

If you have specific questions or information about content, the website, and applications, please contact us.
#PICTURES OF MAD HATTER ARCHIVE#
However, Get Archive LLC does not own each component of the compilation displayed and accessible on the PICRYL website and applications.
#PICTURES OF MAD HATTER SOFTWARE#
Get Archive LLC is the owner of the compilation of content that is posted on the PICRYL website and applications, which consists of text, images, audio, video, databases, tags, design, codes, and software ("Content"). Get Archive LLC does not charge permission and license fees for use of any of the content on PICRYL, however, upon request, GetArchive can provide rights clearance for content for a fee. GetArchive believes there are no usage restrictions or limitations put on content in the U.S. Permission for use, re-use, or additional use of the content is not required. Get Archive LLC, creator of PICRYL, endeavors to provide information that it possesses on the copyright status of the content and to identify any other terms and conditions that may apply to the use of the content, however, Get Archive LLC offers no guarantee or assurance that all pertinent information is provided, or that the information is correct in each circumstance. PICRYL makes the world's public domain media fun to find and easy to use. PICRYL is an AI-driven search & similarity engine. PICRYL is the largest media source for public domain images, scans, and documents. Lewis Carroll never intended for the Hatter’s riddle to have an answer.The World's Largest Public Domain Media Search Engine

It is the Cheshire Cat who tells Alice that the March Hare and the Hatter are “both mad.” He is never actually called the Mad Hatter in Carroll’s text. The tag on the Hatter’s hat is a price tag, displaying the price: 10 shillings and 6 pence. John Tenniel may have based his illustration of the Hatter on an eccentric Oxford furniture dealer, Theophilus Carter, who always wore a top hat.
#PICTURES OF MAD HATTER TRIAL#
Rushing out of the courtroom without his shoes during the trial of the Knave of Hearts, trying to evade execution. 27 Mad Hatter's Tea Party Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images FILTERS CREATIVE EDITORIAL VIDEO 27 Mad Hatter's Tea Party Premium High Res Photos Browse 27 mad hatter's tea party photos and images available, or start a new search to explore more photos and images. Usually in the company of the March Hare and Dormouse. Frequently seen drinking tea and eating bread with butter. Frustrating tea party guests with his rudeness. Speaking nonsense and asking riddles which have no answer. “courteous to all, high or low, grand or grotesque, King or Caterpillar…trustful, ready to accept the wildest impossibilities with all that utter trust that only dreamers know…wildly curious…with the eager enjoyment of Life that comes only in the happy hours of childhood.” Alice Liddell was also fond of her family’s two cats - one of which was named Dinah. In the story, Alice has a cat named Dinah. Alice Liddell had short, dark hair, and straight bangs. Tenniel’s drawings of Alice look nothing like Alice Liddell, on whom Carroll’s heroine is based. (Though she later finds herself in Looking-Glass Land.) Did You Know: Waking up from Wonderland to find herself in her sister’s lap. Size changes on occasion, generally when she eats or drinks something. Swimming in a pool of her own tears, getting stuck in the White Rabbit’s house, inviting herself to the Mad Tea Party, playing croquet with the Queen using flamingos and hedgehogs, and interrupting the trial of the Knave of Hearts. Following a White Rabbit and falling into Wonderland.
