How does alice leave wonderland




















I shall be late! Alice gets very curious and follows him down his rabbit-hole. The rabbit-hole suddenly goes straight down and Alice falls into it.

She falls very slowly and while she is talking to herself she falls asleep. Suddenly she lands on a heap of sticks and dry leaves and the fall is over.

She sees the White Rabbit running in front of her through a long passage and she continues to follow him. When she turns the corner the Rabbit is gone and Alice finds herself in a long, low hall, with doors all round it. She tries them, but they are all locked.

Then she comes upon a little three-legged table on which a little golden key lies. The key fits in a little door behind a curtain and when she opens it she sees that it leads into a small passage.

At the end of the passage Alice sees a beautiful garden. She really wants to get into the garden, but she is too big to fit through the door. Alice drinks from it and starts shrinking until she is only ten inches high. She now has the right size to enter the door, but she finds that the door is still locked and that she has left the little golden key on the table, which is now too high to reach. Hoping that this cake will make her grow or shrink too, she eats it.

Suddenly Alice finds herself growing and she continues growing until she reaches the ceiling. Now she is able to get the key from the table, but again she is too big to fit through the door. This situation makes her cry and she cries until there is a large pool all round her, which reaches half down the hall. The White Rabbit returns, now splendidly dressed and carrying a pair of white kid gloves and a large fan.

Alice asks him for help, but the Rabbit is so frightened that he drops the gloves and fan and runs away. Alice picks them up and starts fanning herself while she wonders what it is that has made this day so different from every other. The fanning makes Alice shrink again until she is two feet high. She tries again to enter the door but it is still locked and the key is still lying on the table. Then she slips and falls into her own pool of tears.

She encounters a Mouse who fell into the pool too, but she frightens him when she starts talking about her cat Dinah and a dog. He promises her to tell her why he hates cats and dogs and they swim to the shore, taking other creatures that fell into the pool too with them. As all creatures are wet they start thinking of a way to get dry. The Dodo draws a circle in which they all start running at random. After half an hour they are quite dry and the race is over. The Dodo decides that everyone has won and all must have prizes.

They look to Alice for these, and she hands around comfits, which she finds in her pocket. The Mouse thinks she must have a prize herself and she is presented her own thimble. When no one pays attention he becomes angry and leaves. The other creatures leave too when Alice begins talking about her cat again.

The White Rabbit returns, looking for his fawn and gloves. Alice wants to help but finds that the hall has vanished. When the Rabbit sees Alice he mistakes her for his maid, Mary Ann, and orders her to go home and get him a pair of gloves and a fan. Ask Question. Asked 11 months ago. Active 8 months ago. Viewed 2k times. Warning, many spoilers of Alice in Wonderland and sequel.

What I can recall is that she entered Wonderland through a rabbit hole just like the 2nd time and as for her departure I recall the following: The young Alice unintentionally destroyed the Red Queen's house of cards. However, I don't remember anymore how the young Alice escaped. Do you know? Thank you. Improve this question. John John 5 5 bronze badges.

Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Valorum Valorum k gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Alright it was a dream, but the dreams are memories of her actual visit. The talking door in your movie clip refuses to open to let Alice go. Amidst this madness, Alice bumps into the Cheshire Cat again, who asks her how she is doing.

The King of Hearts interrupts their conversation and attempts to bully the Cheshire Cat, who impudently dismisses the King. The Duchess approaches Alice and attempts to befriend her, but the Duchess makes Alice feel uneasy.

Alice shares her strange experiences with the Mock Turtle and the Gryphon, who listen sympathetically and comment on the strangeness of her adventures. The King of Hearts leads the proceedings, and various witnesses approach the stand to give evidence. The Mad Hatter and the Cook both give their testimony, but none of it makes any sense. The White Rabbit, acting as a herald, calls Alice to the witness stand. The King goes nowhere with his line of questioning, but takes encouragement when the White Rabbit provides new evidence in the form of a letter written by the Knave.

The letter turns out to be a poem, which the King interprets as an admission of guilt on the part of the Knave. SparkTeach Teacher's Handbook. Themes Motifs Symbols. Alice saw that she could now reach the key on the table, and she picked up the golden key, hurried off to the garden door, and unlocked it. She looked along the passageway, only to find that she is worse off than before, as she could only look at the garden with one eye. She was so gigantic that she couldn't fit through the door now and get into the pretty garden.

Sad and frustrated, she began to cry uncontrollably, and her tremendous tears flooded part of the chamber. The White Rabbit runs by and is so frightened of the giant Alice that he drops his gloves and fan.

He immediately scurries away into the darkness. Alice fans herself with the fan, wondering if she is still the same person that she was before she fell down the rabbit hole. Using the White Rabbit's fan causes Alice to shrink again, and she finds herself swimming through her own tears.

Alice tries to make small talk with a talking Mouse while they paddle together, but the only topic of conversation that comes to mind is her beloved pussy cat, Dinah , which offends him deeply. So Alice starts to talk about a pleasant little dog that lives near her house, but when she mentioned that the dog kills rats the Mouse gets offended again. The Mouse then tells Alice to get to shore so he could tell her his history on why he dislikes cats and dogs.

The pool quickly becomes crowded with other talking animals and birds that have been swept away, and they all swim to shore. The group decides that the first order of business is drying off, so the mouse gives them a very dry lecture on William the Conqueror.

When this proves ineffective, the Dodo decides that the best thing to dry them off would be a Caucus-Race. The Dodo marks out a race course in an approximate circle, the racers begin running whenever they feel like it, and everyone wins in the end. Alice reaches into her pocket and gives sugar coated sweets to the winners.

The animals then beg the mouse to tell them something more and he recites a tale about a mouse and a dog. Alice mistakes the mouse's tale for his tail; this insults him and he leaves. The others and Alice beg him to finish his story, but he refuses and walks away quicker. Flustered, Alice begins talking about her pet cat Dinah again, which frightens the rest of the animals away. Lonely and sad at the prospect of everyone not seeming to like Dinah, Alice sits down on a tree-stump and starts to sob bitterly.

He orders her to go back to his house and fetch him his gloves and fan. Inside the house, she finds another bottle and drinks from it, hoping that it will make her grow large again.

Before she knew it, Alice grows so large that she has to stick one arm out the window and her foot up the chimney. The horrified Rabbit orders his gardener, Bill the Lizard , to climb on the roof and go down the chimney. As Bill slides down the chimney, Alice kicks him out with her foot, shooting him up into the sky. Outside, Alice hears the voices of animals that have gathered to gawk at her giant arm.

The crowd hurls pebbles at her, which turn into little cakes. When Alice nibbles the cakes, she suddenly shrinks down again.



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