Natalia To start this all of who are the people who take place in the passion; Jesus Mary Disciples King satan prisoner People in the lion witch and wardrobe; Lucy Susan Peter Edmund Witch Aslan Animals _______________________________________________ The Lion, Witch, And the WardrobE, the White Witch is present during the killing of Aslan. As in the Passion, Satan is in the crowd during the beating at the pillar. When Jesus is tied to the pillar the soldiers beat him at the pillar. At the stone table, the White Witch had her servants beat Aslan with spears and the killed him And in the Passion, the kings had him tied to a pillar like the White Witch had Aslan tied to the stone table and then beat him, put a crown of thorns
Courage. That’s what it takes to save a country. That’s what it takes to discover who you truly are. That’s what Lucy is made up of. In the book, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, by C.S. Lewis, the White Witch tries to take over Narnia, but the Pevensie children come to the rescue.
Back in the second grade, my teacher; Mrs.McFarland had read a book to us called, The Lion,The Witch, and the Wardrobe. I learned how to read when I was three years old, but in the second grade I was unable to read books past my reading level so when Mrs.McFarland got to the part where Lucy went through the Wardrobe to me it had to be the coolest thing in the world and that was coming from a kid who had just gotten back from Disney World. I read the topic for this personal narrative and almost immediately asked my sister who is starting college at Howard because honestly for me, the question for me was very complex. How Do Books Work? The answer that she gave me was confusing, to say the least, not because it was a long and complicated, but
Lucy is a young girl who never lies, and she is part of an adventure to discover more about the untamed land of Narnia. My personal favorite book is “A Long Way from Chicago” by Richard Peck. I love it because of how hilarious it is. In the beginning chapter, a funeral is held at the home of the main characters.
A little girl named Lucy discovers a secret portal to a mysterious land called Narnia. She mets a faun and is taken into a cave for tea and spounge cake. The rest of the siblings don 't believe her when she comes back telling them what happened. Her older brother Edmund finds himself coming into the land. He gets approached by the White witch to bring the rest of his siblings.
The four children, Susan, Edmund, Peter and Lucy end up at the back of a wardrobe in a magical world called Narnia when they are looking for their sister Lucy while playing hide and seek. The author of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe strongly showed Christian elements within the characters, the battle between good and evil and the courage that was shown by the characters also. Good vs evil is a big theme in the British novel. The first sign the reader sees of good vs. evil is in the very beginning of the book. The beginning of the book starts off with the children and their mother running to safety in their bomb shelter.
Blindness or the lack of self-awareness seem to be a recurring theme in the story. Characters’ inability in seeing the truth often resulted in reprehensible decisions: Edmund’s perception of his life resulted in schemes that would eventually cause great strife in the story, the two fathers who are unable to see the true intentions of their children, paving the way for the events that make the play so tragic, and a man who was blinded by love, leaving his wife uncontested. Nonetheless, once these characters are able to see the world for what it is, they are able to relieve the tension of the ending through reconciliation and the implementation of justice where “The wheel [has] come full circle” (5.3.200).
In the novel, The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, there are two main settings. The four main characters, Lucy, Susan, Edmund, and Peter live in London, England during World War II. They are sent away to the countryside to live safely during the war with an elderly professor, Digory Kirke. Lucy, the youngest of the four siblings, finds a wardrobe in the professor’s house and goes into it, finding a magical land called Narnia. Narnia is absolutely beautiful and filled with amazing creatures that our world has never seen or imagined existing.
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe tells a tale of four children who end up having an adventure of a lifetime. Entering a world of wonders and creatures were the only hope of saving it is in their hands. An adventure that only one can possible dream of where good triumphs evil. As a child one can only dream of an alternate world where things you have seen on the television and read about in books become a reality.
Fantasy and magic are popular and mysterious topics pursued by many individuals nowadays; however many of the ideas used in modern magic stories are often reflections or interpretations of stories told in the past. This is because many of these stories are often ambiguous and left up to the audience to create their own understanding of the story. Narnia: the lion, the witch and the wardrobe is a fantasy adventure novel written by C. S. Lewis in 1950 and 55 years later was later adapted into a popular film directed by Adam Adamson. It is evident that both the film and the novel have various similarities as well as differences. The story follows four siblings who discover a magical wardrobe that leads to a magical world called Narnia.
The four children, Susan, Edmund, Peter and Lucy end up at the back of a wardrobe in a magical world called Narnia when they are looking for their sister Lucy while playing hide and seek. The author of lion the witch and the wardrobe strongly show Christian elements
When Edmund states this the audience can clearly see that he is the primary antagonist because he is going to sell his father out to the duke. Edmund’s decision to snitch on his father leads to gruesome consequences for Gloucester. Once the Duke of Cornwall finds out about Gloucester’s knowledge of the troops and the division he brings him in for punishments. Gloucester ultimately gets both of his eyes plucked out and can no longer see. Immediately after he has lost all vision he calls for Edmund to come save him.
However once Aslan’s supporters saved Edmund from the White Witch’s harm, Edmund had a revealing conversation with Aslan. “There is no need to tell you (and no one ever heard) what Aslan was saying, but it was a conversation which Edmund never forgot,” (Lewis 139). Aslan’s conversation with Edmund caused him to have a change of heart; Edmund apologized to his siblings and to everyone else inside the camp. Edmund’s journey from becoming a traitor to transforming into the Edmund who returns to England, highlights his dynamic character development throughout the novel. His feelings of wickedness towards his siblings have turned into love for his family once he realized his betrayal was not worth losing
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe takes place in a World War II era England. Four siblings, Peter, Edmund, Susan, and Lucy, are sent into the countryside to be looked after by an old professor in order to get away from the bombings. This professor lives in a mansion, in which one of the rooms contains an old wardrobe. The youngest sibling, Lucy, is the first to wander into the Wardrobe, during a game of hide and seek, to find a magical world called “Narnia.” Edmund is the second to discover the magical world, and the two eldest siblings, Peter and Susan, are the last to discover it.
Subject: In William Wordsworth’s “Lucy Gray”, the speaker narrates the story about a young girl named Lucy Gray who disappears in a snow storm. Before she disappears, Lucy Gray spent much time alone and not a lot of people saw her face besides her parents. She becomes lost when she is instructed by her father to take a lantern into town for her mother. When Lucy does not return back home, her worried parents go looking for her and can only find her footprints in the snow leading up to a bridge.