Mary Ann
The White Rabbit's housemaid whom he mistakes Alice for. Only mentioned as the person the Rabbit believes Alice to be; does not appear.
The White Rabbit's housemaid whom he mistakes Alice for. Only mentioned as the person the Rabbit believes Alice to be; does not appear.
Alice's cat back at home, mentioned in her imaginings about giving orders. Only referenced in Alice's thoughts about her cat potentially ordering people around or scaring the animals.
An anxious, easily flustered rabbit who is always in a hurry and worried about the Duchess punishing him. Returns searching for his lost fan and gloves, mistakes Alice for Mary Ann and orders her to fetch them, then attempts to enter his house and directs the animals to remove the giant intruder.
A serious, authoritative rodent among the group who is knowledgeable about English history and easily offended. Calls everyone to sit and listen to a dry history lecture, participates in the Caucus-race, receives and presents the thimble prize, begins telling its long sad tale but storms off angrily after Alice's interruptions.
The authority figure the White Rabbit fears will have him executed for losing his items. Only mentioned in the Rabbit's anxious mutterings about her punishing him.
A small lizard who is frequently ordered around and ends up being the one sent down the chimney. Is pushed by the group to climb down the chimney, gets kicked by Alice, flies out, and is then cared for by the other animals.
Alice’s sister who is present offscreen but not described in detail; a close family member whose reading bores Alice. Referenced as the reason Alice has nothing to do before she notices the rabbit.
A literal-minded duck who questions the meaning of words in the Mouse's story. Interrupts the Mouse's history lecture asking what the archbishop found.
A solemn and formal bird who speaks in long words and takes charge of solutions. Proposes and organizes the Caucus-race where everyone wins, awards prizes, and solemnly presents Alice's thimble as her prize.
An opinionated parrot who is older than Alice and quick to interrupt or complain. Interrupts the Mouse's lecture with "Ugh!", participates in the race, asks about Dinah, and sighs that it's a pity the Mouse left.
A young eagle who complains about big words and hides a smile. Mocks the Dodo's long words during the proposal for the Caucus-race.
An older magpie concerned about its health. Wraps itself up and leaves quickly after Alice mentions Dinah, claiming the night air is bad for its throat.
A nervous canary with children. Calls its children to bed and leaves after Alice mentions Dinah eating birds.
An older crab giving life lessons to her daughter. Tells her daughter that the Mouse's behavior is a lesson against losing one's temper.
A young crab who speaks back to her mother. Tells her mother to be quiet because she tries the patience of an oyster.
A servant or gardener animal (possibly a guinea pig or similar) who speaks with a strong accent and assists the White Rabbit. Helps the Rabbit by trying to remove the giant arm from the window and follows his orders during the attempt to evict Alice.
A large, calm, hookah-smoking blue caterpillar perched on a mushroom. Sits silently on top of a large mushroom smoking a hookah and stares at Alice as the chapter ends.