Pages
- Home
- Contents
- My Design Creations
- Jane Austen
- Lewis Carroll
- Nature Notes
- Anonymous
- Love Letters
- Amy Lowell
- William Morris
- D.H. Lawrence
- Daphne Du Maurier
- e.e. cummings
- Dodie Smith
- A.A Milne
- John Keats
- Lord Byron
- Emily Dickinson
- Charlotte Brontë
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Elizabeth Gaskell
- William Shakespeare
Monday, 16 January 2012
Sunday, 15 January 2012
'Alice in Wonderland'
The Mouse's Tale
by Lewis Carroll
"Mine is a long and a sad tale!" said the Mouse, turning to Alice, and sighing.
"It is a long tail, certainly," said Alice, looking down with wonder at the Mouse's tail; "but why do you call it sad?" And she kept on puzzling about it while the Mouse was speaking, so that her idea of the tale was something like this:
Fury said to a mouse,
That he met in the
house, 'Let us
both go to law:
I will prosecute
you.-- Come, I'll
take no denial;
We must have
a trial: For
really this
morning I've
nothing to do.'
Said the mouse
to the cur,
'Such a trial,
dear Sir, With
no jury or
judge, would
be wasting
our breath.'
'I'll be
judge, I'll
be jury,'
Said cunning
old Fury:
'I'll try
the whole
cause, and
condemn
you
to
death.'
"You are not attending!" said the Mouse to Alice, severely. "What are you thinking of?"
"I beg your pardon," said Alice very humbly, "you had got to the fifth bend, I think?"
"I had not!" cried the Mouse sharply and very angrily.
"A knot!" said Alice, always ready to make herself useful, and looking anxiously about her. "Oh, let me help to undo it!"
"I shall do nothing of the sort,” said the Mouse, getting up and walking away.
"You insult me by talking such nonsense!"
Friday, 13 January 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)