Lewis Carroll Quotes

Lewis Carroll Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Lewis Carroll quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Lewis Carroll. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

You are old, said the youth, and your jaws are too weak For anything tougher than suet; Yet you finished the goose, with the bones and the beak - Pray, how did you manage to do it? In my youth, said his father, I took to the law, And argued e

By Lewis Carroll
What is the use of a book', thought Alice, 'without pictures or conversations?

By Lewis Carroll
We called him Tortoise because he taught us.

By Lewis Carroll
Twinkle, twinkle little bat How I wonder what you're at! Up above the world you fly, Like a tea-tray in the sky

By Lewis Carroll
The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things: Of shoes and ships - and sealing wax - of cabbages and kings

By Lewis Carroll
Surely your gladness need not be the less for the thought that you will one day see a brighter dawn than this - when lovelier sights will meet your eyes than any waving trees or rippling waters - when angel-hands shall undraw your curtains, and sweeter tones than ever loving Mother breathed shall wake you to a new and glorious day - and when all the sadness, and the sin, that darkened life on this little earth, shall be forgotten like the dreams of a night that is past!

By Lewis Carroll
Take care of the sense and the sounds will take care of themselves.

By Lewis Carroll
Sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.

By Lewis Carroll
She generally gave herself very good advice, (though she very seldom followed it).

By Lewis Carroll
Please, Ma' am, is this New Zealand or Australia?

By Lewis Carroll
Oh, 'tis love, 'tis love that makes the world go round

By Lewis Carroll
It's a poor sort of memory that only works backward.

By Lewis Carroll
It is one of the great secrets of life that those things which are most worth doing, we do for others.

By Lewis Carroll
If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there.

By Lewis Carroll
His intimate friends called him `Candle-ends', / And his enemies `Toasted-cheese'.

By Lewis Carroll
He's an Anglo-Saxon Messenger - and those are Anglo-Saxon attitudes.

By Lewis Carroll
For I do not believe God means us thus to divide life into two halves - to wear a grave face on Sunday, and to think it out-of-place to even so much as mention Him on a week-day. Do you think He cares to see only kneeling figures and to hear only tones of prayer - and that He does not also love to see the lambs leaping in the sunlight, and to hear the merry voices of the children, as they roll amoung the hay? Surely their innocent laughter is as sweet in His ears as the grandest anthem that ever rolled up from the 'dim religious light' of some solemn cathedral?

By Lewis Carroll
Everything has got a moral if you can only find it.

By Lewis Carroll
Do cats eat bats? - Do bats eat cats?

By Lewis Carroll
Courtesy while you're thinking what to say. It saves time.

By Lewis Carroll
Alice laughed. 'There's no use trying,' she said. 'One can't believe impossible things.' 'I daresay you haven't had much practice,' said the Queen. 'When I was your age, I always did it half an hour a day. Why, sometimes, I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.'

By Lewis Carroll
'What is the use of a book,' thought Alice, 'without pictures or conversations'

By Lewis Carroll
'Where shall I begin, please your Majesty' he asked. 'Begin at the beginning,' the King said, gravely, 'and go on till you come to the end then stop.'

By Lewis Carroll