The Mock Turtle's Story
'You can't think how
glad I am to see you
again, you dear old
thing!' said the
Duchess, as she tucked
her arm affectionately
into Alice's, and they
walked off together.
Alice was very glad to
find her in such a
pleasant temper, and
thought to herself that
perhaps it was only the
pepper that had made her
so savage when they met
in the kitchen.
'When I'm a
Duchess,' she said to
herself, (not in a very
hopeful tone though), 'I
won't have any pepper in
my kitchen at all.
Soup does very well
without--Maybe it's
always pepper that makes
people hot-tempered,'
she went on, very much
pleased at having found
out a new kind of rule,
'and vinegar that makes
them sour--and camomile
that makes them
bitter--and--and
barley-sugar and such
things that make
children sweet-tempered.
I only wish people knew
that: then they wouldn't
be so stingy about it,
you know--'
She had quite forgotten
the Duchess by this
time, and was a little
startled when she heard
her voice close to her
ear. 'You're thinking
about something, my
dear, and that makes you
forget to talk. I can't
tell you just now what
the moral of that is,
but I shall remember it
in a bit.'
'Perhaps it hasn't one,'
Alice ventured to
remark.
'Tut, tut, child!' said
the Duchess.
'Everything's got a
moral, if only you can
find it.' And she
squeezed herself up
closer to Alice's side
as she spoke.
Alice did not much like
keeping so close to her:
first, because the
Duchess was very
ugly; and secondly,
because she was exactly
the right height to rest
her chin upon Alice's
shoulder, and it was an
uncomfortably sharp
chin. However, she did
not like to be rude, so
she bore it as well as
she could.
'The game's going on
rather better now,' she
said, by way of keeping
up the conversation a
little.
''Tis so,' said the
Duchess: 'and the moral
of that is--"Oh, 'tis
love, 'tis love, that
makes the world go
round!"'
'Somebody said,' Alice
whispered, 'that it's
done by everybody
minding their own
business!'
'Ah, well! It means much
the same thing,' said
the Duchess, digging her
sharp little chin into
Alice's shoulder as she
added, 'and the moral of
that is--"Take
care of the sense, and
the sounds will take
care of themselves."'
'How fond she is of
finding morals in
things!' Alice thought
to herself.
'I dare say you're
wondering why I don't
put my arm round your
waist,' the Duchess said
after a pause: 'the
reason is, that I'm
doubtful about the
temper of your flamingo.
Shall I try the
experiment?'
'He might bite,'
Alice cautiously
replied, not feeling at
all anxious to have the
experiment tried.
'Very true,' said the
Duchess: 'flamingoes and
mustard both bite. And
the moral of that
is--"Birds of a feather
flock together."'
'Only mustard isn't a
bird,' Alice remarked.
'Right, as usual,' said
the Duchess: 'what a
clear way you have of
putting things!'
'It's a mineral, I
think,' said Alice.
'Of course it is,' said
the Duchess, who seemed
ready to agree to
everything that Alice
said; 'there's a large
mustard-mine near here.
And the moral of that
is--"The more there is
of mine, the less there
is of yours."'
'Oh, I know!' exclaimed
Alice, who had not
attended to this last
remark, 'it's a
vegetable. It doesn't
look like one, but it
is.'
'I quite agree with
you,' said the Duchess;
'and the moral of that
is--"Be what you would
seem to be"--or if you'd
like it put more
simply--"Never imagine
yourself not to be
otherwise than what it
might appear to others
that what you were or
might have been was not
otherwise than what you
had been would have
appeared to them to be
otherwise."'
'I think I should
understand that better,'
Alice said very
politely, 'if I had it
written down: but I
can't quite follow it as
you say it.'
'That's nothing to what
I could say if I chose,'
the Duchess replied, in
a pleased tone.
'Pray don't trouble
yourself to say it any
longer than that,' said
Alice.
'Oh, don't talk about
trouble!' said the
Duchess. 'I make you a
present of everything
I've said as yet.'
'A cheap sort of
present!' thought Alice.
'I'm glad they don't
give birthday presents
like that!' But she did
not venture to say it
out loud.
'Thinking again?' the
Duchess asked, with
another dig of her sharp
little chin.
'I've a right to think,'
said Alice sharply, for
she was beginning to
feel a little worried.
'Just about as much
right,' said the
Duchess, 'as pigs have
to fly; and the m--'
But here, to Alice's
great surprise, the
Duchess's voice died
away, even in the middle
of her favourite word
'moral,' and the arm
that was linked into
hers began to tremble.
Alice looked up, and
there stood the Queen in
front of them, with her
arms folded, frowning
like a thunderstorm.
'A fine day, your
Majesty!' the Duchess
began in a low, weak
voice.
'Now, I give you fair
warning,' shouted the
Queen, stamping on the
ground as she spoke;
'either you or your head
must be off, and that in
about half no time! Take
your choice!'
The Duchess took her
choice, and was gone in
a moment.
'Let's go on with the
game,' the Queen said to
Alice; and Alice was too
much frightened to say a
word, but slowly
followed her back to the
croquet-ground.
The other guests had
taken advantage of the
Queen's absence, and
were resting in the
shade: however, the
moment they saw her,
they hurried back to the
game, the Queen merely
remarking that a
moment's delay would
cost them their lives.
All the time they were
playing the Queen never
left off quarrelling
with the other players,
and shouting 'Off with
his head!' or 'Off with
her head!' Those whom
she sentenced were taken
into custody by the
soldiers, who of course
had to leave off being
arches to do this, so
that by the end of half
an hour or so there were
no arches left, and all
the players, except the
King, the Queen, and
Alice, were in custody
and under sentence of
execution.
Then the Queen left off,
quite out of breath, and
said to Alice, 'Have you
seen the Mock Turtle
yet?'
'No,' said Alice. 'I
don't even know what a
Mock Turtle is.'
'It's the thing Mock
Turtle Soup is made
from,' said the Queen.
'I never saw one, or
heard of one,' said
Alice.
'Come on, then,' said
the Queen, 'and he shall
tell you his history,'
As they walked off
together, Alice heard
the King say in a low
voice, to the company
generally, 'You are all
pardoned.' 'Come,
that's a good
thing!' she said to
herself, for she had
felt quite unhappy at
the number of executions
the Queen had ordered.
They very soon came upon
a Gryphon, lying fast
asleep in the sun. (If
you don't know what a
Gryphon is, look at the
picture.) 'Up, lazy
thing!' said the Queen,
'and take this young
lady to see the Mock
Turtle, and to hear his
history. I must go back
and see after some
executions I have
ordered'; and she walked
off, leaving Alice alone
with the Gryphon. Alice
did not quite like the
look of the creature,
but on the whole she
thought it would be
quite as safe to stay
with it as to go after
that savage Queen: so
she waited.
The Gryphon sat up and
rubbed its eyes: then it
watched the Queen till
she was out of sight:
then it chuckled. 'What
fun!' said the Gryphon,
half to itself, half to
Alice.
'What is the
fun?' said Alice.
'Why, she,' said
the Gryphon. 'It's all
her fancy, that: they
never executes nobody,
you know. Come on!'
'Everybody says "come
on!" here,' thought
Alice, as she went
slowly after it: 'I
never was so ordered
about in all my life,
never!'
They had not gone far
before they saw the Mock
Turtle in the distance,
sitting sad and lonely
on a little ledge of
rock, and, as they came
nearer, Alice could hear
him sighing as if his
heart would break. She
pitied him deeply. 'What
is his sorrow?' she
asked the Gryphon, and
the Gryphon answered,
very nearly in the same
words as before, 'It's
all his fancy, that: he
hasn't got no sorrow,
you know. Come on!'
So they went up to the
Mock Turtle, who looked
at them with large eyes
full of tears, but said
nothing.
'This here young lady,'
said the Gryphon, 'she
wants for to know your
history, she do.'
'I'll tell it her,' said
the Mock Turtle in a
deep, hollow tone: 'sit
down, both of you, and
don't speak a word till
I've finished.'
So they sat down, and
nobody spoke for some
minutes. Alice thought
to herself, 'I don't see
how he can even
finish, if he doesn't
begin.' But she waited
patiently.
'Once,' said the Mock
Turtle at last, with a
deep sigh, 'I was a real
Turtle.'
These words were
followed by a very long
silence, broken only by
an occasional
exclamation of
'Hjckrrh!' from the
Gryphon, and the
constant heavy sobbing
of the Mock Turtle.
Alice was very nearly
getting up and saying,
'Thank you, sir, for
your interesting story,'
but she could not help
thinking there must
be more to come, so she
sat still and said
nothing.
'When we were little,'
the Mock Turtle went on
at last, more calmly,
though still sobbing a
little now and then, 'we
went to school in the
sea. The master was an
old Turtle--we used to
call him Tortoise--'
'Why did you call him
Tortoise, if he wasn't
one?' Alice asked.
'We called him Tortoise
because he taught us,'
said the Mock Turtle
angrily: 'really you are
very dull!'
'You ought to be ashamed
of yourself for asking
such a simple question,'
added the Gryphon; and
then they both sat
silent and looked at
poor Alice, who felt
ready to sink into the
earth. At last the
Gryphon said to the Mock
Turtle, 'Drive on, old
fellow! Don't be all day
about it!' and he went
on in these words:
'Yes, we went to school
in the sea, though you
mayn't believe it--'
'I never said I didn't!'
interrupted Alice.
'You did,' said the Mock
Turtle.
'Hold your tongue!'
added the Gryphon,
before Alice could speak
again. The Mock Turtle
went on.
'We had the best of
educations--in fact, we
went to school every
day--'
'I've been to a
day-school, too,' said
Alice; 'you needn't be
so proud as all that.'
'With extras?' asked the
Mock Turtle a little
anxiously.
'Yes,' said Alice, 'we
learned French and
music.'
'And washing?' said the
Mock Turtle.
'Certainly not!' said
Alice indignantly.
'Ah! then yours wasn't a
really good school,'
said the Mock Turtle in
a tone of great relief.
'Now at ours they
had at the end of the
bill, "French, music,
and washing--extra."'
'You couldn't have
wanted it much,' said
Alice; 'living at the
bottom of the sea.'
'I couldn't afford to
learn it.' said the Mock
Turtle with a sigh. 'I
only took the regular
course.'
'What was that?'
inquired Alice.
'Reeling and Writhing,
of course, to begin
with,' the Mock Turtle
replied; 'and then the
different branches of
Arithmetic-- Ambition,
Distraction,
Uglification, and
Derision.'
'I never heard of
"Uglification,"' Alice
ventured to say. 'What
is it?'
The Gryphon lifted up
both its paws in
surprise. 'What! Never
heard of uglifying!' it
exclaimed. 'You know
what to beautify is, I
suppose?'
'Yes,' said Alice
doubtfully: 'it
means--to--make--anything--prettier.'
'Well, then,' the
Gryphon went on, 'if you
don't know what to
uglify is, you are
a simpleton.'
Alice did not feel
encouraged to ask any
more questions about it,
so she turned to the
Mock Turtle, and said
'What else had you to
learn?'
'Well, there was
Mystery,' the Mock
Turtle replied, counting
off the subjects on his
flappers, '--Mystery,
ancient and modern, with
Seaography: then
Drawling--the
Drawling-master was an
old conger-eel, that
used to come once a
week: He taught
us Drawling, Stretching,
and Fainting in Coils.'
'What was that
like?' said Alice.
'Well, I can't show it
you myself,' the Mock
Turtle said: 'I'm too
stiff. And the Gryphon
never learnt it.'
'Hadn't time,' said the
Gryphon: 'I went to the
Classics master, though.
He was an old crab,
he was.'
'I never went to him,'
the Mock Turtle said
with a sigh: 'he taught
Laughing and Grief, they
used to say.'
'So he did, so he did,'
said the Gryphon,
sighing in his turn; and
both creatures hid their
faces in their paws.
'And how many hours a
day did you do lessons?'
said Alice, in a hurry
to change the subject.
'Ten hours the first
day,' said the Mock
Turtle: 'nine the next,
and so on.'
'What a curious plan!'
exclaimed Alice.
'That's the reason
they're called lessons,'
the Gryphon remarked:
'because they lessen
from day to day.'
This was quite a new
idea to Alice, and she
thought it over a little
before she made her next
remark. 'Then the
eleventh day must have
been a holiday?'
'Of course it was,' said
the Mock Turtle.
'And how did you manage
on the twelfth?' Alice
went on eagerly.
'That's enough about
lessons,' the Gryphon
interrupted in a very
decided tone: 'tell her
something about the
games now.' |