Jabberwocky


It is considered by many to be one of the greatest nonsense poems written in the English language. The poem is sometimes used in primary schools to teach students about the use of portmanteau and nonsense words in poetry, as well as use of nouns and verbs.


The poem

Glossary
The first verse originally appeared in Mischmasch—a periodical which Carroll wrote and edited for the amusement of his family—claiming to be a piece of Anglo-Saxon poetry.
Several of the words in the poem are of Carroll's own invention, many of them portmanteaux. In the book, the character of Humpty Dumpty gives definitions for the nonsense words in the first stanza.

The rest of the nonsense words were never explicitly defined by Carroll, who claimed that he did not know what some of them meant. An extended analysis of the poem is given in the book The Annotated Alice, including writings from Carroll about how he formed some of his idiosyncratic words.

A few words that Carroll invented in this poem (namely "chortled" and "galumphing") have entered the English language. The word jabberwocky itself is sometimes used to refer to nonsense language.


Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.

Bandersnatch – A swift moving creature with snapping jaws, capable of extending its neck.

Borogove – A thin shabby-looking bird with its feathers sticking out all round, "something like a live mop". The initial syllable of borogove is pronounced as in borrow, rather than as in burrow..

Brillig – Four o'clock in the afternoon: the time when you begin broiling things for dinner.

Burbled – Possibly a mixture of "bleat", "murmur", and "warble". Burble is also pre-existing word, circa 1303, meaning to form bubbles as in boiling water.

Chortled - Combination of chuckle and snort.

Frabjous - Probably a blend of fair, fabulous, and joyous .

Frumious – Combination of "fuming" and "furious."

Galumphing - Perhaps a blend of "gallop" and "triumphant".

Used to describe a way of "trotting" down hill, while keeping one foot further back than the other. This enables the Galumpher to stop quickly.

Gimble – To make holes as does a gimlet.

Gyre – To go round and round like a gyroscope. However, Carroll also wrote in Mischmasch that it meant to scratch like a dog.

The g is pronounced like the /g/ in gold, not like gem..

Jubjub – A desperate bird that lives in perpetual passion.

Manxome – Fearsome; the word is of unknown origin. Mimsy – Combination of "miserable" and "flimsy".

Mome – Possibly short for "from home," meaning that the raths had lost their way.

Outgrabe (past tense; present tense outgribe) – Something between bellowing and whistling, with a kind of sneeze in the middle.

Rath – A sort of green pig. (See Origin and structure for further details.)

Slithy – Combination of "slimy" and "lithe." The i is long, as in writhe.

Tove – A combination of a badger, a lizard, and a corkscrew.
Jabberwocky
Alice In Wonderland (1983) - Jabberwocky
They are very curious looking creatures which make their nests under sundials and eat only cheese. Pronounced so as to rhyme with groves. Note that "gyre and gimble," i.e. rotate and bore, is in reference to the toves being partly corkscrew by Humpty Dumpty's definitions.

Tulgey - Thick, dense, dark.

Uffish – A state of mind when the voice is gruffish, the manner roughish, and the temper huffish.

Vorpal - See vorpal sword.

Wabe – The grass plot around a sundial.

It is called a "wabe" because it goes a long way before it, and a long way behind it, and a long way beyond it on each side.

Pronunciation


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In the Preface to The Hunting of the Snark, Carroll wrote:
Also, in an author's note (dated Christmas 1896) about Through the Looking-Glass, Carroll wrote:

Origin and structure
The poem was written during Lewis Carroll's stay with relatives at Whitburn, near Sunderland, although the first stanza was written in Croft on Tees, close to nearby Darlington, where Carroll lived as a boy. The story may have been inspired by the local Sunderland area legend of the Lambton Worm, as noted in "A Town Like Alice's" by Michael Bute (1997 Heritage Publications, Sunderland) and as later adapted in "Alice in Sunderland" by Brian Talbot.
The first stanza of the poem originally appeared in Mischmasch, a periodical that Carroll wrote and illustrated for the amusement of his family. It was entitled "Stanza of Anglo-Saxon Poetry." Carroll also gave translations of some of the words which are different from Humpty Dumpty's.

For example, a "rath" is described as a species of land turtle that lived on swallows and oysters. Also, "brillig" is spelled with two ys rather than with two is.
Roger Lancelyn Green, in the Times Literary Supplement (March 1, 1957), and later in The Lewis Carroll Handbook (1962), suggests that the rest of the poem may have been inspired by an old German ballad, "The Shepherd of the Giant Mountains".

It was translated into English by Lewis Carroll's relative Menella Bute Smedley in 1846, many years before the appearance of the Alice books. Palmer notes a possible Shakespearean source. The inspiration for the Jabberwock allegedly came from a tree in the gardens of Christ Church, Oxford, where Carroll was a mathematician under his right name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson.

The tree in question is large and ancient with many sprawling, twisted branches somewhat suggestive of tentacles, or of the Hydra of Greek mythology.
Although the poem contains many nonsensical words, its structure is perfectly consistent with classic English poetry. The sentence structure is accurate (another aspect that has been challenging to reproduce in other languages), the poetic forms are observed (e.g.
Jabberwocky
Jabberwocky - Jan Svankmajer (clip) http://Www.cinema16.org
quatrain verse, rhymed, iambic meter), and a "story" is somewhat discernible in the flow of events. According to Alice in Through the Looking-Glass, "Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas – only I don't exactly know what they are!".
The narrative contained in the middle four verses of the poem may be considered as an example of the monomyth.
Translations
"Jabberwocky" has become famous around the world, with translations into many languages. The task of translation is the more notable and difficult because many of the principal words of the poem were simply made up by Carroll, having had no previous meaning.

Translators have generally dealt with these words by inventing words of their own. Sometimes these are similar in spelling or sound to Carroll's words while respecting the morphology of the language to be translated into.

In cases like this both the original and the invented words may echo actual words in the lexicon, but not necessarily ones with similar meanings. The same French translation uses "lubricilleux" for "slithy", evoking French words like "lubrifier" (to lubricate) to give a similar impression of the meaning of the invented word.

It makes a great difference whether the poem is translated in isolation or as part of a translation of the novel. In the latter case the translator must, through Humpty Dumpty, supply explanations of the invented words in the first stanza.
Full translations of "Jabberwocky" into French and German can be found in Martin Gardner's The Annotated Alice along with a discussion of why some translation decisions were made.
Yuen Ren Chao, a Chinese linguist, translated "Jabberwocky" into Chinese by inventing characters to imitate what Rob Gifford describes as the "slithy toves that gyred and gimbled in the wabe of Carroll's original". Satyajit Ray the famous film-maker translated this poem in Bengali.
Reception of the poem
"Jabberwocky" was meant by Carroll as a parody designed to show how not to write a poem. The poem has since transcended Carroll's purpose, becoming now the subject of serious study.

This transformation of perception was in a large part predicted by G. In most cases the writers simply change the nonsense words into words relating to the parodied subject (e.g.
Jabberwocky
Donovan - Jabberwocky
Other writers use the poem as a poetic form, much like a sonnet, and create their own nonsense words and glossaries (e.g. In 31 years the Gaberbocchus Press published over sixty titles, including works by Alfred Jarry, Kurt Schwitters, Bertrand Russell and the Themersons themselves.

Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi became one of the most celebrated plays and was published in many editions.

Literature
In 1943, Henry Kuttner, writing with his wife C. The story was the inspiration for the 2007 film The Last Mimzy.
In 1951, noted mystery writer Fredric Brown drew substantively on the poem for the comic mystery novel Night of the Jabberwock, in which the narrator learns that the Alice novels are not fiction but are an encoded report detailing the existence of another plane of reality.
In 1962, in his short story "Naudsonce," H.

Beam Piper used a blend of the first few lines from "Jabberwocky" and Robert W. Service's "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" as a demonstration to a newly encountered alien race that humans use a spoken language.

The contact team member stood before the alien assemblage and solemnly intoned "'Twas brillig and the slithy toves were whooping it up in the Malemute Saloon, and the kid that handled the music box did gyre and gimble in the wabe, and back of the bar in a solo game all mimsy were the borogoves, and the mome raths outgrabe the lady that's known as Lou".
Roger Zelazny's Chronicles of Amber series had a vivid scene where Luke has an acid trip and winds up in the poem and Merlin must save him.
A character in the book Alien vs Predator: Hunter's Planet by David Bischoff and Stephani Perry, on numerous occasions remembers bits and pieces of the poem, first as a way to pass the time, then as a comparison to the grotesque form of the Xenomorph.
Military science fiction author John Ringo has based a certain portion of his Space Bubble series of books around the Jabberwocky, partially in reference to the nonsensical nature of quantum physics that the characters end up dealing with. The Jabberwock has a body like that of a dragon and its head is like that of an insect; an image probably inspired by the book's original illustration (see above).

Film and TV
In 1934, a Betty Boop short titled Betty in Blunderland was released featuring the Jabberwock as the antagonist.
The 1941 film Pimpernel Smith quotes the poem in a humorous discussion of the differences between British and German culture.
In the 1951 Disney version of Alice in Wonderland, the Cheshire Cat is heard singing the poem before he materializes in front of Alice.
In 1971, film director Jan Švankmajer made a 14 minute short film called Jabberwocky (Žvahlav aneb šaticky Slaměného Huberta) which features the whole poem.

As the poem is read out, various toys come to life, dancing around. The only thing that seems to stop the toys is a black cat that appears.
Lewis Carroll " Jabberwocky" Poem Animation
The Jabberwocky
The movie's plot very loosely resembles that of the poem.
In 1995, the vampire-cop drama Forever Knight featured an episode called "Curiouser and Curiouser," where Nick enters a delusional world where everyone is opposite and his vampiric father LaCroix (Nigel Bennett) recites lines from the Carroll poetry. In the final confrontation, a visibly-stabbed LaCroix recites the second-to-last stanza from the Jabberwocky poem, the Jabberwock referring to himself and the "beamish boy" referring to his son Nick, who attempted patricide in a previous episode.

Bennett won a Gemini Award for Best Supporting Actor for the episode.
An episode of The Muppet Show adapted most of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass, including this poem, for which special muppets of slithy toves, borogoves, mome raths, and the Jabberwock were designed, all based on Tenniel's illustrations.
The anime "Project Arms" circa 2001 has many references to Carrol's work. Various other characters have 'forms' or powers relating to his works, such as one female character having the power of the "Queen of Hearts."

Music
Michael Hedges often performed yoga moves on stage while reciting this poem.
René Clausen and Jan Moeyaert composed a choral piece titled Jabberwocky out of this poem.
A recitation of "Jabberwocky" is included on A Book of Human Language, hip hop MC Aceyalone's sophomore album.
Donovan set the poem to music on his album HMS Donovan.
A full recitation of "Jabberwocky" is included on Ambrosia's 1975 self-titled album, in the song "Mama Frog".
English band Hatcham Social have recorded their own rendition of the poem.
The band Dzeltenie Pastnieki based the opening track on their 1984 album Alise around a Latvian translation of the poem, titled "Džabervokijs".
The band The Crüxshadows quoted the poem on their Tears album in 2001.
The band Forgive Durden released 'Beware The Jubjub Bird And Shun The Frumious Bandersnatch', their first single, in 2006.
The band The Books feature excerpts from "Jabberwocky" frequently in their song "Vogt Dig For Kloppervok".

Games and toys
Due to its popularity as a poem, a multitude of role-play and video games have used the artifacts and characters of the poem in their respective universes.
Jabberwocky ' - By LEWIS CARROLL
Jabberwocky
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