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Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore THE WALRU S AND THE CARPENTER A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk through Lewis Carroll's poem For the complete geostories with media resources, visit: http://www.nationalgeographic.org/media/walrus-carpenter-natgeo/ "The Walrus and the Carpenter," a silly and surprisingly morbid poem by Lewis Carroll, was published in 1865. It was a part of the book Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There, a sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. The poem is a narrative, or story, told by the annoying twins Tweedledum and Tweedledee. The GeoStory "The Walrus and the Carpenter... And National Geographic", above, provides the entire text of the poem. It also includes a walk through the poem, with an image and map accompanying each stanza, and in many cases individual lines. The images are either literal representations or metaphors of a line in the stanza. Use the GeoStory to better understand metaphors and other literary devices. Metaphors are figures of speech or visual representations in which a term is applied to something it could not possibly be. "Students have an appetite for learning," for example, is a metaphor. Students don't actually have an appetite for anything except food! Carroll uses a number of other literary devices in "The Walrus and the Carpenter." A series of possible discussion questions about the literary devices used in the poem is provided in the following tab, "Questions." The discussion topics progress from the simplest to the most difficult. 1 of 7

Questions "The Walrus and the Carpenter" is a narrative poem, meaning it tells a story. What are the key events in the narrative? There are four key events in "The Walrus and the Carpenter." The Walrus and the Carpenter ask the oysters to take a walk. Most of the oysters accept. The group stops walking. The Walrus and the Carpenter eat the oysters. Alliteration is the literary device of using the same letter or sound at the beginning of closely connected words. The first line of "The Walrus and the Carpenter" uses alliteration: "The sun was shining on the sea." What other lines of the poem use alliteration? There are several examples of alliteration in the poem: And then they rested on a rock (stanza 10) Of cabbages and kings (stanza 11) A dismal thing to do (stanza 14) Personification is the literary device of giving human characteristics to plants, animals, or objects. (Personification sometimes called anthropomorphism.) Carroll uses personification in describing the Walrus: He speaks, walks, and eats like a person. Besides the Walrus, what other examples of personification can you find in "The Walrus and the Carpenter"? Everything from the sun to the sand is personified in the poem! For example: 2 of 7

the sun shines "with all his might" (stanza 1) the moon shines "sulkily" (stanza 2) the doomed young oysters are "eager for the treat" (stanza 8) A simile is a literary device that simply compares one thing to another, usually using the linking words "like" or "as." "The Walrus and the Carpenter" has two famous, silly similes in one line. Can you spot them? Stanza three begins "The sea was wet as wet could be, the sands were dry as dry." Carroll uses similes to compare the thing to itself! Rhyme is the repeating of a sound (or several sounds) in one or more words. Each of the 18 stanzas in "The Walrus and the Carpenter" has its own set of three rhyming words. Identify the rhyming words in each stanza. Rhyming words, in order: 1. might, bright, night 2. sun, done, fun 3. dry, sky, fly 4. hand, sand, grand 5. year, clear, tear 6. beseech, beach, each 7. said, head, bed 8. treat, neat, feet 9. four, more, shore 10. so, low, row 11. things, kings, wings 12. chat, fat, that 13. need, indeed, feed 14. blue, do, view 15. nice, slice, twice 16. trick, quick, thick 17. sympathize, size, eyes 18. run, none, one 3 of 7

A poem's rhyme scheme is its pattern of rhyme. Each ending line of a rhyming poem is identified by a letter. Rhyming words share the same letter. For example: Mary had a little lamb (A) Its fleece was white as snow (B) And everywhere that Mary went (C) The lamb was sure to go (B) "Mary Had a Little Lamb" has a simple ABCB rhyme scheme. Can you identify the rhyme scheme of "The Walrus and the Carpenter"? (It isn't as hard as it seems!) The poem's rhyme scheme is ABCBDB: "The time has come," the Walrus said, (A) "To talk of many things: (B) Of shoes and ships and sealing-wax (C) Of cabbages -and kings (B) And why the sea is boiling hot (D) And whether pigs have wings." (B) A poem's metre is its rhythm. Like many poems, "The Walrus and the Carpenter" uses iambs to create its metre. An iamb is simply an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable: duh-dum. Iambic meters are usually broken into how many iambs the poet puts in a row. Iambic trimeters are three iambs in a row: duh-dum, duh-dum, duh-dum. Iambic pentameters are five in a row: duh-dum, duh-dum, duh-dum, duh-dum, duh-dum. "The Walrus and the Carpenter" is written in rhythms of seven iambs. What do you think this is called? 4 of 7

The poem uses iambic heptameter. ("Hepta" is "seven" in ancient Greek.) "The Walrus and the Carpenter" is a type of ballad. Can you sing it? Of course you can! It uses the same phrasing as "Amazing Grace," "The Ballad of Gilligan's Island," and "America the Beautiful." A ballad is simply a fourteener, a poem written in iambic heptameter. (Fourteeners have fourteen syllables two iambs in seven meters.) "The Walrus and the Carpenter" is easiest to sing if you just sing the first four lines of a stanza. Try it with the tunes above: "Amazing Grace," "The Ballad of Gilligan's Island," or "America the Beautiful." The time has come, the walrus said to talk of many things Of shoes and ships, and sealing wax of cabbages and kings or Oh beautiful, for spacious skies for amber waves of grain for purple mountains majesties above the fuited plain Vocabulary Term Part of Speech Definition 5 of 7

Term alliteration Part of Definition Speech literary device of using the same letter, sound, or sound group at the beginning of closely connected words. anthropomorphism ballad characteristic Elizabethan iamb Lewis Carroll attributing human characteristics to other organisms or inanimate objects. poem or verse often set to music, originally composed of a poem with the metre of iambic tetrameter followed by iambic trimeter. physical, cultural, or psychological feature of an organism, place, or object. having to do with the reign or time period of adjective Elizabeth I of England (1558-1603). in poetry, an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable: duh-dum. (1832-1898) pen name of British author Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. literally adverb exactly what is said, without exaggeration. literary device metaphor metre morbid technique or method a writer uses to structure their work or produce an effect, such as metaphor or hyperbole. word or phrase used to represent something else, or an understanding of one concept in terms of another concept. rhythmic arrangement of syllables in a line of poetry. adjectivehaving to do with death or dying. narrative story or telling of events. personification attribution of human characteristics to inanimate objects. 6 of 7

poem Term Part of Definition Speech written or spoken composition notable for its beauty or rhythm. rhyme word that has the same ending sound as another word. rhyme scheme pattern of rhyme. simile literary device where two things are directly compared to each other, usually using the words "like" or "as." stanza part of a poem, marked by a certain number of lines or syllables. 1996 2017 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved. 7 of 7