Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was written in the 1860s, during the Victorian era. Men wore three piece suits, women wore long dresses with corsets and crinolines, and young girls wore over the knee dresses with pinafores to protect them.
For the Wikipedia entry on 1860s fashion follow the related link below.
foot rest
Follow the Related Link below to see an example of archetypal criticism of Alice in Wonderland
Hedgehogs are used as croquet balls in Alice in Wonderland. However, hedgehogs are not rodents.
Hedgehogs were used as croquet balls in "Alice in Wonderland." The Queen of Hearts used flamingos as mallets to hit the hedgehogs through the croquet wickets.
Music in Alice and Wonderland is used to help tell stories. This happens during the songs performed by twiddle Dee and twiddle dumb, the Cheshire cat, and the mad hatter.
hmmm might be matiesseit
Yes she is. She is the song they used to promote the film.
It all started in Oxford, England in a boat beneath a sunny sky where echoes fade and memories die. Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), Reverend Duckworth, Alice Liddell (The Real Alice), Lorina Liddell, and Edith Liddell were all in that boat that famous day. Lewis was telling the three little girls of a marvelous place called Wonderland and Alice loved the stories so much that she asked him to give it to her as a book. So Lewis set to work and gave it to her for Christmas. Later his friend George Macdonald had his children read the story and they told Lewis to publish it. Thus the story was born on a boat. I suggest you read "Still She Haunts Me" it'll explain every detail of why the Wonderland was made.
In "Alice in Wonderland," the flamingos were used as mallets in a game of flamingo croquet. The Queen of Hearts ordered her subjects to use the live flamingos as mallets, which added to the whimsical and nonsensical nature of the story.
Hat makers - the Mad Hatter is a character in the story.
In the original Disney movie, the croquet balls were hedgehogs :D
No, "Alice in Wonderland" does not contain any explicit or bad language. The book is a classic children's story known for its whimsical and fantastical elements, making it suitable for readers of all ages.