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Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (also known as Alice Through the Looking-Glass or simply Through the Looking-Glass) is a novel published on 27 December 1871 (although it is indicated [where?] that the novel was published in 1872 [1]) by Lewis Carroll, a mathematics lecturer at Christ Church, University of Oxford, and the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865).
Throughout the book he is known as a "child prodigy." One day, Barty and his mother go to his father's grave when it is raining. Agnes gets soaked in the weather, but not a single drop touched Barty, as he says, "I ran where the rain wasn't." Barty, when reading at the age of three, starts to complain about wavy lines in the pages of his book.
Mitchell's adaptation originated as a commission from the Royal Shakespeare Company.In his version, Mitchell uses a fictionalized version of the biographically famous "Golden Afternoon" on the 4th of July 1862, when Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) first told the stories that would become the Alice novels to his friend Canon Robinson Duckworth and the Liddell children, Alice, Lorina, and Edith.
Leaving the car, they walk along a path, where they see panes of slow glass facing a view of a loch. They meet Mr Hagan, who is sitting on a low wall in front of his stone farmhouse and looking toward the house. Inside, through the window, they see a young woman, presumably Mrs Hagan, and a small boy.
Madam, Will You Talk? is a novel by Mary Stewart, first published in 1955. [1] It is Stewart's first published novel.The title is a quotation from a folk song, Madam, Will You Walk?: the line "Madam, will you walk and talk with me?"
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Through a Glass Darkly, a 1978 album by Peter Howell; Through a Glass Darkly, a 1999 album by David Olney "Through a Glass, Darkly", a song by Hammock from Kenotic (2005) Through a Glass, Darkly, an oratorio by Michael Shaieb; premiered in 2008 "Through a Glass Darkly", a 2010 program by the Blue Devils Drum and Bugle Corps
The passer-through-walls (French: Le Passe-muraille), translated as The Man Who Walked through Walls, The Walker-through-Walls or The Man who Could Walk through Walls, is a short story published by Marcel Aymé in 1941.