Classic Audiobook Collection - The Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll ~ Full Audiobook [fantasy]
Episode Date: February 26, 2026The Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll audiobook. Genre: fantasy Lewis Carroll's The Nursery Alice invites very young listeners into a gentler, storybook version of Alice's famous journey, told with the ...warm, teasing voice of a grownup who keeps turning to the child at their side: Look here, did you notice that? After a drowsy afternoon, curious Alice spots a White Rabbit in a hurry and follows him into a world where nothing behaves as it should. A sip can make her smaller, a bite can make her bigger, and every new path introduces a new set of puzzling manners and impossible rules. Along the way she meets a gallery of unforgettable figures - a grinning Cheshire Cat, a frantic tea party full of nonsense, and a Queen whose temper turns simple mistakes into sudden danger. Alice's central struggle is not to defeat a villain, but to keep her courage and good sense when logic breaks down and everyone insists their way is the only way. Playful, rhythmic, and full of invitations to look and laugh, this nursery retelling captures Wonderland's wonder while celebrating a child's sharp eye for absurdity. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 00 (00:02:07) Chapter 01 (00:05:17) Chapter 02 (00:08:37) Chapter 03 (00:11:45) Chapter 04 (00:14:32) Chapter 05 (00:17:58) Chapter 06 (00:20:56) Chapter 07 (00:23:53) Chapter 08 (00:27:09) Chapter 09 (00:30:09) Chapter 10 (00:33:16) Chapter 11 (00:35:52) Chapter 12 (00:38:33) Chapter 13 (00:42:22) Chapter 14 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll. Preface. Addressed to Any Mother.
I have reason to believe that Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has been read by some hundreds of English children,
aged from five to fifteen, also by children aged from fifteen to twenty-five, yet again by children aged from twenty-five to thirty-five,
and even by children, for there are such, children in whom no waning of health and strength, no weariness of
the solemn mockery and the gaudy glitter and the hopeless misery of life has availed to
parched the pure fountain of joy that wells up in all childlike hearts, children of a certain
age, whose tale of years must be left untold and buried in respectful silence.
And my ambition now is, is it a vain one, to be read by children aged from naught to five?
To be read?
Nay, not so.
Say rather to be thumbed, to be cooed over, to be dog's ear, to be rumbled, to be kissed by the illiterate, ungrammatical, dimpled darlings that fill your nursery with merry-uproar, and your inmost heart of hearts with a restful gladness.
Such, for instance, as a child I once knew, who, having been carefully instructed that one of any earthly thing was enough for any little girl, and that to ask for two buns, two oranges, two of anything, would certainly be able to be able to be able to,
bring upon her the awful charge of being greedy, was found one morning sitting up in bed,
solemnly regarding her two little naked feet, and murmuring to herself, softly and penitently,
Dedy!
Eastertide, 1889.
End of Preface
Chapter 1 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This lemurvox recording is in the public domain.
The White Rabbit
Once upon a time there was a little girl called Alice,
and she had a very curious dream.
Would you like to hear what it was that she dreamed about?
Well, this is the first thing that happened.
A white rabbit came running by in a great hurry,
and just as it passed Alice, it stopped and took its watch out of its pocket.
Wasn't that a funny thing?
Did you ever see a rabbit that had a watch
and a pocket to put it in.
Of course, when a rabbit has a watch,
it must have a pocket to put it in.
It would never do to carry it about in its mouth,
and it wants its hands sometimes to run about with.
Hasn't it got pretty pink eyes?
I think all white rabbits have pink eyes.
And pink ears, and a nice brown coat.
And you can just see its red pocket handkerchief
peeping out of its coat pocket.
And what with its blue necktie and its yellow waistcoat,
it really is very nicely.
dressed. Oh dear, oh dear, said the rabbit. I shall be too late. What would it be too late for,
I wonder? Well, you see, it had to go and visit the Duchess. You'll see a picture of the
Duchess soon, sitting in her kitchen, and the Duchess was a very cross old lady,
and the rabbit knew she'd be very angry indeed if he kept her waiting, so the poor thing was as
frightened as frightened could be. Don't you see how he's trembling? Just shake the book a little from
side to side and you'll soon see him tremble. Because he thought the Duchess would have his head cut off
for a punishment. That was what the Queen of Hearts used to do when she was angry with people. You'll see a
picture of her soon. At least she used to order their heads to be cut off, and she always thought it was
done. But they never really did it. And so when the White Rabbit ran away, Alice wanted to see what
would happen to it. So she ran after it, and she ran and she ran,
till she tumbled right down the rabbit hole.
And then she had a very long fall indeed,
down and down and down,
till she began to wonder if she was going right through the world
so as to come out on the other side.
It was just like a very deep well,
only there was no water in it.
If anybody really had such a fall as that,
it would kill them most likely.
But, you know, it doesn't hurt a bit to fall in a dream,
because all the time you think you're falling,
You really are lying somewhere safe and sound and fast asleep.
However, this terrible fall came to an end at last,
and down came Alice on a heap of sticks and dry leaves.
But she wasn't a bit hurt, and up she jumped and ran after the rabbit again.
And so that was the beginning of Alice's curious dream.
And next time you see a white rabbit, try and fancy you're going to have a curious dream,
just like dear little Alice.
End of Chapter 1
Chapter 2 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
How Alice grew tall.
And so, after Alice had tumbled down the rabbit hole and had run a long, long way underground,
all of a sudden she found herself in a great hall with doors all around it.
But all the doors were locked, so you see, poor Alice couldn't get out of the hall.
hall, and that made her very sad.
However, after a little while she came to a little table, all made of glass, with three legs.
There are two of the legs in the picture, and just the beginning of the other leg.
Do you see?
And on the table was a little key, and she went around the hall and tried if she could
unlock any of the doors with it.
Poor Alice, the key wouldn't unlock any of the doors.
But at last she came upon a tiny little door, and oh, how glad she was when she found the key would fit it.
So she unlocked the tiny little door, and she stooped down and looked through it.
And what do you think she saw?
Oh, such a beautiful garden!
And she did so long to go into it, but the door was far too small.
She couldn't squeeze herself through any more than you could squeeze yourself into a mouth.
household. So poor little Alice locked up the door and took the key back to the table again,
and this time she found quite a new thing on it. Now look at the picture again. What do you think it was?
It was a little bottle with a label tied to it, with the words, Drink Me on the label. So she tasted it,
and it was very nice. So she set to work and drank it up. And then such a curious thing
happened to her. You'll never guess what it was, so I shall have to tell you. She got smaller and smaller,
till at last she was just the size of a little doll. Then she said to herself,
Now I'm the right size to get through the little door. And away she ran. But when she got there,
the door was locked, and the key was on the top of the table, and she couldn't reach it.
Wasn't it a pity she had locked up the door again? Well, the next day, the next day. The next
thing she found was a little cake, and it had the words,
Eat me, marked on it.
So, of course, she set to work and ate it up.
And then what do you think happened to her?
No, you'll never guess.
I shall have to tell you again.
She grew and she grew and she grew, and she grew.
Taller than she was before.
Taller than any child.
Taller than any grown-up person.
Taller and taller and taller.
Just look at the picture and you'll see how tall she got.
Which would you have liked the best, do you think?
To be a little tiny, Alice, no larger than a kitten,
or a great, tall Alice,
with your head always knocking against the ceiling.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of the nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Lieber Vox recording is in the public domain.
The Pool of Tears
Perhaps you think Alice must have been very much pleased when she had eaten the little cake
to find herself growing so tremendously tall,
because of course it would be easy enough now to reach the little key off the glass table
and to open the little tiny door.
Well, of course she could do that,
but what good was it to get the door open when she couldn't get through?
She was worse off than ever, poor thing.
She could just manage by putting her head down, close.
to the ground to look through with one eye. But that was all she could do. No wonder the poor tall
child sat down and cried as if her heart would break. So she cried and she cried,
and her tears ran down the middle of the hall, like a deep river, and very soon there was quite a
large pool of tears reaching halfway down the hall. And there she might have stayed till this very
day, if the white rabbit hadn't happened to come through the hall on his way to visit the Duchess.
He was dressed up as grand as grand could be, and he had a pair of white kid gloves in one hand
and a little fan in the other hand, and he kept on muttering to himself.
Oh, the Duchess, the Duchess, oh, won't she be savage if I've kept her waiting?
But he didn't see Alice, you know, so when she began to say,
"'If you please, sir!'
Her voice seemed to come from the top of the hall
because her head was so high up,
and the rabbit was dreadfully frightened,
and he dropped the gloves in the fan
and ran away as hard as he could go.
Then a very curious thing indeed happened.
Alice took up the fan and began to fan herself with it.
And lo and behold, she got quite small again,
and all in a minute she was just about the size of a mouse.
Now look at the picture, and you'll soon guess what happened next.
It looks just like the sea, doesn't it?
But it really is the pool of tears, all made of Alice's tears, you know.
And Alice has tumbled into the pool, and the mouse has tumbled in,
and there they are, swimming about together.
Doesn't Alice look pretty as she swims across the picture?
you can just see her blue stockings far away under the water.
But why is the mouse swimming away from Alice in such a hurry?
Well, the reason is that Alice began talking about cats and dogs,
and a mouse always hates talking about cats and dogs.
Suppose you were swimming about in a pool of your own tears,
and suppose somebody began talking to you about lesson books and bottles of medicine.
Wouldn't you swim away as hard as you could go?
End of Chapter 3
Chapter 4 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Caucus Race
When Alice and the Mouse had got out of the pool of tears, of course they were very wet,
and so were a lot of other curious creatures that had tumbled in as well.
There was a dodo, that's the great bird in front, leaning on a walking stick,
and a duck, and a lorry, that's just be a little.
behind the duck looking over its head, and an eaglet that's on the left-hand side of the lorry,
and several others.
Well, and so they didn't know how in the world they were going to get dry again.
But the Dodo, who was a very wise bird, told them the right way was to have a caucus race.
And what do you think that was?
You don't know.
Well, you are an ignorant child.
Now be very attentive, and I'll soon cure you.
of your ignorance.
First, you must have a race course.
It ought to be a sort of circle,
but it doesn't much matter what shape it is
so long as it goes a good way around
and joins on to itself again.
Then you must put all the racers on the course here and there.
It doesn't matter where,
so long as you don't crowd them too much together.
Then you needn't say one, two, three in a way,
but let them all set off running just when they like
and leave off just when they like.
So all these creatures, Alice and all,
went on running round and round
till they were all quite dry again.
And then the dodo said,
Everybody won,
and everybody must have prizes.
Of course, Alice had to give them their prizes,
and she had nothing to give them
but a few comforts she happened to have in her pocket.
And there was just won a piece all around.
And there was no prize for Alice.
So what do you think they did,
did. Alice had nothing left but her thimble. Now look at the picture and you'll see what happened.
Hand it over here, said the dodo. Then the dodo took the thimble and handed it back to Alice and said,
We beg your acceptance of this elegant thimble. And then all the other creatures cheered. Wasn't that a
curious sort of present to give her? Suppose they wanted to give you a birthday present. Would you rather
they should go to your toy cupboard and pick out your nicest doll and say,
Here, my love, here's a lovely birthday present for you,
or would you rather them to give you something new,
something that didn't belong to you before?
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Bill the Lizard
Now I'm going to tell you about Alice's adventures in the
white rabbit's house. Do you remember how the rabbit dropped his gloves and his fan when he was so
frightened at hearing Alice's voice that seemed to come down from the sky? Well, of course he couldn't go
to visit the Duchess without his gloves and his fan, so after a bit, he came back again to look for
them. By this time, the Dodo and all the other curious creatures had gone away, and Alice was
wandering about all alone. So what do you think he did? Actually,
He thought she was his housemaid and began ordering her about.
"'Marianne,' he said.
"'Go home this very minute and fetch me a pair of gloves and a fan.
Quick now!'
Perhaps he couldn't see very clearly with his pink eyes,
for I'm sure Alice doesn't look very like a housemaid, does she?
However, she was a very good-natured little girl,
so wasn't a bit offended, but ran off to the rabbit's house as quick as she could.
It was lucky she found the door open, for if she had had to ring,
I suppose the real Marianne would have come to open the door,
and she would never have let Alice come in.
And I'm sure it was very lucky she didn't meet the real Marianne as she trotted upstairs,
for I'm afraid she would have taken Alice for a robber.
So at last she found her way into the rabbit's room,
and there was a pair of gloves lying on the table,
and she was just going to take them up and go away
when she happened to see a little bottle on the table.
And of course it had the words,
Drink me on the label.
And of course Alice drank some.
Well, I think that was rather lucky too, don't you?
For if she hadn't drunk any,
all this wonderful adventure that I'm going to tell you about
wouldn't have happened at all.
And wouldn't that have been a pity?
You're getting so used to Alice's adventures that I dare say you can guess what happened next.
If you can't, I'll tell you.
She grew, and she grew, and she grew, and she grew,
and in a very short time the room was full of Alice,
just in the same way as a jar is full of jam.
There was Alice all the way up to the ceiling,
and Alice in every corner of the room.
The door opened inward, so of course there wasn't any room
open it, so when the rabbit got tired of waiting and came to fetch his gloves for himself,
of course he couldn't get in. So what do you think he did? Now we come to the picture.
He sent Bill the lizard up to the roof of the house and told him to get down the chimney.
But Alice happened to have one of her feet in the fireplace, so when she heard Bill coming down
the chimney, she just gave a little tiny kick and away went Bill flying up.
up into the sky. Poor little Bill. Don't you pity him very much. How frightened he must have been.
End of Chapter 5. Chapter 6 of the nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll. This Libravox recording is in the
public domain. The Dear Little Puppy. Well, it doesn't look like such a very little puppy,
does it? But then, you see, Alice had grown very small indeed. And that's
That's what makes the puppy look so large.
When Alice had eaten one of those little magic cakes that she found in the White Rabbit's house
and made her get quite small directly so that she could get through the door,
or else she could never have got out of the house again.
Wouldn't that have been a pity?
Because then she wouldn't have dreamed all the other curious things that we're going to read about.
So it really was a little puppy, you see, and isn't it a little pet?
And look at the way it's barking at the little stick that Alice is holding out for it.
You can see she was a little afraid of it all the time because she's got behind that great thistle for fear it should run over her.
That would have been just about as bad for her as it would be for you to be run over by a wagon and four horses.
Have you got a little pet puppy at your home?
If you have, I hope you're always kind to it and give it nice things to eat.
Once upon a time, I knew some little children about as big as you, and they had a little pet dog of their own, and it was called Dash.
And this is what they told me about its birthday treat.
Do you know, one day we remembered it was Dash's birthday that day, so we said, let's give Dash a nice birthday treat, like what we have on our birthdays.
So we thought and we thought, now, what is it we like best of all on our birthdays?
And we thought and we thought, and at last we all called out together.
Why, it's oatmeal porridge, of course.
So, of course, we thought Dash would be quite sure to like it very much, too.
So we went to the cook and we got her to make a saucer full of nice oatmeal porridge.
And then we called Dash into the house and we said,
Now, Dash, you're going to have your birthday treat.
We expected Dash would jump for joy.
But it didn't.
One bit.
So we put the saucer down before it and we said,
Now Dash, don't be greedy.
Eat it nicely like a good dog.
So Dash just tasted it with the tip of his tongue
and then it made, oh, such a horrid face.
And then, do you know, it did hate it, so it wouldn't eat a bit more of it.
So we had to put it all down its throat with a spoon.
I wonder if Alice will give this little puppy some porridge.
I don't think she can because she can.
She hasn't got any with her. I can't see any saucer in the picture.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Blue Caterpillar
Would you like to know what happened to Alice after she had got away from the puppy?
It was far too large an animal, you know, for her to play with.
I don't suppose you would much enjoy playing with a young hippopotamus, would you?
you would always be expecting to be crushed as flat as a pancake under its great heavy feet.
So Alice was very glad to run away while it wasn't looking.
Well, she wandered up and down, and she didn't know what in the world to do
to make herself grow up to the right size again.
Of course, she knew that she had to eat or drink something.
That was the regular rule, you know.
But she couldn't guess what thing.
However, she soon came to a great mushroom that was so tall
that she couldn't see over the top of it without standing on tiptoe.
And what do you think she saw?
Something that I'm sure you never talked to in all your life.
It was a large blue caterpillar.
I'll tell you soon what Alice and the caterpillar talked about,
but first let us have a good look at the picture.
That curious thing, standing in front of the caterpillar, is called a hookah,
and it's used for smoking.
The smoke comes through that long tube that winds,
round and round like a serpent.
And do you see its long nose and chin?
At least they look exactly like a nose and chin, don't they?
But they really are two of its legs.
You know, a caterpillar has got quantities of legs.
You can see some more of them further down.
What a bother must be to a caterpillar
counting over such a lot of legs every night
to make sure it hasn't lost any of them.
And another great bother must be having to settle
which leg it had better move
first. I think if you had 40 or 50 legs and if you wanted to go a walk, you'd be such a time
in settling which leg to begin with that you'd never go a walk at all. And what did Alice and the
caterpillar talk about, I wonder? Well, Alice told it how very confusing it was, being first one
size, then another, and the caterpillar asked her if she liked the size she was just then.
and Alice said she would like to be just a little bit larger.
Three inches was such a wretched height to be.
Just mark off three inches on the wall about the length of your middle finger
and you'll see what size she was.
And the caterpillar told her one side of the mushroom would make her grow taller
and the other side would make her grow shorter.
So Alice took two little bits of it with her to nibble
and managed to make herself quite a nice comfortable height
before she went on to visit the Duchess.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
The Pig Baby.
Would you like to hear about Alice's visit to the Duchess?
It was a very interesting visit indeed, I can assure you.
Of course she knocked at the door to begin with, but nobody came,
so she had to open it for herself.
Now, if you look at the picture,
You'll see exactly what Alice saw when she got inside.
The door led right into the kitchen, you see.
The Duchess sat in the middle of the room nursing the baby.
The baby was howling.
The soup was boiling.
The cook was stirring the soup.
The cat, it was a Cheshire cat, was grinning, as Cheshire cats always do.
All these things were happening, just as Alice went in.
The Duchess has a beautiful cap and gown, hasn't she?
But I'm afraid she hasn't got a very beautiful.
face. The baby, well, I dare say you've seen several nicer babies than that, and more good
temper ones, too. However, take a good look at it, and we'll see if you know it again next time you
meet it. The cook, well, you may have seen nicer cooks once or twice, but I'm nearly sure you've
never seen a nicer cat. Now have you? And wouldn't you like to have a cat of your own, just like that one
with lovely green eyes and smiling so sweetly.
The Duchess was very rude to Alice, and no wonder why she even called her own baby
pig.
And it wasn't a pig, was it?
And she ordered the cook to chop off Alice's head, though of course the cook didn't do it,
and at last she threw the baby at her.
So Alice caught the baby and took it away with her, and I think that was about the best thing
she could do.
So she wandered away through the wood carrying the ugly little thing with her.
And a great job it was to keep hold of it.
It wriggled about so.
But at last she found out that the proper way was to keep tight hold of its left foot and its right ear.
But don't you try to hold on to a baby like that, my child.
There are not many babies that like being nursed in that way.
Well, and so the baby kept grunting and grunting, so that Alice had to see.
say to it quite seriously. If you're going to turn into a pig, my dear, I'll have nothing more to do
with you. Mine now? And at last she looked down into its face, and what do you think had happened to it?
Look at the picture and see if you can guess. Why, that's not the baby Alice was nursing, is it?
I knew you wouldn't know it again, though I told you to take a good look at it. Yes, it is the baby,
and it's turned into a little pig.
So Alice put it down and let it trot away into the wood,
and she said to herself,
it was a very ugly baby,
but it makes a rather handsome pig, I think.
Don't you think she was right?
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
The Cheshire Count.
All alone, all alone. Poor Alice. No baby, not even a pig to keep her company. So you may be sure
she was very glad indeed when she saw the Cheshire cat perched up in a tree over her head.
The cat has a very nice smile, no doubt, but just look what a lot of teeth it's got. Isn't Alice
just a little shy of it? Well, yes, a little. But then it couldn't help having teeth, you know,
and it could have helped smiling,
supposing it had been cross.
So on the whole, she was glad.
Doesn't Alice look very prim,
holding her head so straight up
and with her hands behind her
just as if she were going to say her lessons to the cat?
And that reminds me.
There's a little lesson I want to teach you
while we're looking at the picture of Alice and the cat.
Now, don't be in a bad temper about it, my dear child.
It's a very little lesson indeed.
Do you see that fox glove growing close to the tree, and do you know why it's called a fox glove?
Perhaps you think it's got something to do with a fox?
No, indeed.
Foxes never wear gloves.
The right word is folks glove.
Did you ever hear that fairies used to be called the good folk?
Now we've finished the lesson, and we'll wait a minute until you've got your temper again.
Well, do you feel quite good-natured again?
No temperache?
No crossness about the corners of the mouth?
Then we'll go on.
Cheshire Puss, said Alice.
Wasn't that a pretty name for a cat?
Would you tell me which way I ought to go from here?
And so the Cheshire cat told her which way she ought to go
if she wanted to visit the Hatter,
and which way to go to visit the Marchair.
They're both mad.
said the cat.
And then the cat vanished away,
just like the flame of a candle when it goes out.
So Alice set off to visit the marchair.
And as she went along, there was the cat again.
And she told it she didn't like it coming and going so quickly.
So this time the cat vanished quite slowly,
beginning with the tail and ending with the grin.
Wasn't that a curious thing?
A grin without any cat.
Would you like to see one?
If you turn up the corner of this leaf, you'll have Alice looking at the grin,
and she doesn't look a bit more frightened than what she was looking at the cat, does she?
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Mad Tea Party
This is the Mad Tea Party.
You see Alice had left the Cheshire Cat and had gone off to see the March Hare
and the hatter as the Cheshire cat had advised her, and she found them having tea under a great tree
with a dormouse sitting between them. There were only those three at the table, but there were
quantities of tea cups set all along it. You can't see all the table, you know, and even in the
bit you can see, there are nine cups, counting the one the march hare has got in his hand.
That's the march hare, with the long ears and straws mixed up with his hair. The straws showed
he was mad. I don't know why. Never twist up straws among your hair, for fear people should think you're
mad. There was a nice green armchair at the end of the table that looked as if it was just meant for
Alice, so she went and sat down in it. Then she had quite a long talk with the march hair and the
hatter. The dormouse didn't say much. You see, it was fast asleep generally, and it only just
woke up for a moment now and then. As long as it was asleep, it was very useful to the
march hare and the hatter, because it had a nice, round, soft head, just like a pillow,
so they could put their elbows on it and lean across it and talk to each other quite comfortably.
You wouldn't like people to use your head for a pillow, would you? But if you were fast asleep
like the dormouse, you wouldn't feel it, so I suppose you wouldn't care about it. I'm afraid
they gave Alice very little to eat and drink. However, after a bit, she helped herself to some
tea and bread and butter. Only, I don't quite see where she got the bread and butter, and she had
no plate for it. Nobody seems to have a plate except the hatter. I believe the march hare must have
had one as well, because when they all moved one place on, that was the rule at this curious tea party,
and Alice had to go into the place of the march hare, she found he had,
just upset the milk jug into his plate, so I suppose his plate and the milk jug are hidden
behind that large teapot. The hatter used to carry about hats to sell, and even the one
that he's got on his head is meant to be sold. You see, it's got its price marked on it. A ten
and a six. That means ten shillings and sixpence. Wasn't that a funny way of selling hats?
And hasn't he got a beautiful necktie on? Such a lovely yellow yellow.
tie with large red spots.
He has just got up to say to Alice,
Your hair wants cutting!
That was a rude thing to say, wasn't it?
And do you think her hair does want cutting?
I think it's very pretty length, just the right length.
End of Chapter 10.
Chapter 11 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
The Queen's Garden
This is a little bit of the beautiful garden I told you about.
You see, Alice had managed at last to get quite small
so that she could go through the little door.
I suppose she was about as tall as a mouse
if it stood on its hind legs.
So, of course, this was a very tiny rose tree,
and these are very tiny gardeners.
What funny little men they are.
But are they men, do you think?
I think they must be live cards with just a head and arms and legs so as to look like little men.
And what are they doing with that red paint, I wonder?
Well, you see, this is what they told Alice.
The Queen of Hearts wanted to have a red rose tree just in that corner,
and these poor little gardeners had made a great mistake and had put in a white one instead,
and they were so frightened about it because the Queen was sure to be angry.
and then she would order all their heads to be cut off.
She was a dreadfully savage queen,
and that was the way she always did when she was angered with people.
Off with their heads!
They didn't really cut their heads off, you know,
because nobody ever obeyed her,
but that was what she always said.
Now, can you guess what the poor little gardeners are trying to do?
They're trying to paint the roses red,
and they're in a great hurry to get it done before the queen comes.
And then perhaps the queen won't find out it was a white rose tree to begin with,
and then perhaps the little men won't get their heads cut off.
You see, there were five large white roses on the tree.
Such a job to get them all painted red.
But they've got three and a half done now,
and if only they wouldn't stop to talk.
Work away, little men, do work away.
Or the queen will be coming before it's done, and if she finds any white roses on the tree,
do you know what will happen? It will be off with their heads.
Oh, work away, my little man. Hurry, hurry!
The queen has come, and isn't she angry?
Oh, my poor little Alice.
End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Lobster Quadrille
Did you ever play at croquet?
There are large wooden balls painted with different colors that you have to roll about
and arches of wire that you have to send them through,
and great wooden mallets with long handles to knock the balls about with.
Now look at the picture, and you'll see that Alice has just been playing a game of croquet.
But she couldn't play with that great red wot.
What's its name in her arms? Why, how could she hold the mallet? Why, my dear child, that great red
what's its name, its real name is a flamingo, is the mallet. In this croquet game, the balls were
live hedgehogs. You know a hedgehog can roll itself up into a ball? And the mallets were live flamingos.
So Alice is just resting from the game for a minute to have a chat with that dear old thing,
the Duchess. And of course, she's.
She keeps her mallet under her arm so as not to lose it.
But I don't think she was a dear old thing one bit.
To call her baby a pig and to want to chop off Alice's head?
Oh, that was only a joke about chopping off Alice's head.
And as to the baby, why, it was a pig, you know?
And just look at her smile.
Why, it's wider than all Alice's head, and yet you can only see half of it.
Well, they'd only had a very little chat when the queen came and took Alice away to see the griffin and the mock turtle.
You don't know what a griffin is?
Well, do you know anything? That's the question.
However, look at the picture.
That creature with a red head and red claws and green scales is the griffin.
Now you know.
And the others, the mock turtle.
It's got a calf's head because
Calf's Head is used to make
mock turtle soup.
Now you know.
But what are they doing, going round
and round Alice like that?
Why, I thought of course you'd know that.
They're dancing a lobster quadrille.
And next time you meet a griffin
and a mock turtle, I dare say
they'll dance it for you, if you ask them prettily.
Only don't let them come quite close,
or they'll be treading on your toes as they did on poor alices.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Who stole the tarts?
Did you ever hear how the Queen of Hearts made some tarts,
and can you tell me what became of them?
Why, of course I can.
Doesn't the song tell all about it?
The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts all on a summer day.
The knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts and took them quite away.
Well, yes, the song says so,
but it would never do to punish the poor knave just because there was a song about him.
They had to take him prisoner and put chains on his wrists
and bring him before the King of Hearts so that there might be a regular trial.
Now if you look at the big picture at the beginning of this book,
you'll see what a grand thing a trial is when the judge is a king.
The king is very grand, isn't he?
But he doesn't look very happy.
I think that big crown on the top of his wig must be very heavy and uncomfortable.
But he had to wear them both, you see,
so that people might know he was a judge and a king.
And doesn't the queen look cross?
She can see the dish of tarts on the table that she had taken such trouble to make.
and she could see the bad knave. Do you see the chains hanging from his wrists that stole them away from her,
so I don't think it's any wonder if she does feel a little cross. The white rabbit is standing near the king,
reading out the song to tell everybody what a bad knave he is, and the jury, you can just see two of them up in the jury box,
the frog and the duck, have to settle whether he's guilty or not guilty. Now I'll tell you about
the accident that happened to Alice. You see, she was sitting close by the jury box, and she was
called as a witness. You know what a witness is. A witness is a person who has seen the prisoner do
whatever he's accused of, or at any rate knows something that's important in the trial. But Alice
hadn't seen the queen make the tarts, and she hadn't seen the knave take the tarts. And in fact,
She didn't know anything about it.
So why in the world they wanted her to be a witness?
I'm sure I can't tell you.
Anyhow, they did want her.
And the white rabbit blew his big trumpet and shouted out,
Alice!
And so Alice jumped up in a great hurry.
And then...
And then what do you think happened?
Why her skirt caught against the jury box and tipped it over
and all the poor little jurors came tumbling out of it.
Let's try if we can make out all the twelve.
You know, there ought to be twelve to make up a jury.
I see the frog and the dormouse and the rat and the ferret,
and the hedgehog and the lizard and the bantamcock and the mole,
and the duck and the squirrel,
and the screaming bird with a long beak just behind the mole.
But that only makes eleven.
We must find one more creature.
Oh, do you see a little white head coming out behind the mole
and just under the duck's beak?
Oh, that makes up 12.
Mr. Tenial says the screaming bird is a storkling.
Of course you know what that is.
And the little white head is a mouseling.
Isn't it a little darling?
Alice picked them all up again very carefully,
and I hope they weren't much hurt.
End of Chapter 13
Chapter 14 of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
The Shower of Cards
Oh dear, oh dear, what is it all about?
And what's happening to Alice?
Well, I'll tell you all about it as well as I can.
The way the trial ended was this.
The king wanted the jury to settle whether the knave of hearts was guilty
or not guilty.
That means that they were to settle
whether he had stolen the tarts
or if somebody else had taken them.
But the wicked queen
wanted to have his punishment settled
first of all.
That wasn't at all fair, was it?
Because, you know,
supposing he never took the tarts,
then of course he oughtn't to be punished.
Would you like to be punished
for something you hadn't done?
So Alice said,
Stuff and nonsense.
So the queen said,
off with her head.
Just what she always said when she was angry.
So Alice said,
Who cares for you?
You're nothing but a pack of cards.
So they were all very angry and flew up into the air
and came tumbling down again all over Alice,
just like a shower of rain.
And I think you'll never guess what happened next.
The next thing was Alice woke up out of her curious dream,
and she found that the cards were only
some leaves off the tree that the wind had blown down upon her face.
Wouldn't it be a nice thing to have a curious dream just like Alice?
The best plan is this.
First, lie down under a tree and wait till a white rabbit runs by with a watch in his hand,
then shut your eyes and pretend to be dear little Alice.
Goodbye, Alice, dear.
Goodbye.
The end of chapter 14
Recording by Scotty Smith
End of the Nursery Alice by Lewis Carroll
