If you know me, you know of my love of the Jabberwocky, a poem written in nonesense verse by Lewis Carrol author of 'Alice
in Wonderland'. What you may not know is it's meaning or it's history. I will attempt to give you both, including some of
my interpretations on this brilliant work of art.
Brief History
The first stanza appeared in a publication by Carroll, called 'Mischmasch', under the name 'A Stanza of Anglo-Saxon
Poetry'. Within the publication, he gave definitions for the nonesense words in the poem. It then appeared in full in 'Through
the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There', as a poem Alice find in looking-glass world. She would later meet the
character Humpty-Dumpty, a self-proclaimed word expert, who told her the meanings of the words in the first stanza (his definitions
are very different from the definitions given in 'Mischmasch'.) Carroll would later give many of the definitions of the later
stanza's nonsense words in letters and in his introduction to the companion poem to the Jabberwocky
Meaning of the Words
Carroll detailed the meaning of the words in one form or another. What should be realized is that the poem was probably intended
to have people come up with their own idea of what the poem meant, especially considering that the person who tells the meanings
of the words, Humpty-Dumpty, is not the most reliable person when it comes to word definitions (he can pay words to mean whatever
he wants, which has the side-effect of obfuscating what he's trying to say sometimes).
In 'Mischmasch' Carrol gave the following plain English approximation of the first stanza:
"It was evening, and the smooth active badgers were scratching and boring holes in the hill side, all unhappy were the parrots,
and the grave turtles squeaked out."
And the following comments on the stanza's meaning:
"There were probably sun dials on the top of the hill, and the 'borogoves' were afraid that their nests of 'raths', which
ran out squeaking with fear on hearing the 'toves' scratching outside."
Here is a comparison of the meanings given for the words in the first stanza of 'Mischmasch' and Humpty Dumpty in 'Alice
in Wonderland':
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Brillig (Bryllyg in the original publication)
Derived from broil
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The time of broiling, i.e. the close of the afternoon
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four o'clock in the afternoon -- the time when you begin BROILING things for dinner
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Slithy (Slythy in the original publication)
Portmanteau of slimy and lithe
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A species of Badger. They had smooth white hair, long hind legs, and short horns like a stag. Lived chiefly on cheese.
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something like badgers--something like lizards--and something like corkscrews
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Gyre
Derived from gyaour (a dog)
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to go round and round like a gyroscope
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Gimble (Gymble in the original publication)
Derived from gimblet
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to screw out holes in anything
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to make holes like a gimlet
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the grass-plot round a sun-dial (because it goes a long way before it, and a long way behind it, and a long way beyond
it on each side)
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Mimsy
Portmanteau of flimsy and miserable
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An extinct kind of Parrot. They had no wings, beaks turned up, an made their nests under sun-dials; lived on veal
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a thin shabby-looking bird with its feathers sticking out all round-- something like a live mop
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Mome
Derived from solemome (solemn)
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short for "from home"--meaning that they'd lost their way
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A species of land turtle. Head erect, mouth like a shark, the front fore legs curbed out so that the animal walked on
its knees; smooth green body; lived on swallows and oysters
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something between bellowing and whistling, with a kind of sneeze in the middle
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Sources:
Alice in Wonderland, Chapter 6: Humpty Dumpty
Stanza of Anglo-Saxon Poetry, Mischmasck
Jabberwocky, Wikipedia
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