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Knave of Hearts (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Knave of Hearts |
| series | Alice |
| image | John Tenniel - Illustration from The Nursery Alice (1890) - c06544 02.jpg |
| caption | John Tenniel's illustration of the trial of the Knave of Hearts, with the King and Queen of Hearts above. |
| first | Alice's Adventures in Wonderland |
| creator | Lewis Carroll |
| portrayer | Crispin Glover (Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland) |
| Paul McGillion (Once Upon a Time) | |
| Michael Socha (Once Upon a Time in Wonderland) | |
| nickname | Jack of Hearts |
| species | Human |
| occupation | Knave |
| gender | Male |
| nationality | Wonderland |
Paul McGillion (Once Upon a Time) Michael Socha (Once Upon a Time in Wonderland) The Knave of Hearts is a character from the 1865 book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll.
''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland''
The Knave of Hearts is mentioned first in chapter 8, and later in chapters 11 and 12, which deal with his trial for a tart burglary in which the King of Hearts presides as judge. Alice eventually defends the Knave after the evidence becomes increasingly absurd and she is called as a witness.
The White Rabbit announces the charges as:
The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts, :All on a summer day: The Knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts, :And took them quite away!
The Knave rarely speaks during the trial. The Mad Hatter is called to give evidence but spends his entire time being nervous in front of the King and Queen of Hearts, and the Duchess's cook is summoned to tell the court what tarts are made of. Neither is a convincing witness, and the Knave does not provide the King of Hearts with a very good self-defense. He denies he wrote a letter that mysteriously appears in the court, but that he already knows isn't signed.
Alice diverts the attention of the court by growing ever and ever larger and arguing more and more, lastly with the Queen over the concept of "sentence first—verdict afterwards". Before a verdict can be reached for the Knave's innocence or guilt, Alice reaches full size and forcefulness, and then calls them "nothing but a pack of cards!"
It is believed by some people that since Sir John Tenniel's illustration of the scene in chapter 12 has the Knave with small club outline shapes on his blouse, the ultimate nonsense is that the King and the Queen do not even have the correct person standing trial, this isn't the Knave of Hearts at all, and whoever it is is unwilling to clarify the matter. However, this would also suppose Alice, the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter and everyone else missed it as well, and that Carroll inserted an unintroduced character. After calling him "the Knave of Hearts" twice in chapter 8, the rest of the chapter simply refers to him as "the Knave". The only other non-heart card characters in the book are the three gardeners (drawn as spades), the ten soldiers (described and drawn as clubs), and the ten courtiers (described as diamonds). For other illustrations involving the Knave, the original art by Carroll for chapter 12 and the chapter 8 drawing by both Carroll and Tenniel show no markings.
References
References
- [http://www.omegabrands.com/carroll/knave.html ''A Case of Mistaken Identity'' by John Tufail]
- [http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/c/carroll/lewis/alice/ Tenniel illustrated ebook ''Alice's Adventures in Wonderland''] {{webarchive. link. (9 November 2008)
- [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19002/19002-h/19002-h.htm Carroll illustrated ebook ''Alice's Adventures Under Ground'']
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