Topic > Analysis of Through the Looking Glass - 992

He suffered from insomnia and even Alice in Wonderland syndrome, which made it difficult for him to sleep at night, but which influenced Carroll even more in producing his famous writings and making his inventions are famous. In Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, both contrast her life, as Alice "sleeps" and dreams in both. Alice in Wonderland syndrome, is an illness in which one may begin to think that one's body is becoming smaller, and we see that in Through the Looking Glass Carroll writes, "the Queen was no longer at her side - she had suddenly reduced to the size of a little doll…” (Carroll ch. 9). He takes advantage of his difficulties, which is clever, and puts them into his writings, making him a very inspirational writer. Lewis Carroll was someone with a lot of sense of logic .In Through the Looking Glass, he classifies the world Alice has entered as a big chess game. There is also a reversal of the looking glass when Alice enters the Looking Glass world, doing everything in reverse mirror, when the White King says "look along the road and tell me if you can see one". Alice replied: "I don't see anyone on the street". Carroll chapter 7). This sense of logic is funny, as it calls "Nobody" a