The Answer:
Yes and no.
The poem, written by Alice in Wonderland
author Lewis
Carroll, was published in its 1872 sequel, Through
the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There. It's the most
widely known example of nonsense verse. The
words are made up, but they have elements of rhythm and rhyme that
make them perfect for the poem.
That doesn't mean they were all chosen at random or have no
meanings, though. In chapter 6 of the same book, Humpty Dumpty defines
several of the words from the first stanza. "Brillig" is four in the
afternoon, the time you start broiling things for dinner. "Slithy" is
a combination of "lithe and slimy." "Toves" are something like
badgers, and something like lizards, and something like corkscrews;
they make their nests under sun-dials and live on cheese. And so on.
We recommend you read the
book itself for the full scene. Better yet, check out Martin
Gardner's The Annotated Alice, which contains
both Alice books and lots of fascinating notes about them.
Some Jabberwocky-related words have entered the English
language. In describing words like "slithy" (lithe + slimy) and
"mimsy" (flimsy + miserable), Humpty Dumpty says each is like a portmanteau, or a trunk that
combines two halves. "Portmanteau words" is now a
standard name for such word blends. Among the portmanteaus Carroll
invented for Jabberwocky were "galumphing" and "chortled": the former from
"gallop" and "triumphant," the latter from "chuckle" and "snort." Both
have entered the English language.
Many people have come up with their own
translations of Jabberwocky. To learn more about the poem and
more about what Carroll might have been writing about, check out the
Lewis
Carroll Home Page and Glorious
Nonsense.
—The Editors
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.