Featured on PDR in the collection Lewis Carroll’s Illustrations for “Alice’s Adventures Under Ground” (1864)

“[W]hat is the use of a book”, asks Alice in the opening scene to Lewis Carroll’s Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, “without pictures or conversations?” This question from Alice is at once a critique of her sister’s pictureless tome, and a paving the way for the delight of words and images to follow. Indeed, John Tenniel’s famous illustrations — for both the first edition of Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass — have become integral to how we experience the story, in both books and film. Tenniel, however, was not the first to illustrate the tale. That honor belongs to Carroll himself, whose original manuscript of the story (then titled “Alice’s Adventures Under Ground”) is littered with thirty-seven of his own sepia-ink drawings. It seems…

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Artist

Date

1864

From

Alice’s Adventures Under Ground


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

857 x 1400

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