'Begin at the beginning, and go on till you come to the end: then
stop.'. So many readers were to take the advice of the King of Hearts
that by the end of the nineteenth century the double Alice (1865 and
1872) had acquired a pre-eminent and unassailable position in children's
literature. Lewis Carroll's use of logic, by which the ordinary is
translated into the extraordinary in an entirely plausible way, is
delightfully combined with an exceptional knowledge and understanding of
the mind of the child. Satire, allusion, and symbolism weave deeper and
mysterious meanings, lending a measure of immortality to Carroll's
remarkable fantasy.