This is from Alice in Wonderland. And ah the painful irony (and I'm told that Americans don't do irony) of a turtle singing about turtle soup, in the same way that a turkey might sing about Christmas dinner/Thanksgiving dinner or Hilary Clinton might sing the praises of the fabulous Barack Hussain Obama.
The melancholy Lewis Carroll character named for the offal used in England to imitate an expensive reptilian soup is the Mock Turtle from "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." He is a sad, turtle-like creature who tells stories of his past experiences and laments his transformation into mock turtle soup.
Beautiful Soup is a good example of Carroll's ability to create effective parodies because it satirizes Victorian society's obsession with propriety and logic by using absurd and nonsensical language and situations. Carroll cleverly mocks societal norms and conventions through nonsensical characters and events, providing a humorous and exaggerated reflection of contemporary culture. The poem effectively parodies the rigid and formulaic nature of educational systems and social conventions prevalent during Carroll's time.
The Mock Turtle is a character in Lewis Carroll's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.He is named after mock turtle soup, which was very popular in England at the time the book was written. Turtle soup was considered a delicacy, but as turtle was too expensive for most people they made fake, or mock, turtle soup instead, usually from calf's head and offal.Carroll clearly found the idea that a mock turtle would be a real animal quite funny (in much the same way that Scottish people occasionally joke about hunting for wild haggis)
Go to Neopia Central, click on Marketplace above the map, then go to the bottom-left corner. There should be a faerie next to a pot of soup.
The soup you’re describing is commonly known as "Beefy Tomato Soup" or "Beef and Tomato Noodle Soup." It typically features ground beef, tomatoes, and noodles, often combined with broth and seasonings for added flavor. Variations may exist, but these ingredients are central to its preparation.
Lewis Carroll, who was a professional mathematician who worked at Oxford University, invented what is now known as the Carroll Diagram or Lewis Carroll Square. It was designed to assist in the resolution of syllogisms, enabling the user to sort data into simple yes/no categories. Please follow the related link below for more details.He also invented rabbits who can tell time and a smoking caterpillar. He invented mushrooms that can enlarge and shrink you, as well as a manically smiling cat, Tweedledee and Tweedledum and croquet with flamingos.
The best place to look would be walmart or sweetbay.
In Tenniel's illustrations, the Mock Turtle is depicted as a sea turtle with the head, rear legs and tail of a cow.In Victorian times, turtle soup was very popular, but expensive, so poorer people ate mock turtle soup (mock means fake). It was commonly made with veal (cow calf). Tenniel's illustration reflects this, although Carroll makes no reference to it in his original text.Follow the link below to see Tenniel's impression of the Mock Turtle
Borscht is a soup of Ukrainian origin that's popular in many Eastern and Central European countries
`Have you seen the Mock Turtle yet?'`No,' said Alice. `I don't even know what a Mock Turtle is.'`It's the thing Mock Turtle Soup is made from,' said the Queen.`I never saw one, or heard of one,' said Alice.`Come on, then,' said the Queen, `and he shall tell you his history,'The Mock Turtle is a character from Lewis Carroll's book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, who does not appear in the 1951 Disney adaptation.He appears in Chapter 9, the Mock Turtle's Story, where he seems to be a miserable character, always sobbing and sighing, but the Gryphon assures Alice that there is actually nothing wrong with him:It's all his fancy, that: he hasn't got no sorrow, you know.The Mock Turtle's name is a joke about a popular food of the time. The Victorians enjoyed turtle soup, but it was very expensive, so they made a fake turtle soup out of calf which was called mock turtle soup - 'mock' meaning 'fake'. Carroll was clearly amused by the idea of a 'mock turtle' being a real creature (in much the same way the Scottish people will occasionally joke about hunting for haggis.)
soup.
Cream soup is a normol soup but puree soup has more efor more things that cream soup dont have.