Henry Kingsleigh, known informally as Harry, is Alice's younger brother.
Alice's sister
Some believe that she is named Lorina after Alice's real-life sister. Her name was never revealed in Disney's film, but she was named Mathilda in Disney's Alice in Wonderland Jr. She is named Ada in the 1995 Jetlag animated film.
The Alice stories were first created one legendary 'golden afternoon' on 4 July 1862. While entertaining the three Liddell sisters, Alice, Lorina and Edith, during a boating trip, Dodgson improvised the story that would become Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Alice does not have any friends, nor is she an outcast or loner. Much of her time is spent with family, such as her older sister, who gives her daily lessons because Alice is homeschooled.
Alice is a seven-and-a-half-year-old little girl living in an upper-middle-class family in Victorian England. She has an older sister who's too literal-minded to play the imaginative games Alice thinks up, a cat named Dinah that she adores, and a nursemaid who looks after her.
Henry Kingsleigh, known informally as Harry, is Alice's younger brother.
zooming at some topics of this novel, we come up to understand that Little Alice suffers from Hallucinations and Personality Disorders, the White Rabbit from General Anxiety Disorder “I'm late”, the Cheshire Cat is schizophrenic, as he disappears and reappears distorting reality around him and subsequently driving ...
Alice in Wonderland Syndrome (AWS), also known as Todd's syndrome or Lilliputian hallucinations, is a condition in which visual perception is altered.
Tweedledee and Tweedledum are a pair of identical twins in Alice in Wonderland, and fictional characters from the novel Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There by Lewis Carroll. They are based upon a traditional nursery rhyme of the same name.
Helen Kingsleigh is Alice's mom, Margaret and Alice's mother-in-law, and the wife of Charles Kingsleigh. In the books, she died along with her husband in a fire accident at their home, where Alice, Margaret, and Alice's brother were the only three children survived in the fire.
Tweedledum and Tweedledee are characters in an English nursery rhyme and in Lewis Carroll's 1871 book Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. Their names may have originally come from an epigram written by poet John Byrom.
In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865), which takes place on 4 May, the character is widely assumed to be seven years old; Alice gives her age as seven and a half in the sequel, which takes place on 4 November.
Plot. A mother reads "The Stolen Child" by William Butler Yeats to her three children and recounts a story of three siblings; eldest David, middle child Alice and youngest Peter, who live with their parents: Jack and Rose Littleton.
While not mentioned in the first-game, Alice's sister has a prominent role in the backstory of the second where she is given the name of Elizabeth "Lizzie" Liddell. Like the rest of Alice's family, Lizzie died in the fire which destroyed their home.
Once Upon a Time in Wonderland
Years after the battle of Wonderland, Alice and Cyrus get married and settle down back in Victorian England, where they have a daughter together. Alice recounts her adventures in Wonderland to her daughter, and together they write a book entitled Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Tweedledum and Tweedledee are twin brothers, fat little boys who like grinning and reciting poetry to Alice. They continually act out the nursery rhyme from which they come, quarreling because Tweedledum says Tweedledee broke his rattle.
In the Characters' Past
In the new realm during a flashback, Alice makes a birthday wish to get out of the tower and shortly after, a troll suddenly appears and helps her escape the prison, hopefully to search for her father.
Some time during the next eight years, Alice meets Robin and they fall in love, but are separated when the curse hits.
The diagnosis the Mad Hatter seems to fit best is Borderline Personality Disorder (301.83). He displays this among Mally and the Hare. He is constantly changing his mood and one minute is harsh to them, and the next minute he thinks they have the greatest idea ever.
Alice Pleasance Liddell (1852 – 1934) was the little girl who inspired Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Under her married name of Alice Hargreaves, she came to live in Lyndhurst and was a society hostess.
Alice in Wonderland syndrome (AIWS) is a rare neurological disorder characterized by distortions of visual perception (metamorphopsias), the body image, and the experience of time. As noted as early as 1955 by John Todd, these symptoms may be accompanied by derealization and depersonalization (1).
Through the Mad Hatter, Carroll is seen by some observers as critiquing England's mistreatment of its workers and its mentally ill. During the Victorian era, workers in the textile industries were subjected to hazardous conditions, including exposure to lead and mercury.
Mercury was used in the manufacturing of felt hats during the 19th century, causing a high rate of mercury poisoning among those working in the hat industry. Mercury poisoning causes neurological damage, including slurred speech, memory loss, and tremors, which led to the phrase "mad as a hatter".
1. Alice isn't blonde, after all. Contrary to most films and illustrations, Alice is probably a brunette. Carroll based his book character on the real-life Alice Liddell, the young daughter of a family friend (who most definitely had brown hair, as we've seen the photographs).