Quote:
Originally Posted by Bookpossum
Thanks very much for that link, fantasyfan. I have just downloaded it and had a quick look, and it does end with a drawing of Alice Liddell, rather than one of the photographs. Perhaps the British Library changed that since you downloaded your copy.
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I found the answer. Here it is!
“The story, which began life as ‘Alice’s Adventures Under Ground’, was first told to Alice and her sisters, Lorina and Edith, on a trip down the river on 4 July 1862. The children enjoyed the story so much that Alice asked Dodgson to write it down for her. Written in sepia-coloured ink and including 37 pen and ink illustrations (and a coloured title page) the manuscript was presented to Alice as an early Christmas present on 26 November 1864. Dodgson was not an artist and had some difficulties with the illustrations; he pasted a photograph of Alice (he was a keen photographer) over a drawing of her that he had included. The original drawing would not be seen again until it was uncovered in 1977. The photograph is now attached to a paper flap, enabling readers to see the illustration underneath.”