<P>--Through the Looking - Glass </P> <P> The characters of the Walrus and the Carpenter have been interpreted many ways both in literary criticism and popular culture . Some, including the character Loki in the film Dogma, interpret the Walrus to be a caricature of the Buddha and the Carpenter to be a caricature of Jesus Christ . British essayist J.B. Priestley argued that the figures were political, as does Walter Russell Mead, who utilises the Walrus and the Carpenter as an allegory for Britain and the United States respectively . However, in The Annotated Alice, Martin Gardner notes that, when Carroll gave the manuscript for Looking Glass to illustrator John Tenniel, he gave him the choice of drawing a carpenter, a butterfly, or a baronet, since each word would fit the poem's metre . Because Tenniel rather than Carroll chose the carpenter, the character's significance in the poem is probably not in his profession, and interpretations of the poem as a commentary on religion are likely false . Gardner cautions the reader that there is not always intended symbolism in the Alice books, which were made for the imagination of children and not the analysis of "mad people". </P> <Ul> <Li> In the 1934 Betty Boop short film Betty in Blunderland, the Carpenter is using a hammer on a saw with two lobsters and three clams and the Walrus is on a board eating fishes out of a fishbowl . </Li> <Li> In the Doctor Who episode, "Rings of Akhaten", the Doctor mentions "Shoes and ships and sealing - wax and cabbages and kings", when talking about things made by the stars . </Li> <Li> In the XKCD comic entitled, "Click and Drag", a character recites a version combining the poem with the Lord of The Rings trilogy, saying, "" The time has come', the Walrus said, and put on Sauron's ring ." </Li> <Li> "The Walrus and the Carpenter" song is sung by Tweedledum and Tweedledee in the 1951 Disney film Alice in Wonderland with the moon and the sun on each side and the oysters . The Walrus is portrayed as an intelligent, but lazy conman, with the Carpenter as a hardworking, but dimwitted sidekick who needs beating with a cane for acting before thinking . All characters in the story are voiced by J. Pat O'Malley . After the Carpenter discovers a family of oysters underwater, the Walrus tries to persuade them to come "walk" with them . The Mother Oyster, on the other hand, knows that the current month is March, one of the 8 months with the letter "R" in which oysters are eaten . She tries to convince her children to stay in the sea, but the Walrus (refusing to take no for an answer) shuts her up (literally) and leads the dozen curious, younger oysters in a Pied Piper - like dance and flute solo ashore, where the Carpenter builds a restaurant from a shipwreck on the beach in six seconds . Once everyone is inside, the Walrus (who somehow doesn't want to share) tricks the Carpenter into preparing some food so that he can eat all the oysters himself (off screen). When the Carpenter returns to find every last oyster devoured and that the Walrus has double - crossed him, his face turns red with anger and he chases the Walrus outside with his hammer . In the final parts of the film, the Walrus and the Carpenter are among those who join the Queen of Hearts into chasing after Alice . </Li> <Li> A line from the poem was used by O. Henry for the title of his 1904 book Cabbages and Kings . </Li> <Li> Lines were used as clues in the Ellery Queen mystery story "The Adventure of the Mad Tea - Party". </Li> <Li> The surreal short story "The Sea was Wet as Wet Could Be" by Gahan Wilson, first published in Playboy in 1967, was inspired by the poem and includes large portions of it . </Li> <Li> In the Beatles song "I Am the Walrus", the walrus refers to the walrus in the book . John Lennon later expressed dismay upon belatedly realising that the walrus was a villain in the poem . </Li> <Li> In the play Journey's End by R.C. Sheriff, the character Osborne quotes the poem to Raleigh before going to the trenches . </Li> <Li> Harriet the Spy, a 1996 adaptation of the Louise Fitzhugh novel, shows lead character Harriet and her nanny (played by Rosie O'Donnell) reciting alternating lines of the poem to each other on multiple occasions . </Li> <Li> A line from the poem was used as the title of the book Why The Sea Is Boiling Hot: A Symposium On The Church And The World (Ryerson Press, 1965). It was a collection of essays by a group of leading literary and political writers concerning the place of the church in 1960s Canadian society, commissioned by the then - Board of Evangelism and Social Service of the United Church of Canada . </Li> <Li> The Jack Warden character "Doc" in the John Wayne and Lee Marvin film Donovan's Reef, quotes part of the poem to his visiting daughter from Boston, who looks down her society nose at the lifestyles of the people who live on the island . </Li> <Li> In "The Clocks" by Agatha Christie, Hercule Poirot quotes part of the poem to his visiting mentee, Colin Lamb, who is trying to find the importance of clocks found at a murder scene . </Li> <Li> The Lucy Maud Montgomery character "Anne" quotes the part of this poem when talking about things she might learn in college in the book Anne of the Island . </Li> <Li> In the Ultimate Muscle manga series the villanious wrestler and superman Neptuneman turns the good - natured Seiuchin (a walrus - themed hero and wrestler) evil by telling him the tale . The tale drives Seiuchin to embrace his own predatory nature and start displaying an egotistical streak . </Li> <Li> In the 1999 film Dogma, the Matt Damon character Loki tells a nun this story as his reason for becoming atheist . </Li> <Li> In Arthur C. Clarke's novel 2010: Odyssey Two, the poem is playfully quoted as "' The time has come,' said Dr. Dimitri Moisevitch to his old friend Heywood Floyd,' to talk of many things . Of shoes and spaceships and sealing wax, but mostly of monoliths and malfunctioning computers ."' in reference to the events from 2001: A Space Odyssey . </Li> <Li> In Sandra Cisneros's novel The House on Mango Street, Esperanza recites the poem to Ruthie in the vignette "Edna's Ruthie ." </Li> <Li> In The Wild Wild West episode "The Night of the Underground Terror", James West briefly quotes from the poem when he first meets the episode's villain . </Li> </Ul> <Li> In the 1934 Betty Boop short film Betty in Blunderland, the Carpenter is using a hammer on a saw with two lobsters and three clams and the Walrus is on a board eating fishes out of a fishbowl . </Li>

Summary of the poem the walrus and the carpenter