The Queen's
Croquet-Ground
A large rose-tree stood
near the entrance of the
garden: the roses
growing on it were
white, but there were
three gardeners at it,
busily painting them
red. Alice thought this
a very curious thing,
and she went nearer to
watch them, and just as
she came up to them she
heard one of them say,
'Look out now, Five!
Don't go splashing paint
over me like that!'
'I couldn't help it,'
said Five, in a sulky
tone; 'Seven jogged my
elbow.'
On which Seven looked up
and said, 'That's right,
Five! Always lay the
blame on others!'
You'd better not
talk!' said Five. 'I
heard the Queen say only
yesterday you deserved
to be beheaded!'
'What for?' said the one
who had spoken first.
'That's none of your
business, Two!' said
Seven.
'Yes, it is his
business!' said Five,
'and I'll tell him--it
was for bringing the
cook tulip-roots instead
of onions.'
Seven flung down his
brush, and had just
begun 'Well, of all the
unjust things--' when
his eye chanced to fall
upon Alice, as she stood
watching them, and he
checked himself
suddenly: the others
looked round also, and
all of them bowed low.
'Would you tell me,'
said Alice, a little
timidly, 'why you are
painting those roses?'
Five and Seven said
nothing, but looked at
Two. Two began in a low
voice, 'Why the fact is,
you see, Miss, this here
ought to have been a
red rose-tree, and
we put a white one in by
mistake; and if the
Queen was to find it
out, we should all have
our heads cut off, you
know. So you see, Miss,
we're doing our best,
afore she comes, to--'
At this moment Five, who
had been anxiously
looking across the
garden, called out 'The
Queen! The Queen!' and
the three gardeners
instantly threw
themselves flat upon
their faces. There was a
sound of many footsteps,
and Alice looked round,
eager to see the Queen.
First came ten soldiers
carrying clubs; these
were all shaped like the
three gardeners, oblong
and flat, with their
hands and feet at the
corners: next the ten
courtiers; these were
ornamented all over with
diamonds, and walked two
and two, as the soldiers
did. After these came
the royal children;
there were ten of them,
and the little dears
came jumping merrily
along hand in hand, in
couples: they were all
ornamented with hearts.
Next came the guests,
mostly Kings and Queens,
and among them Alice
recognised the White
Rabbit: it was talking
in a hurried nervous
manner, smiling at
everything that was
said, and went by
without noticing her.
Then followed the Knave
of Hearts, carrying the
King's crown on a
crimson velvet cushion;
and, last of all this
grand procession, came
THE KING AND QUEEN OF
HEARTS.
Alice was rather
doubtful whether she
ought not to lie down on
her face like the three
gardeners, but she could
not remember ever having
heard of such a rule at
processions; 'and
besides, what would be
the use of a
procession,' thought
she, 'if people had all
to lie down upon their
faces, so that they
couldn't see it?' So she
stood still where she
was, and waited.
When the procession came
opposite to Alice, they
all stopped and looked
at her, and the Queen
said severely 'Who is
this?' She said it to
the Knave of Hearts, who
only bowed and smiled in
reply.
'Idiot!' said the Queen,
tossing her head
impatiently; and,
turning to Alice, she
went on, 'What's your
name, child?'
'My name is Alice, so
please your Majesty,'
said Alice very
politely; but she added,
to herself, 'Why,
they're only a pack of
cards, after all. I
needn't be afraid of
them!'
'And who are these?'
said the Queen, pointing
to the three gardeners
who were lying round the
rosetree; for, you see,
as they were lying on
their faces, and the
pattern on their backs
was the same as the rest
of the pack, she could
not tell whether they
were gardeners, or
soldiers, or courtiers,
or three of her own
children.
'How should I know?'
said Alice, surprised at
her own courage. 'It's
no business of mine.'
The Queen turned crimson
with fury, and, after
glaring at her for a
moment like a wild
beast, screamed 'Off
with her head! Off--'
'Nonsense!' said Alice,
very loudly and
decidedly, and the Queen
was silent.
The King laid his hand
upon her arm, and
timidly said 'Consider,
my dear: she is only a
child!'
The Queen turned angrily
away from him, and said
to the Knave 'Turn them
over!'
The Knave did so, very
carefully, with one
foot.
'Get up!' said the
Queen, in a shrill, loud
voice, and the three
gardeners instantly
jumped up, and began
bowing to the King, the
Queen, the royal
children, and everybody
else.
'Leave off that!'
screamed the Queen. 'You
make me giddy.' And
then, turning to the
rose-tree, she went on,
'What have you
been doing here?'
'May it please your
Majesty,' said Two, in a
very humble tone, going
down on one knee as he
spoke, 'we were
trying--'
'I see!' said the Queen,
who had meanwhile been
examining the roses.
'Off with their heads!'
and the procession moved
on, three of the
soldiers remaining
behind to execute the
unfortunate gardeners,
who ran to Alice for
protection.
'You shan't be
beheaded!' said Alice,
and she put them into a
large flower-pot that
stood near. The three
soldiers wandered about
for a minute or two,
looking for them, and
then quietly marched off
after the others.
'Are their heads off?'
shouted the Queen.
'Their heads are gone,
if it please your
Majesty!' the soldiers
shouted in reply.
'That's right!' shouted
the Queen. 'Can you play
croquet?'
The soldiers were
silent, and looked at
Alice, as the question
was evidently meant for
her.
'Yes!' shouted Alice.
'Come on, then!' roared
the Queen, and Alice
joined the procession,
wondering very much what
would happen next.
'It's--it's a very fine
day!' said a timid voice
at her side. She was
walking by the White
Rabbit, who was peeping
anxiously into her face.
'Very,' said Alice:
'--where's the Duchess?'
'Hush! Hush!' said the
Rabbit in a low, hurried
tone. He looked
anxiously over his
shoulder as he spoke,
and then raised himself
upon tiptoe, put his
mouth close to her ear,
and whispered 'She's
under sentence of
execution.'
'What for?' said Alice.
'Did you say "What a
pity!"?' the Rabbit
asked.
'No, I didn't,' said
Alice: 'I don't think
it's at all a pity. I
said "What for?"'
'She boxed the Queen's
ears--' the Rabbit
began. Alice gave a
little scream of
laughter. 'Oh, hush!'
the Rabbit whispered in
a frightened tone. 'The
Queen will hear you! You
see, she came rather
late, and the Queen
said--'
'Get to your places!'
shouted the Queen in a
voice of thunder, and
people began running
about in all directions,
tumbling up against each
other; however, they got
settled down in a minute
or two, and the game
began. Alice thought she
had never seen such a
curious croquet-ground
in her life; it was all
ridges and furrows; the
balls were live
hedgehogs, the mallets
live flamingoes, and the
soldiers had to double
themselves up and to
stand on their hands and
feet, to make the
arches.
The chief difficulty
Alice found at first was
in managing her
flamingo: she succeeded
in getting its body
tucked away, comfortably
enough, under her arm,
with its legs hanging
down, but generally,
just as she had got its
neck nicely straightened
out, and was going to
give the hedgehog a blow
with its head, it
would twist itself
round and look up in her
face, with such a
puzzled expression that
she could not help
bursting out laughing:
and when she had got its
head down, and was going
to begin again, it was
very provoking to find
that the hedgehog had
unrolled itself, and was
in the act of crawling
away: besides all this,
there was generally a
ridge or furrow in the
way wherever she wanted
to send the hedgehog to,
and, as the doubled-up
soldiers were always
getting up and walking
off to other parts of
the ground, Alice soon
came to the conclusion
that it was a very
difficult game indeed.
The players all played
at once without waiting
for turns, quarrelling
all the while, and
fighting for the
hedgehogs; and in a very
short time the Queen was
in a furious passion,
and went stamping about,
and shouting 'Off with
his head!' or 'Off with
her head!' about once in
a minute.
Alice began to feel very
uneasy: to be sure, she
had not as yet had any
dispute with the Queen,
but she knew that it
might happen any minute,
'and then,' thought she,
'what would become of
me? They're dreadfully
fond of beheading people
here; the great wonder
is, that there's any one
left alive!'
She was looking about
for some way of escape,
and wondering whether
she could get away
without being seen, when
she noticed a curious
appearance in the air:
it puzzled her very much
at first, but, after
watching it a minute or
two, she made it out to
be a grin, and she said
to herself 'It's the
Cheshire Cat: now I
shall have somebody to
talk to.'
'How are you getting
on?' said the Cat, as
soon as there was mouth
enough for it to speak
with.
Alice waited till the
eyes appeared, and then
nodded. 'It's no use
speaking to it,' she
thought, 'till its ears
have come, or at least
one of them.' In another
minute the whole head
appeared, and then Alice
put down her flamingo,
and began an account of
the game, feeling very
glad she had someone to
listen to her. The Cat
seemed to think that
there was enough of it
now in sight, and no
more of it appeared.
'I don't think they play
at all fairly,' Alice
began, in rather a
complaining tone, 'and
they all quarrel so
dreadfully one can't
hear oneself speak--and
they don't seem to have
any rules in particular;
at least, if there are,
nobody attends to
them--and you've no idea
how confusing it is all
the things being alive;
for instance, there's
the arch I've got to go
through next walking
about at the other end
of the ground--and I
should have croqueted
the Queen's hedgehog
just now, only it ran
away when it saw mine
coming!'
'How do you like the
Queen?' said the Cat in
a low voice.
'Not at all,' said
Alice: 'she's so
extremely--' Just then
she noticed that the
Queen was close behind
her, listening: so she
went on, '--likely to
win, that it's hardly
worth while finishing
the game.'
The Queen smiled and
passed on.
'Who are you
talking to?' said the
King, going up to Alice,
and looking at the Cat's
head with great
curiosity.
'It's a friend of
mine--a Cheshire Cat,'
said Alice: 'allow me to
introduce it.'
'I don't like the look
of it at all,' said the
King: 'however, it may
kiss my hand if it
likes.'
'I'd rather not,' the
Cat remarked.
'Don't be impertinent,'
said the King, 'and
don't look at me like
that!' He got behind
Alice as he spoke.
'A cat may look at a
king,' said Alice. 'I've
read that in some book,
but I don't remember
where.'
'Well, it must be
removed,' said the King
very decidedly, and he
called the Queen, who
was passing at the
moment, 'My dear! I wish
you would have this cat
removed!'
The Queen had only one
way of settling all
difficulties, great or
small. 'Off with his
head!' she said, without
even looking round.
'I'll fetch the
executioner myself,'
said the King eagerly,
and he hurried off.
Alice thought she might
as well go back, and see
how the game was going
on, as she heard the
Queen's voice in the
distance, screaming with
passion. She had already
heard her sentence three
of the players to be
executed for having
missed their turns, and
she did not like the
look of things at all,
as the game was in such
confusion that she never
knew whether it was her
turn or not. So she went
in search of her
hedgehog.
The hedgehog was engaged
in a fight with another
hedgehog, which seemed
to Alice an excellent
opportunity for
croqueting one of them
with the other: the only
difficulty was, that her
flamingo was gone across
to the other side of the
garden, where Alice
could see it trying in a
helpless sort of way to
fly up into a tree.
By the time she had
caught the flamingo and
brought it back, the
fight was over, and both
the hedgehogs were out
of sight: 'but it
doesn't matter much,'
thought Alice, 'as all
the arches are gone from
this side of the
ground.' So she tucked
it away under her arm,
that it might not escape
again, and went back for
a little more
conversation with her
friend.
When she got back to the
Cheshire Cat, she was
surprised to find quite
a large crowd collected
round it: there was a
dispute going on between
the executioner, the
King, and the Queen, who
were all talking at
once, while all the rest
were quite silent, and
looked very
uncomfortable.
The moment Alice
appeared, she was
appealed to by all three
to settle the question,
and they repeated their
arguments to her,
though, as they all
spoke at once, she found
it very hard indeed to
make out exactly what
they said.
The executioner's
argument was, that you
couldn't cut off a head
unless there was a body
to cut it off from: that
he had never had to do
such a thing before, and
he wasn't going to begin
at his time of
life.
The King's argument was,
that anything that had a
head could be beheaded,
and that you weren't to
talk nonsense.
The Queen's argument
was, that if something
wasn't done about it in
less than no time she'd
have everybody executed,
all round. (It was this
last remark that had
made the whole party
look so grave and
anxious.)
Alice could think of
nothing else to say but
'It belongs to the
Duchess: you'd better
ask her about
it.'
'She's in prison,' the
Queen said to the
executioner: 'fetch her
here.' And the
executioner went off
like an arrow.
The Cat's head began
fading away the moment
he was gone, and, by the
time he had come back
with the Duchess, it had
entirely disappeared; so
the King and the
executioner ran wildly
up and down looking for
it, while the rest of
the party went back to
the game. |