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Lewis Carroll
Lewis
Carroll is the pseudonym of the English writer and mathematician
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, b. Jan. 27, 1832, d. Jan. 14, 1898, known
especially for ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND (1865) and THROUGH
THE LOOKING GLASS (1872), children's books that are also distinguished
as satire and as examples of verbal wit. Carroll invented his pen
name by translating his first two names into the Latin "Carolus
Lodovicus" and then anglicizing it into "Lewis Carroll."
The son of a clergyman and the firstborn of 11 children, Carroll
began at an early age to entertain himself and his family with magic
tricks, marionette shows, and poems written for homemade newspapers.
From 1846 to 1850 he attended Rugby School; he graduated from Christ
Church College, Oxford, in 1854. Carroll remained there, lecturing
on mathematics and writing treatises and guides for students. Although
he took deacon's orders in 1861, Carroll was never ordained a priest,
partly because he was afflicted with a stammer that made preaching
difficult and partly, perhaps, because he had discovered other interests.
Among Carroll's avocations was photography, at which he became proficient.
He excelled especially at photographing children. Alice Liddell,
one of the three daughters of Henry George Liddell, the dean of
Christ Church, was one of his photographic subjects and the model
for the Fictional Alice.
Carroll's comic and children's works also include The Hunting of
the Snark (1876), two collections of humorous verse, and the two
parts of Sylvie and Bruno (1889, 1893), unsuccessful attempts to
re-create the Alice fantasies.
As a mathematician, Carroll was conservative and derivative. As
a logician, he was more interested in logic as a game than as an
instrument for testing reason. In his diversions as a photographer
and author of comic fantasy, he is most memorable and original--the
man who, for example, contributed, in "Jabberwocky," the
word chortle, a portmanteau word that combines "snort"
and "chuckle," to the English language.
- DONALD J. GRAY
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