Illegal Abuse In Alice In Wonderland

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Lewis Carroll is a notable British author who is well known for his book, “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.” It is the popular story about a curious girl who falls down a rabbit hole and discovers a mysterious and different world with unusual, zany characters with whom she interacts with along the way as she tries to find her way home. Many people today would suggest that he created these insane characters because of the use of illegal substances especially since Opium was a legal drug during his lifetime. I believe that these accusations are completely false. Lewis Carroll did not show any signs of using illegal substances while writing “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.”
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, also known as, Lewis Carroll was born in Daresbury, England on January 27, 1832. He was the eldest boy out of eleven siblings. As a boy, Carroll excelled in mathematics and won many academic achievements. Carroll had a good childhood growing up that was epitome of innocence. Young Carroll attended one of England’s greatest private schools but he was not too fond of it because he missed his family dearly. When he was home, he would assist his father in teaching at the local school and would entertain the children with puzzles and games that he created himself and wrote stories to amuse those close to him. At the age of 20, he was awarded a scholarship to Christ College. Along with being a mathematics lecturer, Carroll was an enthusiastic photographer and wrote essays, political pamphlets and poetry.
Carr...

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...Worthington, Children's Literature lecturer at Cardiff University.
Anthony Browne, an illustrator for the 1988 edition of Alice in Wonderland, believes Carroll may have not have been mindful of the connotations in his own story. "People interpret books in a logical way as they do dreams. They want it to have meaning." "In a way, it does not matter," says Browne. "I don't think Carroll wrote Alice in Wonderland to be interpreted. He wrote it to entertain."
In conclusion, Lewis Carroll did not show any signs of using illegal substances while writing “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.” Lewis Carroll simply just had a very imaginative and creative style of writing. This book was purely innocent and whimsical, just like the little girl he wrote it for.

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