The First Voice
by Lewis Carroll
English novelist and poet. Famous for his children's stories, especially Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865), Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There (1871). His children's poems include Phantasmagoria (published with other poems in 1869), The Hunting of the Snark (1876) and Sylvie and Bruno (1889). He also published various mathematical treatises of which the most notable is his light-hearted defence of Euclid, Euclid and his Modern Rivals. His stories and poems have been seen as revolutionising children's literature,
breaking with and even parodying the moral tales which had previously dominated.
The Three Voices
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HE trilled a carol fresh and free, It passed athwart the glooming flat - All to the feet of one who stood With huge umbrella, lank and brown, Then, with an aspect cold and grim, A while like one in dreams he stood, For it had lost its shape and shine, "To dine!" she sneered in acid tone. The tear-drop trickled to his chin: "Term it not 'radiance,'" said he: And she "Yea so? Yet wherefore cease? He moaned: he knew not what to say. "To dine!" she shrieked in dragon-wrath. "Say, can thy noble spirit stoop "Canst thou desire or pie or puff? "Yet well-bred men," he faintly said, Her visage scorched him ere she spoke: "Such wretches live: they take their share "We grant them - there is no escape - "In all such theories," said he, Baffled, she gave a wolfish bark: She felt that her defeat was plain, Fixing her eyes upon the beach, He could not answer yea or nay: "If that be so," she straight replied, "The world is but a Thought," said he: And darkly fell her answer dread "The Good and Great must ever shun "The man that smokes - that reads the TIMES - He felt it was his turn to speak, But when she asked him "Wherefore so?" While, like broad waves of golden grain, Pitying his obvious distress, "A truth of such undoubted weight," Roused into sudden passion, she But when she saw him quail and quake, "Thought in the mind doth still abide "And he, that yearns the truth to know, "And thus the chain, that sages sought, So passed they on with even pace: |