A Mad Tea-Party
There was a table set
out under a tree in
front of the house, and
the March Hare and the
Hatter were having tea
at it: a Dormouse was
sitting between them,
fast asleep, and the
other two were using it
as a cushion, resting
their elbows on it, and
talking over its head.
'Very uncomfortable for
the Dormouse,' thought
Alice; 'only, as it's
asleep, I suppose it
doesn't mind.'
The table was a large
one, but the three were
all crowded together at
one corner of it: 'No
room! No room!' they
cried out when they saw
Alice coming. 'There's
plenty of room!'
said Alice indignantly,
and she sat down in a
large arm-chair at one
end of the table.
'Have some wine,' the
March Hare said in an
encouraging tone.
Alice looked all round
the table, but there was
nothing on it but tea.
'I don't see any wine,'
she remarked.
'There isn't any,' said
the March Hare.
'Then it wasn't very
civil of you to offer
it,' said Alice angrily.
'It wasn't very civil of
you to sit down without
being invited,' said the
March Hare.
'I didn't know it was
your table,' said
Alice; 'it's laid for a
great many more than
three.'
'Your hair wants
cutting,' said the
Hatter. He had been
looking at Alice for
some time with great
curiosity, and this was
his first speech.
'You should learn not to
make personal remarks,'
Alice said with some
severity; 'it's very
rude.'
The Hatter opened his
eyes very wide on
hearing this; but all he
said was, 'Why is
a raven like a
writing-desk?'
'Come, we shall have
some fun now!' thought
Alice. 'I'm glad they've
begun asking riddles.--I
believe I can guess
that,' she added aloud.
'Do you mean that you
think you can find out
the answer to it?' said
the March Hare.
'Exactly so,' said
Alice.
'Then you should say
what you mean,' the
March Hare went on.
'I do,' Alice hastily
replied; 'at least--at
least I mean what I
say--that's the same
thing, you know.'
'Not the same thing a
bit!' said the Hatter.
'You might just as well
say that "I see what I
eat" is the same thing
as "I eat what I see"!'
'You might just as well
say,' added the March
Hare, 'that "I like what
I get" is the same thing
as "I get what I like"!'
'You might just as well
say,' added the
Dormouse, who seemed to
be talking in his sleep,
'that "I breathe when I
sleep" is the same thing
as "I sleep when I
breathe"!'
'It is the same
thing with you,' said
the Hatter, and here the
conversation dropped,
and the party sat silent
for a minute, while
Alice thought over all
she could remember about
ravens and
writing-desks, which
wasn't much.
The Hatter was the first
to break the silence.
'What day of the month
is it?' he said, turning
to Alice: he had taken
his watch out of his
pocket, and was looking
at it uneasily, shaking
it every now and then,
and holding it to his
ear.
Alice considered a
little, and then said
'The fourth.'
'Two days wrong!' sighed
the Hatter. 'I told you
butter wouldn't suit the
works!' he added looking
angrily at the March
Hare.
'It was the best
butter,' the March Hare
meekly replied.
'Yes, but some crumbs
must have got in as
well,' the Hatter
grumbled: 'you shouldn't
have put it in with the
bread-knife.'
The March Hare took the
watch and looked at it
gloomily: then he dipped
it into his cup of tea,
and looked at it again:
but he could think of
nothing better to say
than his first remark,
'It was the best
butter, you know.'
Alice had been looking
over his shoulder with
some curiosity. 'What a
funny watch!' she
remarked. 'It tells the
day of the month, and
doesn't tell what
o'clock it is!'
'Why should it?'
muttered the Hatter.
'Does your watch
tell you what year it
is?'
'Of course not,' Alice
replied very readily:
'but that's because it
stays the same year for
such a long time
together.'
'Which is just the case
with mine,' said
the Hatter.
Alice felt dreadfully
puzzled. The Hatter's
remark seemed to have no
sort of meaning in it,
and yet it was certainly
English. 'I don't quite
understand you,' she
said, as politely as she
could.
'The Dormouse is asleep
again,' said the Hatter,
and he poured a little
hot tea upon its nose.
The Dormouse shook its
head impatiently, and
said, without opening
its eyes, 'Of course, of
course; just what I was
going to remark myself.'
'Have you guessed the
riddle yet?' the Hatter
said, turning to Alice
again.
'No, I give it up,'
Alice replied: 'what's
the answer?'
'I haven't the slightest
idea,' said the Hatter.
'Nor I,' said the March
Hare.
Alice sighed wearily. 'I
think you might do
something better with
the time,' she said,
'than waste it in asking
riddles that have no
answers.'
'If you knew Time as
well as I do,' said the
Hatter, 'you wouldn't
talk about wasting it.
It's him.'
'I don't know what you
mean,' said Alice.
'Of course you don't!'
the Hatter said, tossing
his head contemptuously.
'I dare say you never
even spoke to Time!'
'Perhaps not,' Alice
cautiously replied: 'but
I know I have to beat
time when I learn
music.'
'Ah! that accounts for
it,' said the Hatter.
'He won't stand beating.
Now, if you only kept on
good terms with him,
he'd do almost anything
you liked with the
clock. For instance,
suppose it were nine
o'clock in the morning,
just time to begin
lessons: you'd only have
to whisper a hint to
Time, and round goes the
clock in a twinkling!
Half-past one, time for
dinner!'
('I only wish it was,'
the March Hare said to
itself in a whisper.)
'That would be grand,
certainly,' said Alice
thoughtfully: 'but
then--I shouldn't be
hungry for it, you
know.'
'Not at first, perhaps,'
said the Hatter: 'but
you could keep it to
half-past one as long as
you liked.'
'Is that the way you
manage?' Alice asked.
The Hatter shook his
head mournfully. 'Not
I!' he replied. 'We
quarrelled last
March--just before he
went mad, you know--'
(pointing with his tea
spoon at the March
Hare,) '--it was at the
great concert given by
the Queen of Hearts, and
I had to sing
"Twinkle, twinkle,
little bat!
How I wonder what
you're at!"
You know the song,
perhaps?'
'I've heard something
like it,' said Alice.
'It goes on, you know,'
the Hatter continued,
'in this way:--
"Up above the world
you fly,
Like a tea-tray in
the sky.
Twinkle, twinkle--"'
Here the Dormouse shook
itself, and began
singing in its sleep 'Twinkle,
twinkle, twinkle,
twinkle--' and went
on so long that they had
to pinch it to make it
stop.
'Well, I'd hardly
finished the first
verse,' said the Hatter,
'when the Queen jumped
up and bawled out, "He's
murdering the time! Off
with his head!"'
'How dreadfully savage!'
exclaimed Alice.
'And ever since that,'
the Hatter went on in a
mournful tone, 'he won't
do a thing I ask! It's
always six o'clock now.'
A bright idea came into
Alice's head. 'Is that
the reason so many
tea-things are put out
here?' she asked.
'Yes, that's it,' said
the Hatter with a sigh:
'it's always tea-time,
and we've no time to
wash the things between
whiles.'
'Then you keep moving
round, I suppose?' said
Alice.
'Exactly so,' said the
Hatter: 'as the things
get used up.'
'But what happens when
you come to the
beginning again?' Alice
ventured to ask.
'Suppose we change the
subject,' the March Hare
interrupted, yawning.
'I'm getting tired of
this. I vote the young
lady tells us a story.'
'I'm afraid I don't know
one,' said Alice, rather
alarmed at the proposal.
'Then the Dormouse
shall!' they both cried.
'Wake up, Dormouse!' And
they pinched it on both
sides at once.
The Dormouse slowly
opened his eyes. 'I
wasn't asleep,' he said
in a hoarse, feeble
voice: 'I heard every
word you fellows were
saying.'
'Tell us a story!' said
the March Hare.
'Yes, please do!'
pleaded Alice.
'And be quick about it,'
added the Hatter, 'or
you'll be asleep again
before it's done.'
'Once upon a time there
were three little
sisters,' the Dormouse
began in a great hurry;
'and their names were
Elsie, Lacie, and
Tillie; and they lived
at the bottom of a
well--'
'What did they live on?'
said Alice, who always
took a great interest in
questions of eating and
drinking.
'They lived on treacle,'
said the Dormouse, after
thinking a minute or
two.
'They couldn't have done
that, you know,' Alice
gently remarked; 'they'd
have been ill.'
'So they were,' said the
Dormouse; 'very
ill.'
Alice tried to fancy to
herself what such an
extraordinary ways of
living would be like,
but it puzzled her too
much, so she went on:
'But why did they live
at the bottom of a
well?'
'Take some more tea,'
the March Hare said to
Alice, very earnestly.
'I've had nothing yet,'
Alice replied in an
offended tone, 'so I
can't take more.'
'You mean you can't take
less,' said the
Hatter: 'it's very easy
to take more than
nothing.'
'Nobody asked your
opinion,' said Alice.
'Who's making personal
remarks now?' the Hatter
asked triumphantly.
Alice did not quite know
what to say to this: so
she helped herself to
some tea and
bread-and-butter, and
then turned to the
Dormouse, and repeated
her question. 'Why did
they live at the bottom
of a well?'
The Dormouse again took
a minute or two to think
about it, and then said,
'It was a treacle-well.'
'There's no such thing!'
Alice was beginning very
angrily, but the Hatter
and the March Hare went
'Sh! sh!' and the
Dormouse sulkily
remarked, 'If you can't
be civil, you'd better
finish the story for
yourself.'
'No, please go on!'
Alice said very humbly;
'I won't interrupt
again. I dare say there
may be one.'
'One, indeed!' said the
Dormouse indignantly.
However, he consented to
go on. 'And so these
three little
sisters--they were
learning to draw, you
know--'
'What did they draw?'
said Alice, quite
forgetting her promise.
'Treacle,' said the
Dormouse, without
considering at all this
time.
'I want a clean cup,'
interrupted the Hatter:
'let's all move one
place on.'
He moved on as he spoke,
and the Dormouse
followed him: the March
Hare moved into the
Dormouse's place, and
Alice rather unwillingly
took the place of the
March Hare. The Hatter
was the only one who got
any advantage from the
change: and Alice was a
good deal worse off than
before, as the March
Hare had just upset the
milk-jug into his plate.
Alice did not wish to
offend the Dormouse
again, so she began very
cautiously: 'But I don't
understand. Where did
they draw the treacle
from?'
'You can draw water out
of a water-well,' said
the Hatter; 'so I should
think you could draw
treacle out of a
treacle-well--eh,
stupid?'
'But they were in
the well,' Alice said to
the Dormouse, not
choosing to notice this
last remark.
'Of course they were',
said the Dormouse;
'--well in.'
This answer so confused
poor Alice, that she let
the Dormouse go on for
some time without
interrupting it.
'They were learning to
draw,' the Dormouse went
on, yawning and rubbing
its eyes, for it was
getting very sleepy;
'and they drew all
manner of
things--everything that
begins with an M--'
'Why with an M?' said
Alice.
'Why not?' said the
March Hare.
Alice was silent.
The Dormouse had closed
its eyes by this time,
and was going off into a
doze; but, on being
pinched by the Hatter,
it woke up again with a
little shriek, and went
on: '--that begins with
an M, such as
mouse-traps, and the
moon, and memory, and
muchness-- you know you
say things are "much of
a muchness"--did you
ever see such a thing as
a drawing of a
muchness?'
'Really, now you ask
me,' said Alice, very
much confused, 'I don't
think--'
'Then you shouldn't
talk,' said the Hatter.
This piece of rudeness
was more than Alice
could bear: she got up
in great disgust, and
walked off; the Dormouse
fell asleep instantly,
and neither of the
others took the least
notice of her going,
though she looked back
once or twice, half
hoping that they would
call after her: the last
time she saw them, they
were trying to put the
Dormouse into the
teapot.
'At any rate I'll never
go there again!'
said Alice as she picked
her way through the
wood. 'It's the
stupidest tea-party I
ever was at in all my
life!'
Just as she said this,
she noticed that one of
the trees had a door
leading right into it.
'That's very curious!'
she thought. 'But
everything's curious
today. I think I may as
well go in at once.' And
in she went.
Once more she found
herself in the long
hall, and close to the
little glass table.
'Now, I'll manage better
this time,' she said to
herself, and began by
taking the little golden
key, and unlocking the
door that led into the
garden. Then she went to
work nibbling at the
mushroom (she had kept a
piece of it in her
pocket) till she was
about a foot high: then
she walked down the
little passage: and
then--she found
herself at last in the
beautiful garden, among
the bright flower-beds
and the cool fountains. |