Lewis Carroll : a portrait with background

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Lewis Carroll : a portrait with background

Donald Thomas

John Murray, 1996

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Includes bibliographical references and index

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Description

In this biography, the author reveals Lewis Carroll as a man who faced what Robert Browning described as "The Dangerous Edge of Things", closer to the underworld of psychopathology, crime and vice than his admirers thought possible, yet closer still to the golden afternoon of Wonderland. Despite the apparent seclusion of his life in an Oxford college, Lewis Carroll as the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson had strong political views and was unusually well informed about the vices of his age. He saw mid-Victorian London at its most raffish, while his library contained books on prostitution and the criminal underworld. He showed a sustained interest in law, crime and madness, counting the most eminent advocates and judges among his friends. "Alice in Wonderland" may appear as a spontaneous tale told on a summer afternoon; David Thomas shows it as the fruit of Dodgson's classical education and a reflection of momentous changes in mid-Victorian law and society. Though a recluse in his later years, Dodgson in the 1860s was an inveterate theatre-goer, a friend of a young actress, a guest in the bohemia of the Pre-Raphaelites, and photographer of the famous. His summer months were spent in the elegance and comfort of the fashionable Voctorian seaside. The most paradoxical of Victorians was an opponent of vivisection and blood sports who teased his readers with the humour of cruelty. He was importunate in persuading "little nudities" to pose before his camera, yet described any attempt to overcome their reluctance as a "crime before God". Dodgson, the anxious prude, left to the world unfettered imagination of Lewis Carroll in Alice and "The Hunting of the Snark". Within 40 years of his death, his progency had escaped the nursery to rub shoulders with Swift and Sade, Freud and surrealism.

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