| Carroll, Lewis (1832-98), English
author, mathematician, and logician, best known for his creation of the
immortal fantasy Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Carroll was born Charles Lutwidge Dodgson in Daresbury, Cheshire, on January
27, 1832, and was educated at Rugby and at Christ Church College, University
of Oxford. From 1855 to 1881 he was a member of the faculty of mathematics
at Oxford. He was the author of several mathematical treatises, including
Euclid and His Modern Rivals (1879). In 1865 he published under his pseudonym
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass
and What Alice Found There, appeared in 1871. These were followed by Phantasmagoria
and Other Poems (1869), The Hunting of the Snark (1876), and a novel,
Sylvie and Bruno (2 vol., 1889-93). He died at Guildford, Surrey, on January
14, 1898.
Always a friend of children, particularly little girls, Carroll wrote
thousands of letters to them, delightful flights of fantasy, many illustrated
with little sketches. They have been collected and published as The Letters
of Lewis Carroll (2 vol., 1979) by Morton N. Cohen and Roger L. Green.
Carroll gained an additional measure of fame as an amateur photographer.
Most of his camera portraits were of children in various costumes and
poses, including nude studies; he also did portraits of adults, including
the actress Ellen Terry and the poets Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Dante
Gabriel Rossetti. Apparently because his posing of children was criticized,
he abandoned photography in 1880.
The Alice stories, which have made the name Lewis Carroll famous throughout
the world, and have been translated into many languages, were originally
written in 1862 for Alice Liddell, a daughter of Henry George Liddell,
dean of Christ Church College. On publication, the works, illustrated
by the English cartoonist Sir John Tenniel, became immediately popular
as books for children. Their subsequent appeal to adults is based upon
the ingenious mixture of fantasy and realism, gentle satire, absurdity,
and logic. The names and sayings of the characters, such as the March
Hare, the Mad Hatter, the Cheshire Cat, and the White Knight, have become
part of everyday speech.
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