Alice in WonderlandWordsworth Editions, 1992 - 295 עמודים With an Introduction and Notes by Michael Irwin, Professor of English Literature, University of Kent at Canterbury This selection of Carroll's works includes Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass, both containing the famous illustrations by Sir John Tenniel. No greater books for children have ever been written. The simple language, dreamlike atmosphere, and fantastical characters are as appealing to young readers today as ever they were. Meanwhile, however, these apparently simple stories have become recognised as adult masterpieces, and extraordinary experiments, years ahead of their time, in Modernism and Surrealism. Through wordplay, parody and logical and philosophical puzzles, Carroll engenders a variety of sub-texts, teasing, ominous or melancholy. For all the surface playfulness there is meaning everywhere. The author reveals himself in glimpses. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 55
... tone of great contempt . [ p . 201 ] This exchange is clearly important to the book as a whole . Carroll returns to it in his final chapter , where Alice asks the kitten whether it had been she herself or the Red King who ' dreamed it ...
... tone elsewhere . As often with Dickens , it is as though the author's black humour provides subconscious compensation for sentimental excess . In The Old Curiosity Shop , for example , which the Alice books sometimes echo , the ...
... tone Secunda hopes ' There will be nonsense in it ! ' - While Tertia interrupts the tale Not more than once a minute . Anon , to sudden silence won , In fancy they pursue The dream - child moving through a land Of wonders wild and new ...
אנו מתנצלים, אך הגישה לתוכן של עמוד זה מוגבלת.
אנו מתנצלים, אך הגישה לתוכן של עמוד זה מוגבלת.
תוכן
IV | 37 |
V | 44 |
VI | 52 |
VII | 59 |
VIII | 69 |
IX | 79 |
X | 90 |
XI | 99 |
XX | 170 |
XXI | 181 |
XXII | 192 |
XXIII | 206 |
XXIV | 218 |
XXV | 230 |
XXVI | 241 |
XXVII | 257 |
XII | 109 |
XIII | 118 |
XIV | 127 |
XV | 135 |
XVI | 145 |
XVII | 148 |
XVIII | 151 |
XIX | 155 |
XXVIII | 274 |
XXIX | 275 |
XXXI | 276 |
XXXII | 280 |
XXXIII | 282 |
XXXIV | 283 |