Walrus and Carpenter
PDSH erroneously listed Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as an appearance of the Walrus and Carpenter.
“The Walrus and the Carpenter” (poem) and “Tweedledum and Tweedledee,” ch. 4 of Through the Looking‐Glass, and What Alice Found There, by Lewis Carroll (pseudonym of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), 1871. (Internet Archive)
“The Tweedles,” ch. 11 of A New Alice in the Old Wonderland, by Anna M. Richards, 1895. (HathiTrust)
Cabbages and Kings, by O. Henry (pseudonym of William Sydney Porter), 1904. (Internet Archive) Titled in reference to the poem with repeated mention of its characters and other elements. Also gives symbolic identities for the two: “[H]e was little more than a whimpering oyster led to be devoured on the sands of a Southern sea by the artful walrus, Circumstance, and the implacable carpenter, Fate.”