.' And certainly
there was a most
extraordinary noise
going on within--a
constant howling and
sneezing, and every now
and then a great crash,
as if a dish or kettle
had been broken to
pieces.
'Please, then,' said
Alice, 'how am I to get
in?'
'There might be some
sense in your knocking,'
the Footman went on
without attending to
her, 'if we had the door
between us. For
instance, if you were
inside, you might
knock, and I could let
you out, you know.' He
was looking up into the
sky all the time he was
speaking, and this Alice
thought decidedly
uncivil. 'But perhaps he
can't help it,' she said
to herself; 'his eyes
are so very
nearly at the top of his
head. But at any rate he
might answer
questions.--How am I to
get in?' she repeated,
aloud.
'I shall sit here,' the
Footman remarked, 'till
tomorrow--'
At this moment the door
of the house opened, and
a large plate came
skimming out, straight
at the Footman's head:
it just grazed his nose,
and broke to pieces
against one of the trees
behind him.
'--or next day, maybe,'
the Footman continued in
the same tone, exactly
as if nothing had
happened.
'How am I to get in?'
asked Alice again, in a
louder tone.
'Are you to get
in at all?' said the
Footman. 'That's the
first question, you
know.'
It was, no doubt: only
Alice did not like to be
told so. 'It's really
dreadful,' she muttered
to herself, 'the way all
the creatures argue.
It's enough to drive one
crazy!'
The Footman seemed to
think this a good
opportunity for
repeating his remark,
with variations. 'I
shall sit here,' he
said, 'on and off, for
days and days.'
'But what am I to do?'
said Alice.
'Anything you like,'
said the Footman, and
began whistling.
'Oh, there's no use in
talking to him,' said
Alice desperately: 'he's
perfectly idiotic!' And
she opened the door and
went in.
The door led right into
a large kitchen, which
was full of smoke from
one end to the other:
the Duchess was sitting
on a three-legged stool
in the middle, nursing a
baby; the cook was
leaning over the fire,
stirring a large
cauldron which seemed to
be full of soup.
'There's certainly too
much pepper in that
soup!' Alice said to
herself, as well as she
could for sneezing.
There was certainly too
much of it in the air.
Even the Duchess sneezed
occasionally; and as for
the baby, it was
sneezing and howling
alternately without a
moment's pause. The only
things in the kitchen
that did not sneeze,
were the cook, and a
large cat which was
sitting on the hearth
and grinning from ear to
ear.
'Please would you tell
me,' said Alice, a
little timidly, for she
was not quite sure
whether it was good
manners for her to speak
first, 'why your cat
grins like that?'
'It's a Cheshire cat,'
said the Duchess, 'and
that's why. Pig!'
She said the last word
with such sudden
violence that Alice
quite jumped; but she
saw in another moment
that it was addressed to
the baby, and not to
her, so she took
courage, and went on
again:--
'I didn't know that
Cheshire cats always
grinned; in fact, I
didn't know that cats
could grin.'
'They all can,' said the
Duchess; 'and most of
'em do.'
'I don't know of any
that do,' Alice said
very politely, feeling
quite pleased to have
got into a conversation.
'You don't know much,'
said the Duchess; 'and
that's a fact.'
Alice did not at all
like the tone of this
remark, and thought it
would be as well to
introduce some other
subject of conversation.
While she was trying to
fix on one, the cook
took the cauldron of
soup off the fire, and
at once set to work
throwing everything
within her reach at the
Duchess and the baby
--the fire-irons came
first; then followed a
shower of saucepans,
plates, and dishes. The
Duchess took no notice
of them even when they
hit her; and the baby
was howling so much
already, that it was
quite impossible to say
whether the blows hurt
it or not.
'Oh, please mind
what you're doing!'
cried Alice, jumping up
and down in an agony of
terror. 'Oh, there goes
his precious
nose'; as an unusually
large saucepan flew
close by it, and very
nearly carried it off.
'If everybody minded
their own business,' the
Duchess said in a hoarse
growl, 'the world would
go round a deal faster
than it does.'
'Which would not
be an advantage,' said
Alice, who felt very
glad to get an
opportunity of showing
off a little of her
knowledge. 'Just think
of what work it would
make with the day and
night! You see the earth
takes twenty-four hours
to turn round on its
axis--'
'Talking of axes,' said
the Duchess, 'chop off
her head!'
Alice glanced rather
anxiously at the cook,
to see if she meant to
take the hint; but the
cook was busily stirring
the soup, and seemed not
to be listening, so she
went on again:
'Twenty-four hours, I
think; or is it
twelve? I--'
'Oh, don't bother me,'
said the Duchess; 'I
never could abide
figures!' And with that
she began nursing her
child again, singing a
sort of lullaby to it as
she did so, and giving
it a violent shake at
the end of every line:
'Speak roughly to
your little boy,
And beat him when he
sneezes:
He only does it to
annoy,
Because he knows it
teases.'
CHORUS
(In which the cook and
the baby joined):--
'Wow! wow! wow!'
While the Duchess sang
the second verse of the
song, she kept tossing
the baby violently up
and down, and the poor
little thing howled so,
that Alice could hardly
hear the words:--
'I speak severely to
my boy,
I beat him when he
sneezes;
For he can thoroughly
enjoy
The pepper when he
pleases!'
CHORUS
'Wow! wow! wow!'
'Here! you may nurse it
a bit, if you like!' the
Duchess said to Alice,
flinging the baby at her
as she spoke. 'I must go
and get ready to play
croquet with the Queen,'
and she hurried out of
the room. The cook threw
a frying-pan after her
as she went out, but it
just missed her.
Alice caught the baby
with some difficulty, as
it was a queer- shaped
little creature, and
held out its arms and
legs in all directions,
'just like a star-fish,'
thought Alice. The poor
little thing was
snorting like a
steam-engine when she
caught it, and kept
doubling itself up and
straightening itself out
again, so that
altogether, for the
first minute or two, it
was as much as she could
do to hold it.
As soon as she had made
out the proper way of
nursing it, (which was
to twist it up into a
sort of knot, and then
keep tight hold of its
right ear and left foot,
so as to prevent its
undoing itself,) she
carried it out into the
open air. 'If I
don't take this child
away with me,' thought
Alice, 'they're sure to
kill it in a day or two:
wouldn't it be murder to
leave it behind?' She
said the last words out
loud, and the little
thing grunted in reply
(it had left off
sneezing by this time).
'Don't grunt,' said
Alice; 'that's not at
all a proper way of
expressing yourself.'
The baby grunted again,
and Alice looked very
anxiously into its face
to see what was the
matter with it. There
could be no doubt that
it had a very
turn-up nose, much more
like a snout than a real
nose; also its eyes were
getting extremely small
for a baby: altogether
Alice did not like the
look of the thing at
all. 'But perhaps it was
only sobbing,' she
thought, and looked into
its eyes again, to see
if there were any tears.
No, there were no tears.
'If you're going to turn
into a pig, my dear,'
said Alice, seriously,
'I'll have nothing more
to do with you. Mind
now!' The poor little
thing sobbed again (or
grunted, it was
impossible to say
which), and they went on
for some while in
silence.
Alice was just beginning
to think to herself,
'Now, what am I to do
with this creature when
I get it home?' when it
grunted again, so
violently, that she
looked down into its
face in some alarm. This
time there could be
no mistake about it:
it was neither more nor
less than a pig, and she
felt that it would be
quite absurd for her to
carry it further.
So she set the little
creature down, and felt
quite relieved to see it
trot away quietly into
the wood. 'If it had
grown up,' she said to
herself, 'it would have
made a dreadfully ugly
child: but it makes
rather a handsome pig, I
think.' And she began
thinking over other
children she knew, who
might do very well as
pigs, and was just
saying to herself, 'if
one only knew the right
way to change them--'
when she was a little
startled by seeing the
Cheshire Cat sitting on
a bough of a tree a few
yards off.
The Cat only grinned
when it saw Alice. It
looked good- natured,
she thought: still it
had very long
claws and a great many
teeth, so she felt that
it ought to be treated
with respect.
'Cheshire Puss,' she
began, rather timidly,
as she did not at all
know whether it would
like the name: however,
it only grinned a little
wider. 'Come, it's
pleased so far,' thought
Alice, and she went on.
'Would you tell me,
please, which way I
ought to go from here?'
'That depends a good
deal on where you want
to get to,' said the
Cat.
'I don't much care
where--' said Alice.
'Then it doesn't matter
which way you go,' said
the Cat.
'--so long as I get
somewhere,' Alice
added as an explanation.
'Oh, you're sure to do
that,' said the Cat, 'if
you only walk long
enough.'
Alice felt that this
could not be denied, so
she tried another
question. 'What sort of
people live about here?'
'In that
direction,' the Cat
said, waving its right
paw round, 'lives a
Hatter: and in that
direction,' waving the
other paw, 'lives a
March Hare. Visit either
you like: they're both
mad.'
'But I don't want to go
among mad people,' Alice
remarked.
'Oh, you can't help
that,' said the Cat:
'we're all mad here. I'm
mad. You're mad.'
'How do you know I'm
mad?' said Alice.
'You must be,' said the
Cat, 'or you wouldn't
have come here.'
Alice didn't think that
proved it at all;
however, she went on
'And how do you know
that you're mad?'
'To begin with,' said
the Cat, 'a dog's not
mad. You grant that?'
'I suppose so,' said
Alice.
'Well, then,' the Cat
went on, 'you see, a dog
growls when it's angry,
and wags its tail when
it's pleased. Now I
growl when I'm pleased,
and wag my tail when I'm
angry. Therefore I'm
mad.'
'I call it purring, not
growling,' said Alice.
'Call it what you like,'
said the Cat. 'Do you
play croquet with the
Queen to-day?'
'I should like it very
much,' said Alice, 'but
I haven't been invited
yet.'
'You'll see me there,'
said the Cat, and
vanished.
Alice was not much
surprised at this, she
was getting so used to
queer things happening.
While she was looking at
the place where it had
been, it suddenly
appeared again.
'By-the-bye, what became
of the baby?' said the
Cat. 'I'd nearly
forgotten to ask.'
'It turned into a pig,'
Alice quietly said, just
as if it had come back
in a natural way.
'I thought it would,'
said the Cat, and
vanished again.
Alice waited a little,
half expecting to see it
again, but it did not
appear, and after a
minute or two she walked
on in the direction in
which the March Hare was
said to live. 'I've seen
hatters before,' she
said to herself; 'the
March Hare will be much
the most interesting,
and perhaps as this is
May it won't be raving
mad--at least not so mad
as it was in March.' As
she said this, she
looked up, and there was
the Cat again, sitting
on a branch of a tree.
'Did you say pig, or
fig?' said the Cat.
'I said pig,' replied
Alice; 'and I wish you
wouldn't keep appearing
and vanishing so
suddenly: you make one
quite giddy.'
'All right,' said the
Cat; and this time it
vanished quite slowly,
beginning with the end
of the tail, and ending
with the grin, which
remained some time after
the rest of it had gone.
'Well! I've often seen a
cat without a grin,'
thought Alice; 'but a
grin without a cat! It's
the most curious thing I
ever saw in my life!'
She had not gone much
farther before she came
in sight of the house of
the March Hare: she
thought it must be the
right house, because the
chimneys were shaped
like ears and the roof
was thatched with fur.
It was so large a house,
that she did not like to
go nearer till she had
nibbled some more of the
lefthand bit of
mushroom, and raised
herself to about two
feet high: even then she
walked up towards it
rather timidly, saying
to herself 'Suppose it
should be raving mad
after all! I almost wish
I'd gone to see the
Hatter instead!' |