![]() ![]() ![]() Actually there is no evidence that Carroll ever tried drugs beyond some alarming-sounding homeopathic remedies, which included dosing himself with “aconite and arsenic” to cure a stubborn cold. Songs such as Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” (“Remember what the Dormouse said / Feed your head, feed your head”) have encouraged a whole generation of readers to think of Alice’s journey underground as another kind of trip. DrugsĮven more popular is the theory that Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is a thinly veiled allegory about drug use. His defenders point out that such interpretations probably reveal more about our own fears than they do about Carroll. ![]() ![]() Alice’s attempts to move aside a curtain and squeeze through a little doorway have also attracted comment, particularly when viewed alongside Carroll’s history of child friendships. William Empson gleefully pointed out that Alice is “a father in getting down the hole, a foetus at the bottom, and can only be born by becoming a mother and producing her own amniotic fluid”. Psychoanalytical interpreters have seized on it with particular relish. While the story invites us to step inside Alice’s head, some readers have wondered if it reveals more about her creator. ![]()
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