When I was young, sometimes I’d forget to be afraid of the Jabberwocky. I’d skip along beside his emerald-wet scales, on the sun-strewn sidewalk, me prattling on about apple ciders and Lucy Maud Montgomery, half-humming boats and spiders beneath a pale sky, dry and summery, and he would lumber, unsteady, by my side, trudging heavily through wild glens till the dusk at long last turned to night and I remembered his name once again.